When Morgan Stanley created a firmwide Head of Digital Asset Technique position in January 2026, it handed the job to Amy Oldenburg — a 26-year veteran of the financial institution who spent a lot of her profession in rising markets, buying and selling overseas alternate and equities in locations the place formal banking infrastructure was both unreliable or absent.
That background, she mentioned in a current interview on the Coin Tales podcast with Natalie Brunell, shapes all the things she believes about the place Bitcoin is headed.
“The place had been the primary customers of a number of this?” Oldenburg mentioned, pointing to cross-border and worldwide markets — areas the place folks weren’t rejecting the normal banking system out of ideology, however as a result of that system had already failed them.
On the podcast, she described watching M-Pesa, Safaricom’s cell cash service, spread throughout East Africa in 2007, with girls loading money onto flip telephones in villages with no dependable electrical energy and grime roads. The parallel to Bitcoin’s decentralized worth proposition was not misplaced on her.
Morgan Stanley’s entry into Bitcoin has been methodical, and Oldenburg defined why. The financial institution is a world systemically vital financial institution, or G-SIB, and in contrast to BlackRock — an impartial asset supervisor — Morgan Stanley is owned by a financial institution holding firm ruled by the Federal Reserve.
That distinction meant the agency confronted capital therapy necessities and regulatory constraints that impartial asset managers didn’t, forcing it to observe friends roll out crypto merchandise years earlier than it may.
The regulatory atmosphere was not the one impediment. Morgan Stanley had constructed a plan years prematurely to launch spot crypto buying and selling on its E-Commerce platform, however by 2024, a number of of the distributors the financial institution had shortlisted for partnerships had collapsed — a casualty of the identical trade shakeout that took down FTX and a wave of smaller corporations. The financial institution needed to rebuild its technique from the bottom up.
When the agency lastly launched the Morgan Stanley Bitcoin Belief — ticker MSBT — on April 7, 2026, it became the primary spot Bitcoin ETF issued by a U.S. chartered financial institution. The debut was the strongest first-day ETF launch in Morgan Stanley’s historical past, taking in over $33.8 million and touchdown within the prime 1% of all ETF debuts by quantity, according to Bloomberg senior ETF analyst Eric Balchunas.
The fund carries an expense ratio of 0.14%, making it the most cost effective Bitcoin ETF within the U.S. market — undercutting BlackRock’s IBIT by 11 foundation factors.
The use hole between the merchandise and advisors
The product exists. The problem now, Oldenburg mentioned, is getting the folks inside Morgan Stanley’s personal wealth machine to make use of it.
The agency manages roughly $9.3 trillion in shopper property, and in October 2025 its International Funding Committee formally beneficial a 2% to 4% crypto allocation for average to aggressive development portfolios, describing Bitcoin as a scarce asset similar to digital gold. But advisor uptake has been sluggish.
Oldenburg attributed this on to an schooling hole. Many monetary advisors nonetheless can not cleanly distinguish Bitcoin from the broader crypto class — not to mention clarify the structural variations between Bitcoin, Ethereum, and Solana to a shopper who simply needs to know if it belongs of their retirement account.
The issue runs in each instructions: purchasers who got here of age watching crypto exchanges collapse understandably affiliate all digital property with FTX-era chaos, whereas advisors with fiduciary duty are reluctant to suggest an asset that also strikes in lockstep with danger equities moderately than as an impartial inflation hedge.
“It’s not all becoming collectively but,” Oldenburg mentioned, evaluating the present second to the early days of the BlackBerry — a expertise the place she knew one thing was there, however the use case had not crystallized for most individuals.
This sentiment echoes Oldenburg’s feedback at The Bitcoin Convention, the place she argued that bitcoin stays extensively misunderstood and that investor schooling is the important thing impediment to broader adoption. She mentioned the agency is coaching advisors, increasing crypto entry, and believes regulatory progress may finally make bank-held bitcoin “not out of the query.”
What would transfer Bitcoin larger
On the query of what would push Bitcoin towards a extra decisive breakout, Oldenburg gave a solution that mirrored her expertise watching methods beneath stress. She advised it could take a disaster — not essentially a dramatic one, however a sluggish grind that breaks confidence in conventional monetary infrastructure and makes Bitcoin’s properties as a decentralized, borderless retailer of worth viscerally clear.
She has seen that dynamic play out in rising markets, in Russia and Ukraine, the place folks she knew personally misplaced entry to their banking property in a single day.
For U.S. banks to carry Bitcoin on their stability sheets, she mentioned the trail runs by capital therapy reform — particularly the elimination of the punitive regulatory burden that makes Bitcoin much less environment friendly to carry than different property from a stability sheet perspective.
The financial institution is pursuing an OCC digital belief constitution that may let Morgan Stanley custody crypto instantly, a step that may carry its digital asset ambitions additional in-house.
