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Morgan Stanley Targets Ethereum and Solana ETF Market Share Amid Intensifying Fee Competition

Morgan Stanley is positioning its proposed ethereum and solana ETFs to capture market share as competition intensifies, combining direct token exposure, staking rewards and institutional custody while the registration statements await effectiveness.

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Morgan Stanley Targets Ethereum and Solana ETF Market Share Amid Intensifying Fee Competition

Key Takeaways

  • Morgan Stanley’s ethereum and solana filings extend the bank’s proprietary crypto ETF strategy beyond its existing Bitcoin fund.
  • The proposed pricing suggests crypto ETFs are shifting from product novelty toward competition for investor assets.
  • Both trusts would include staking and institutional custody but remain preliminary offerings without confirmed launch dates.

Why the Crypto ETF Market May Be Entering a Commodity Phase

Morgan Stanley’s proposed ethereum and solana exchange-traded funds (ETFs) would enter a market where issuers increasingly offer similar exposure to the same assets. The firm recently amended both filings with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to include a 0.14% management fee, below Grayscale’s 0.15% and Franklin Templeton’s 0.19%. The narrow spread signals intensifying price competition.

Brian Rudick, chief strategy officer at Solana treasury company Upexi and formerly head of research at crypto trading firm and liquidity provider GSR, argued that the fee matters less than what it suggests about the market’s development. On July 9, he shared on X:

“Issuers don’t compete on price until the product is close to a commodity and the fight is for share, the same compression the spot BTC ETFs went through.”

SOL ETF AUM already crossed $1B, led by Bitwise’s BSOL, so there is real share to fight over,” he added.

The argument places the 0.14% fee within a shift from product creation to asset gathering. Once several issuers offer similar exposure, management costs become one of the clearest points of distinction. His comparison with spot bitcoin ETFs suggests ethereum and solana products may be entering the same phase of fee compression.

Bitwise launched its solana ETF, BSOL, on NYSE Arca in October 2025, marking the first U.S.-listed vehicle to provide direct exposure to spot SOL. The fund goes beyond simple price tracking by actively staking its holdings, allowing staking rewards to contribute to fund returns after applicable expenses.

How Morgan Stanley Designed the Ethereum and Solana Trusts

The Morgan Stanley Ethereum Trust would trade on NYSE Arca under the ticker MSSE and track the Coindesk Ether Benchmark 4PM NY Settlement Rate. Alongside its proposed 0.14% fee, Morgan Stanley Investment Management intends to stake 50% to 80% of the trust’s ether under normal conditions.

BNY and Coinbase Custody would hold the ethereum trust’s assets. Staking providers and custodians would receive an aggregate 5% of staking rewards, leaving the remainder with the trust. Net rewards would be distributed monthly, but at least quarterly, though the filing does not guarantee the amount.

The Morgan Stanley Solana Trust would trade on NYSE Arca under the ticker MSOL and track the Coindesk Solana Benchmark 4PM NY Settlement Rate. It would also carry a proposed 0.14% fee. The trust may stake up to 100% of its SOL while keeping some holdings unstaked for redemptions, expenses and distributions.

BNY and Coinbase Custody would also serve as custodians for MSOL. Staking providers and custodians would receive 5% of staking rewards, leaving 95% with the trust. Net rewards would be distributed monthly, but at least quarterly, while validator block rewards and transaction fees would not accrue to shareholders.

What Morgan Stanley’s Bitcoin ETF Shows About the Strategy

Morgan Stanley has already used the same fee level in its spot bitcoin product. The Morgan Stanley Bitcoin Trust began trading under the ticker MSBT on April 8, 2026, with a 0.14% annual management fee. That undercut Blackrock’s IBIT at 0.25% and Bitwise’s spot bitcoin ETF at 0.20%.

MSBT became the first proprietary spot cryptocurrency ETF launched under the name of a major U.S. commercial bank. As of July 10, 2026, it traded at $18.47 per share and held about $364.23 million in total net assets. Its debut ranked in the top 1% of ETF launches by volume and early adoption.

The proposed ETH and SOL funds remain preliminary, and shares cannot be sold until the registration statements become effective. No firm launch dates have been announced. SEC effectiveness and subsequent asset flows would show whether Morgan Stanley’s combination of low fees, staking income and bank-backed distribution can win market share.