Morgan Stanley is pushing Bitcoin and crypto, but says Wall Street isn’t chasing FOMO
Morgan Stanley is accelerating its Bitcoin and crypto strategy, but the bank’s head of digital assets said this is the result of years of preparation and not a sudden rush to catch up.
Speaking at the Digital Asset Summit on Tuesday, Amy Oldenburg emphasized that Wall Street’s transition to digital assets reflects a long-term effort to modernize financial infrastructure. “We have been on a journey for many years across the modernization of financial infrastructure,” he said, rejecting the idea that banks were acting out of fear of missing out.
Morgan Stanley has expanded beyond indirect crypto exposure such as Bitcoin funds for its wealthy clients to offer spot ETFs on its E*Trade platform, and has filed to launch its own Bitcoin ETF.
Looking ahead, the bank plans to support tokenized stocks in alternative trading systems in the second half of 2026.
Mr. Oldenburg pointed out that major challenges still remain. Upgrading legacy systems, coordinating across global networks, and integrating with complex banking infrastructures have all slowed progress. “We cannot modernize alone,” she said.
JUST IN: Morgan Stanley’s Amy Oldenburg says FOMO isn’t why banks are moving into Bitcoin and cryptocurrencies after years of infrastructure development.
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Even with volatile token prices, institutional investor activity has been quietly growing. Stablecoins and faster payment tools are gaining traction, signaling deeper cryptocurrency integration on Wall Street is slowly but surely underway.
“This is a natural progression,” Oldenburg told Strategy World. “We can’t just borrow technology from the Lord to do this. People rely on Morgan Stanley because they trust our brand and expect it to be error-free.”
Morgan Stanley Bitcoin ETF launched
Back in January, Morgan Stanley applied to U.S. regulators to launch a spot Bitcoin ETF, becoming the first major U.S. bank to pursue a fund that tracks Bitcoin prices directly.
The proposed Morgan Stanley Bitcoin Trust would hold Bitcoin directly rather than using futures or derivatives, joining companies like BlackRock and Fidelity in the growing $120 billion spot Bitcoin ETF market.
Strategy CEO Von Leh called Morgan Stanley’s proposed Bitcoin ETF a “monster Bitcoin” bet, estimating that $160 billion could flow into Bitcoin with just 2% allocated across the bank’s $8 trillion asset platform. $BTC.
The fund, which will trade on the NYSE Arca under the ticker MSBT, will hold Bitcoin directly and use BNY Mellon and Coinbase for custody and management services.
Lee emphasized that even a small allocation by an asset manager could exceed the flows seen in existing ETFs like BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust.
While Morgan Stanley begins offering spot $BTC ETFs to customers, SEC approval for new funds still pending.
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This post, Morgan Stanley is promoting Bitcoin and cryptocurrencies, but Wall Street isn’t chasing FOMO, originally appeared in Bitcoin Magazine and was written by Micah Zimmerman.


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