Morgan Stanley has officially signaled its intent to vertically integrate its crypto operations, confirming a proprietary digital asset wallet for late 2026 and filing S-1 registrations for three branded exchange-traded funds (ETFs), including a spot Solana product.
The disclosures, confirmed by wealth management head Jed Finn via Barron’s, outline a roadmap to transform the bank from a passive intermediary into a full-stack crypto infrastructure provider. Markets reacted mutedly to the long lead time, with Bitcoin (BTC) consolidating at $91,511 (-0.4%) and Solana (SOL) slipping to $136 (-2.6%).
The ‘Walled Garden’ Strategy
According to Finn, the bank will roll out trading for Bitcoin, Ethereum, and Solana on its E*Trade platform in the first half of 2026. This will be followed in H2 by a proprietary digital wallet designed to hold not just cryptocurrencies, but tokenized real-world assets (RWAs) such as private equity and corporate debt.
The move represents a distinct shift in Wall Street’s approach. While peers like Wells Fargo have largely acted as distribution pipes for BlackRock’s products, Morgan Stanley is building the entire rail: the trading venue (E*Trade), the custody layer (the wallet), and now, the financial product itself.
The S-1 Filings: Staking & Solana
SEC filings submitted January 6 and 7 reveal the bank’s ambition to manufacture its own yield-bearing vehicles. The proposed Morgan Stanley Ethereum Trust explicitly includes a staking component, utilizing third-party providers to generate yield, a feature heavily scrutinized by regulators in previous cycles.
Most notably, the bank filed for a Morgan Stanley Solana Trust. This makes Morgan Stanley the first G-SIB (Global Systemically Important Bank) to attempt a proprietary spot Solana ETF, validating the network’s status as the third institutional pillar alongside Bitcoin and Ethereum.
Market Reaction
Despite the institutional validation, immediate price action remained tepid, likely due to the 2026 execution timeline. Ethereum (ETH) hovered around $3,116, struggling to break resistance despite the “staking ETF” narrative. Traders appear to be pricing in the regulatory friction of a major bank issuing a staking product, rather than the eventual liquidity unlock.