With a minimum buy-in of $10 million, Morgan Stanley has made clear this is not a product built for small players. The Wall Street giant quietly unveiled its Stablecoin Reserves Portfolio on Thursday, a new offering that lets stablecoin issuers deposit the cash backing their digital tokens into one of the bank’s money market funds and collect interest while they wait.
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A Fund Built Around Compliance
The portfolio sits inside Morgan Stanley’s Institutional Liquidity Funds trust, known as MSNXX. According to the bank, the fund holds cash, short-dated US Treasury securities maturing within 93 days, and overnight repurchase agreements secured by those same Treasuries.
It targets a stable $1 net asset value, prioritizing capital preservation and daily access to funds. A 0.15% management fee applies. Morgan Stanley said the offering is designed to meet the requirements of the Guiding and Establishing National Innovation for US Stablecoins Act — the GENIUS Act — a federal law signed in July that set the first formal rules for stablecoin issuers operating in the US.
The law’s passage appeared to open a door. Western Union and Zelle were among the payment companies that moved into the stablecoin space following its enactment.
Amy Oldenburg, who heads Morgan Stanley’s digital asset strategy, said in a statement that finding new ways to work with stablecoin issuers is part of a broader push to update financial infrastructure.
While shares in the fund are expected to be held mostly by stablecoin issuers, reports indicate the fund may also accept other qualified investors.
MORGAN STANLEY LAUNCHES STABLECOIN RESERVES FUND
Morgan Stanley Investment Management has launched the Stablecoin Reserves Portfolio (MSNXX). It is a government money market fund built exclusively for stablecoin issuers.
The fund aligns with reserve requirements set out under… pic.twitter.com/ynDaPGPr8y
— BSCN (@BSCNews) April 24, 2026
Morgan Stanley’s Bigger Crypto Push
The stablecoin product is just one piece of a much larger expansion. Earlier this month, the bank launched the Morgan Stanley Bitcoin Trust — its own Bitcoin exchange-traded fund — which pulled in over $170 million in net inflows within weeks of its debut.
The firm has also filed paperwork with US securities regulators to list funds tied to Ether and staked Solana. In February, a national trust banking charter application was submitted to the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency.
If approved, the charter would allow Morgan Stanley to hold crypto assets on behalf of clients, execute trades, and handle transfers directly.
All of this is coming from one of the largest investment banks on the planet. Morgan Stanley manages more than $6 trillion in client assets through roughly 16,000 financial advisers.
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What The Offering Signals
The Stablecoin Reserves Portfolio positions Morgan Stanley not just as a firm that trades or holds digital assets, but as one that now wants to serve the companies issuing them.
Stablecoin issuers need somewhere safe and regulated to park the cash or short-term securities that back their tokens — and now a major US bank is pitching itself as that destination.
Data from Morgan Stanley’s website confirms the $10 million entry floor, placing the product firmly in the institutional category.
Featured image from Banking Dive, chart from TradingView
