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Self-directed investors power bitcoin ETF launch despite Morgan Stanley’s scale

By Helene Braun · Published May 5, 2026 · 4 min read · Source: CoinDesk
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Self-directed investors power bitcoin ETF launch despite Morgan Stanley’s scale

Strong early demand highlights how investors are driving crypto adoption, even without support from Morgan Stanley’s vast advisor network.

By Helene Braun, AI Boost|Edited by Aoyon Ashraf May 5, 2026, 8:44 p.m. 2 min readMake preferred on
Amy Oldenburg at Consensus Miami 2026
Morgan Stanley's Amy Oldenburg at Conensus Miami 2026.

What to know:

Miami Beach, FL — Morgan Stanley’s newly launched spot bitcoin exchange-traded fund (MSBT) has attracted over $200 million in early demand, and it's largely without help from its own advisors.

“Almost all of that first week or two of activity was self-directed, meaning it was not our advisors that were selling this,” Amy Oldenburg, the bank’s newly appointed head of digital assets, said during a fireside chat at Consensus in Miami.

The fund, just a few weeks old, has already gathered more than $200 million in assets, an unusually fast start in the traditional ETF market, where most launches struggle to gain traction over a short period of time. Oldenburg said the flows reflect individual investors making their own allocation decisions rather than relying on financial advisors.

The dynamic points to a broader shift.

Crypto exposure is no longer limited to niche or speculative corners of the market. Instead, investors who may already hold digital assets directly are now moving some of that capital into regulated products.

Oldenburg noted “how much activity that we're fielding in terms of spot crypto holders that are also looking to put assets into ETPs,” describing a transition from decentralized holdings to more traditional investment vehicles.

'Hybrid world'

However, Morgan Stanley is not betting on a single format. The firm plans to support both ETF access and direct crypto ownership, including spot trading on its wealth platform later this year.

“We’ll live in a hybrid world for quite some time, where we’ll be supporting both the digital native and the traditional business all in one,” Oldenburg said.

That approach reflects a practical challenge facing large financial institutions: clients increasingly hold both stocks and crypto, often across disconnected systems. Bringing those assets into a single view remains a work in progress.

Beyond the ETF, Oldenburg said the bank is exploring how digital assets could reshape market structure more broadly, including faster settlement and tokenized financial products.

“We’re not tokenizing for the sake of tokenizing,” she said. “Ultimately, we want to provide the client more value and better service.”

The effort is part of a longer-term shift rather than a short-term trend. “This isn’t a 2026 project or 2027 project. This is the next decade,” she added.

AI Disclaimer: Parts of this article were generated with the assistance from AI tools and reviewed by our editorial team to ensure accuracy and adherence to our standards. For more information, see CoinDesk's full AI Policy.

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