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Home»Cryptocurrency & Free Speech Finance»Morgan Stanley Registers Bitcoin and Solana Funds With SEC
Cryptocurrency & Free Speech Finance

Morgan Stanley Registers Bitcoin and Solana Funds With SEC

News RoomBy News Room6 months agoNo Comments2 Mins Read716 Views
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Morgan Stanley Registers Bitcoin and Solana Funds With SEC
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In brief

  • Morgan Stanley submitted S-1 forms for spot Bitcoin and Solana ETFs pending regulatory approval.
  • The funds will be passive investment vehicles tracking cryptocurrency prices without yet naming custodians or fees.
  • Bitcoin ETFs now hold $119 billion in assets, while Solana ETFs have emerged as a newer investment category since October.

Wall Street titan Morgan Stanley submitted registrations for spot Bitcoin and Solana exchange-traded products early Tuesday morning.

At the time of writing, Bitcoin had gained nearly 1% in the past day and was changing hands for $94,187. Meanwhile, Solana had bumped up nearly 6% to trade for about $143.

“Morgan Stanley Bitcoin Trust and Morgan Stanley Solana Trust are pending regulatory approval and would be passive investment vehicles that seek to track the performance of the price of the relevant cryptocurrency,” the bank wrote in a press release.

The S-1 forms don’t yet list custodians or crypto counterparties, who the bank says will manage the U.S. dollar-to-BTC and -SOL conversions on its behalf. The bank didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment from Decrypt.

The registration form describes the funds’ fee structures, but doesn’t yet specify what those fees will be. Unlike some of its competitors, the Morgan Stanley fund is making use of the bank’s name without relying on a joint venture or white-label sponsor.

For example, the ARK 21Shares Bitcoin ETF is a joint venture that uses Cathie Wood’s Ark Invest investment firm for distribution, branding, and portfolio strategy, and 21Shares for the crypto infrastructure.

Bitcoin ETFs first began trading in January 2024. In the past couple days, BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust has seen its biggest inflows in the past three months as the price of Bitcoin surged from its holiday lull. Analysts have credited that to Bitcoin portfolio rebalancing while institutional investors priced in three more years of Trump’s “America First” policy.

Bitcoin ETFs have grown to account for $119 billion worth of assets under management, with BlackRock’s IBIT accounting for $72.8 billion worth of holdings.

Solana ETFs are a newer cohort, after the Bitwise’s Solana ETF hit U.S. exchanges in October 2025. It’s since been joined by the VanEck Solana ETF, Fidelity Solana Fund, and Grayscale Solana Trust ETF.

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Upon her release, Sotoudeh thanked those who had supported her. “I have gained my freedom thanks to those who have always cared about us political prisoners in Iran,” she stated in a social media post. “We have many friends all over the world, from Iranians to non-Iranians whose hearts ache for the plight of modern humans who are constantly forced to pay a price to live a normal and dignified life.” The terrible irony of the situation is that if this had happened to someone else, Sotoudeh herself would have been the first port of call when looking for help, and she would no doubt have been one of the first to offer it.  Sotoudeh began practising law in 2003, after spending some time in her early career as a newspaper journalist writing about human rights violations. She worked on cases concerning children’s rights, representing juveniles sentenced to death or children facing domestic abuse, as well as cases involving women, ethnic minorities and religious minorities. Thus began a long, impressive career in fighting for human rights in Iran. Her husband Reza Khandan, a graphic designer turned activist whom she met at a hiking group and married in 1995, confirmed that her intention was always to be on the front lines of the fight for the protection of human rights. “Even before she became a lawyer I could see how much she wanted to help everyone,” he said in the 2020 documentary Nasrin.  Sotoudeh was one of the first to join the Campaign for One Million Signatures, a movement launched by Iranian women in 2006 to collect signatures in support of changing laws that were discriminatory against women. Although the movement garnered international support and acclaim, it was heavily suppressed by the authorities in Iran, who arrested and jailed many of the activists taking part in the campaign. Sotoudeh represented several of the persecuted campaign members herself and soon found herself in the crosshairs of the state. She was arrested for the first time in June 2008 while preparing to attend a gathering in Tehran to commemorate the National Day of Solidarity of Iranian Women. After representing several of the other women who were also arrested, she was put on trial herself in February 2009 for disturbing the public and disobeying the police, although she was never sentenced.  Refusing to be cowed by the experience, Sotoudeh continued to fight for women’s rights in the country, forming the Coalition of Women’s Rights Movement in the run up to the presidential election in 2009. This once more evoked the anger of the Iranian authorities, and she was arrested for the second time in 2010 on charges of spreading propaganda and conspiring to harm state security. This time, her detention was longer and she was kept in solitary confinement and denied visits or phone calls to her family, leading her to go on hunger strike for several weeks. In January 2011, Sotoudeh was sentenced to 11 years in jail before being released in September 2013 along with ten other political prisoners.  Sotoudeh continued to speak out against human rights violations in Iran, representing political prisoners and activists including members of the Girls of Revolution Street group who publicly removed their hijabs to protest Iran’s compulsory hijab law. 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A letter signed by 60 members of the European Parliament demanding her release from prison in 2018 described her as “an immensely courageous and respected lawyer”, while Nobel Peace Prize-winning lawyer and writer Shirin Ebadi lauded her as an inspiration, writing in Time magazine in 2021 that “as she strives to promote human rights and human values, Nasrin Sotoudeh inspires others to follow in her footsteps.” Sotoudeh is an example of perseverance in the face of intimidation and oppression. Her case – which is unfortunately not an isolated incident – shows Iran at its worst by exemplifying the cruel and undemocratic actions of the state in their crackdown against dissidents, but also at its best through the efforts of those within the country refusing to back down, demonstrating that there are always people who are willing to fight back. 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