Morgan Stanley Wealth Management just made it meaningfully easier for its richest clients to bridge the gap between holding raw crypto and owning regulated investment products. The firm announced a strategic referral partnership with Galaxy Digital that lets eligible clients lend bitcoin, ether, and solana in exchange for shares of spot crypto exchange-traded products.
The flagship product in the arrangement is the Morgan Stanley Bitcoin Trust (MSBT), which holds the distinction of being the first spot bitcoin ETP from a US bank-affiliated asset manager. For clients sitting on significant crypto holdings, this is essentially a way to convert digital assets into traditional brokerage-compatible shares without selling anything.
How the lending-to-ETP pipeline works
The mechanics here are worth unpacking. Eligible clients lend their digital assets to Galaxy Digital, which then facilitates what’s called an in-kind creation process through an Authorized Participant. The end result: the client receives ETP shares that sit neatly inside a traditional brokerage account.
In English: instead of selling your bitcoin to buy a bitcoin ETF (triggering a taxable event and all the friction that comes with it), you lend the bitcoin and get regulated fund shares back. Those shares then unlock capabilities like margin trading and securities lending that raw crypto holdings typically can’t access.
Galaxy Digital made notable concessions to grease the wheels. The minimum transaction size for referred clients dropped from $25 million to $5 million, a reduction that opens the door considerably wider. And the onboarding process for new clients coming through Morgan Stanley is expected to be up to 75% faster than Galaxy’s standard timeline.
That $5 million floor still keeps this firmly in high-net-worth territory. But within the context of Morgan Stanley’s client base, which collectively manages over $1.5 trillion in assets, even a modest adoption rate could move real volume.
Morgan Stanley’s crypto evolution
This partnership didn’t emerge from thin air. The firm removed restrictions on cryptocurrency fund offerings for high-net-worth clients back in October 2025. The MSBT launch represented the next logical step, giving clients a regulated vehicle with the Morgan Stanley brand attached to it.
Galaxy Digital, which trades on the Nasdaq under the ticker GLXY, brings the crypto-native expertise to the arrangement.
What this means for investors
The ETP shares integrate directly into brokerage accounts, enabling margin and securities lending capabilities that crypto held in wallets simply cannot offer. By converting crypto holdings into ETP shares through a lending mechanism, clients can diversify their investments without necessitating outright sales of their digital assets.
The risk side of the equation deserves attention too. Lending crypto introduces counterparty risk. Galaxy Digital is a publicly traded, regulated entity, which mitigates some concern compared to the opaque lending platforms that collapsed during the 2022 crypto credit crisis. But any arrangement where clients are lending assets carries inherent risk, and the specific terms of those lending agreements will matter enormously for clients evaluating whether the convenience is worth it.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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