Morgan Stanley has taken another step into the U.S. crypto market after filing a Form S-1 registration statement with the Securities and Exchange Commission for a Morgan Stanley Ethereum Trust.
The move adds to growing expectations that large Wall Street firms are positioning for broader spot crypto products beyond Bitcoin.
The filing, submitted on Jan. 6, establishes the legal framework for a statutory trust that would hold ether on behalf of investors.
Ethereum ETFs Top $20B as Morgan Stanley Steps In
The registration statement stated that Morgan Stanley Investment Management will act as the depositor, while CSC Delaware Trust Company will serve as trustee.
The trust was formed on Dec. 16, 2025, under Delaware law, with an initial contribution of $1, a standard procedural step used to create the entity before it begins operations.
While the filing does not guarantee approval or immediate launch, it signals intent to offer regulated Ethereum exposure through traditional brokerage channels.
As of Jan. 6, Ethereum spot ETFs recorded $1.72 billion in daily value traded and collectively held $20.06 billion in net assets, equivalent to just over 5% of Ethereum’s total market capitalization.
Ethereum spot ETF market overview Source: SosovalueBlackRock’s ETHA dominates the sector, holding $11.58 billion in assets and accounting for nearly 3% of ETH’s market cap on its own, with daily trading volume exceeding $1 billion.
Other issuers show a more mixed picture with Grayscale’s higher-fee ETHE continues to see persistent outflows, with more than $5 billion leaving the fund over time, while its lower-fee ETH product and Fidelity’s FETH have retained stronger long-term inflows.
The data suggests that fee sensitivity and liquidity are playing a growing role in how investors choose Ethereum exposure, a factor Morgan Stanley will likely have to consider if its trust eventually converts into an exchange-traded product.
ETH Trust Filing Fits Classic Path to Spot ETFs for Morgan Stanley
Morgan Stanley’s move follows a familiar pattern seen across major asset managers.
Firms such as Grayscale and VanEck began with trusts or futures-based products years before spot ETFs were approved, while BlackRock and Fidelity launched spot Ether ETFs directly in July 2024 after the SEC greenlit the category.
Against that backdrop, Morgan Stanley’s Ethereum trust filing is widely seen as groundwork rather than an endpoint, similar to how earlier trust products eventually transitioned into exchange-traded funds once regulatory conditions allowed.
The timing is notable given Morgan Stanley’s broader crypto push.
Just one day earlier, the bank filed an S-1 for a spot Bitcoin Trust designed to track Bitcoin’s price directly.
Morgan Stanley has also filed for a Solana-linked trust and is preparing to roll out direct crypto trading for Bitcoin, Ether, and Solana through its E-Trade platform, pending regulatory approval.
Together, these filings suggest a coordinated expansion rather than isolated experiments.
Morgan Stanley oversees roughly $8.2 trillion in client assets through its wealth management arm, giving it a strong incentive to internalize crypto exposure as demand grows.
Executives have pointed to a more permissive U.S. regulatory environment as a key reason for accelerating its digital asset plans.
For traditional investors, products like an Ethereum trust or ETF offer regulated, brokerage-based access to ETH price movements without the complexities of self-custody, staking, or on-chain activity.
Unlike spot ETH ownership, trust or ETF investors do not control the underlying asset or receive staking rewards.
Despite those limits, steady ETF inflows show institutions still favor simplicity and compliance.
While Morgan Stanley has not explicitly announced plans for a spot Ethereum ETF, the trust filing fits neatly into the established playbook that preceded spot launches by other major firms.
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