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So Morgan Stanley just filed for their own spot Bitcoin ETF and honestly this is getting real. They're bringing in a major custody provider to hold the actual bitcoin, plus BNY Mellon handling all the admin stuff. This proposed fund would track BTC directly instead of using futures or derivatives, which is kind of the whole point.
What caught my eye is how serious they're going with security - cold storage vaults, offline keys, the whole institutional playbook. They're even using that CoinDesk benchmark for daily pricing, pulling data from major spot exchanges to set the value each day. It's basically treating bitcoin like any other institutional asset at this point.
The proposed structure mirrors how they'd handle traditional securities, which makes sense for a major bank. They're being transparent about insurance too - it exists but it's pooled and might not cover everything. BNY's basically wearing multiple hats here: custodian, administrator, transfer agent, handling all the moving pieces.
Bitcoin's still stuck below that $74K resistance level, so timing-wise it's interesting they're pushing this proposed ETF now. But the bigger picture is institutions aren't slowing down on crypto infrastructure. This proposed product is just another signal that spot Bitcoin exposure is becoming standard institutional fare.