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Morgan Stanley to Let Clients Lend Bitcoin for Spot Crypto ETF Conversions

Felix van Dijk by Felix van Dijk
June 6, 2026
in Bitcoin News
Morgan Stanley to Let Clients Lend Bitcoin for Spot Crypto ETF Conversions Thumbnail

Morgan Stanley to Let Clients Lend Bitcoin for Spot Crypto ETF Conversions Thumbnail

Morgan Stanley is preparing to let its wealth management clients lend Bitcoin and other digital assets to facilitate in-kind creations of spot crypto exchange-traded product (ETP) shares, expanding the firm’s footprint in institutional crypto services.

The move, reported by The Block, would allow clients holding Bitcoin and other qualifying crypto assets to lend them for the purpose of creating new ETF shares through an in-kind conversion process, rather than the cash-based creation mechanism that has dominated U.S. spot crypto ETF operations.

Galaxy Digital and Morgan Stanley Wealth Management announced a referral capability for in-kind creation of spot crypto ETP shares, signaling that the infrastructure for this service is already taking shape through institutional partnerships.

How in-kind spot crypto ETF conversions work

In-kind creation allows authorized participants to deliver the underlying asset, in this case Bitcoin or another cryptocurrency, directly to an ETF issuer in exchange for new fund shares. This contrasts with cash-based creation, where an intermediary buys the crypto on the open market using cash before delivering it to the fund.

The in-kind mechanism is significant because it can reduce trading costs, minimize market impact from large orders, and offer tax efficiencies for investors who already hold the underlying asset. For Morgan Stanley clients sitting on Bitcoin positions, lending those assets for in-kind conversions provides a way to participate in ETF market-making without liquidating holdings.

Morgan Stanley had previously moved to offer spot crypto ETP shares to its client base, making this lending program a natural extension of its existing crypto product suite.

What the move signals for Bitcoin and institutional crypto access

Morgan Stanley’s decision to enable crypto asset lending for ETF conversions carries weight because of the firm’s scale. The bank’s wealth management division oversees trillions in client assets, and its willingness to build out crypto lending infrastructure reflects growing institutional comfort with digital asset operations.

The development arrives as sovereign and institutional holders have become increasingly active in managing their Bitcoin positions. The Royal Government of Bhutan recently transferred 738 BTC worth $44.88 million, illustrating the scale at which large holders now move digital assets across custodial infrastructure.

The headline also references “other assets” beyond Bitcoin, suggesting Morgan Stanley may extend the lending capability to additional cryptocurrencies with approved spot ETF products. This broader scope positions the firm to serve clients across multiple digital asset classes as the U.S. spot crypto ETF market matures.

Bitcoin has experienced sharp price volatility throughout recent months, yet firms like Morgan Stanley continue expanding services. That persistence suggests long-term institutional conviction remains intact regardless of short-term market swings.

The broader financial industry is also navigating intensifying regulatory scrutiny across crypto-adjacent products, with cases like Polymarket facing criminal scrutiny in South Korea highlighting the complex compliance landscape. Morgan Stanley’s measured, compliance-first approach to expanding crypto lending stands in contrast to that uncertainty.

Additional source references: source document 1.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.

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Royal Government of Bhutan Transfers 738 BTC Worth $44.88 Million

Felix van Dijk

Felix van Dijk

Regulation Reporter | Institutional Crypto Journalist | Power & Policy Analyst
Felix van Dijk is a European crypto journalist whose work focuses on regulation, institutional behavior, and the centers of power that shape digital-asset markets. At TheCCPress, he covers regulators, exchanges, policy conflicts, and the institutional side of crypto adoption, with a preference for stories where law, legitimacy, and market structure collide. His writing is built for readers who want more than surface-level updates and need a clearer view of who holds influence and how that influence is exercised.

“In crypto, regulation is rarely just about rules. It is about who gets legitimacy, who gets access, and who gets to define the market on acceptable terms.”

Profile
- Gender: Male
- Born: December 1987
- Based: Amsterdam, Netherlands
- Company: TheCCPress
- Website: https://theccpress.com/
- Coverage Focus: Conflicts, power, regulators, exchanges, institutions, European crypto policy

Experience
Felix has spent more than a decade working across blockchain media, research, and policy-linked reporting. His strongest background is in explaining the overlap between adoption, regulation, and institutional strategy. At TheCCPress, that makes him a natural fit for stories about exchanges, legal friction, market legitimacy, and the organizations that shape the rules of participation.

Background
With training in media and technology and a career rooted in European crypto reporting, Felix brings a policy-literate, institution-aware perspective to the newsroom. He is less interested in short-term market noise than in understanding which actors are building durable influence and how regulatory pressure changes the balance of power.

Achievements
Felix’s best work tends to connect public policy with real market consequences. He is especially strong on stories where a regulatory change, exchange decision, or institutional move creates a wider conflict about control, compliance, or narrative dominance in crypto.

Work Style
He writes in a measured, research-led way and tends to frame stories around systems rather than isolated announcements. That makes him effective in categories where the article needs to explain a conflict clearly and show why a single company, regulator, or institution matters beyond one headline.

Skills
Felix’s core strengths include crypto regulation reporting, institutional analysis, exchange coverage, investigative framing, and editorial synthesis around power and policy. He is most valuable on stories that need both context and structural interpretation.

Additional Information
Within the new TheCCPress taxonomy, Felix is one of the clearest fits for conflicts/regulation, power/regulators, power/exchanges, and people/institutions. He helps anchor the site’s authority in questions of control, legitimacy, and institutional influence.

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