The market may be experiencing its most powerful shift from TradFi to DeFi yet.
On the fundamental side, the fact that the market capitalization of stablecoins is reaching a new all-time high of around $320 billion is a strong signal that liquidity is increasing. More capital is flowing up the chain, and we are seeing deeper integration into L1 ecosystems as they continue to build partnerships with major banking players.
But even on the technical side, this transformation seems to be reaching its peak.
Traditional banking players are now integrating into crypto not only through stablecoins, but also through exchange-traded funds (ETFs), with Morgan Stanley’s Bitcoin [BTC] ETF is in the middle of this shift.


Morgan Stanley reinforces this trend recently purchased 177.76 BTC worth approximately $13.75 million.
This brings the total holdings to approximately $102.02 million across three tracked addresses, based on Arkham data at the time of writing.
As one of the largest TradFi players, these inflows reinforce how DeFi integration is not just limited to on-chain activities. Instead, it’s also expanding into institutional investment products, creating a playbook for other institutions to follow, with companies like Charles Schwab (which manage some $11 trillion in assets) clearly in focus.
That said, unlike the fundamental side where these flows are supporting the broader TradFi-to-DeFi shift, the technical side comes down to Bitcoin’s price action, which is at a major inflection point.
This naturally begs the question: could MSBT’s purchases go against the broader ETF narrative and put upward pressure on BTC?
MSBT helps, but Bitcoin is still trading on broader market momentum
Bitcoin is at an inflection point where bulls and bears are battling for control.
In this context, the recent $13.75 million purchase of BTC reflects a clear bullish signal, reinforcing Bitcoin’s underlying bid support at a time when technical indicators are starting to turn bearish.
That said, more bearish signals are actually appearing in the chain.
As the chart below shows, long-term holders have accumulated more than +3.06 million BTC over the past three months. However, holders are now selling some older coins at a loss.
This is not yet a capitulation, but technically the accumulation is clearly losing steam.


Against this backdrop, Bitcoin ETFs are clearly acting as a strong catalyst by absorbing supply pressure.
In this context, however, MSBT’s $17 million inflow seems relatively limited, especially compared to ETF players like BlackRock, which see over $200 million in net inflows daily, almost 12x larger than MSBT.
So while the integration of major TradFi players into crypto marks a turning point for DeFi, the technical impact is still not strongly visible. This makes the MSBT Bitcoin ETF a strong catalyst at a fundamental level, but its effect on price action remains limited so far, leaving BTC still heavily driven by broader market flows.
