Despite several ETF launches, the market has still not seen full TradFi-DeFi convergence.
Certainly, structural trends such as tokenization, stablecoins and AI are steadily increasing the amount of financial activity taking place on-chain. However, when it comes to large-scale institutional capital, the participation of the traditional financial system has remained relatively cautious. However, that dynamic could soon change.
In a recent post on X, a senior Bloomberg analyst suggested that Morgan Stanley’s Bitcoin [BTC] The launch of a spot ETF could be “imminent,” following an official NYSE listing announcement for the Morgan Stanley Bitcoin ETF (MSBT), sparking renewed market speculation.


Remarkably, most of the conversation revolved around a single key point.
If confirmed, this move could be one of the first examples of a major global bank moving beyond passive cryptocurrency exposure. Instead, it would point to deeper integration into the crypto ecosystem, potentially reshaping institutional Bitcoin flows in the future.
The real focus? Morgan Stanley’s distribution power.
For context, the firm operates one of the most influential advisor networks on Wall Street and manages $6.2 trillion in assets under management (AUM), giving it enormous client reach. When it comes to Bitcoin, this type of distribution could obviously increase institutional access in a meaningful way and stimulate new capital flows.
In fact, a CryptoQuant report reinforces this view, showing how the launch of MSBT could reshape Bitcoin’s institutional flows, which until now have been largely concentrated in the hands of just a few players.
MSBT could break MSTR’s hold on institutional Bitcoin flows
Strategy’s Bitcoin holdings have thus far gone largely unchallenged by other institutional players.
By 2026, the country will buy more BTC per week than most countries currently own average weekly purchases to 7,649. This marks a 77% increase from last year and a staggering jump of over 430% from its 2020 launch, amplifying its influence on both price dynamics and the broader institutional adoption curve.
In support of this, data from CryptoQuant shows that demand for Bitcoin treasuries is now almost entirely driven by Strategy, with 45,000 BTC purchased in the last thirty days, versus just 1,000 BTC from all other players. That’s a 99% drop in participation, leaving the market highly concentrated.


To put it in perspective, a single player now controls roughly 76% of Bitcoin’s institutional holdings, leaving broad corporate demand largely non-existent. In this context, the launch of MSBT could mark a major turning point for the institutional Bitcoin market. For one, Morgan Stanley’s launch of the first US BTC spot ETF marks a decisive step towards convergence between TradFi and DeFi.
But beyond that, it could reshape institutional flows, introduce a broader network of capital, expand distribution, and diversify participation in ways the market has not seen before. So while MSTR has long dominated Bitcoin’s treasury flows, MSBT could be the first real test of that concentration and a signal that TradFi is starting to work with BTC on a larger scale.
Final summary
- Morgan Stanley’s Bitcoin spot ETF could reshape MSTR-dominated institutional Bitcoin flows, redistributing capital and participation.
- The launch represents one of the first major steps by a US bank to integrate TradFi with crypto, potentially broadening access and driving new institutional flows.
