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Morgan Stanley Ethereum and Solana ETF documents
Morgan Stanley has updated documents tied to its proposed Ethereum and Solana ETFs, with the revised paperwork naming Coinbase for custody and staking services. The change is a filing update to product documentation, not a regulatory approval, and it clarifies which service provider would handle asset safekeeping and staking if the products move forward.
The development is a documentation update covering proposed Ethereum and Solana exchange-traded funds. It should be read as a revision to the paperwork, not as a sign that either product has cleared its regulatory review. For related coverage, see Morgan Stanley's Bitcoin ETF Holdings Rise to 3,389 BTC: What the Data Suggests.
Updated filings restate product terms and operational details; they do not, on their own, confirm a launch date or a final decision. The distinction matters because a revised document reflects continued work on a proposal rather than a green light.
The Most Material Change: A Named Service Provider
The most concrete detail disclosed in the revised documents is the naming of Coinbase for custody and staking. Identifying a specific provider is a structural change, because it fills in who would operate the parts of the product that hold and stake the underlying assets. This follows Morgan Stanley’s earlier revised Ethereum and Solana ETF filings, which set the groundwork for the current documentation.
Why Coinbase Was Named for Custody and Staking Services
Coinbase’s inclusion is the differentiating detail in this update. Custody and staking are operational roles that shape how a proposed product is structured and how its compliance story is presented to reviewers and investors.
Custody: Holding the Underlying Assets
In ETF operations, custody refers to the secure safekeeping of the fund’s underlying assets. Naming a custodian tells reviewers and prospective investors who is responsible for holding the Ethereum and Solana backing the products. Coinbase already serves in similar infrastructure roles across the sector, as seen when BlackRock moved bitcoin and ether to Coinbase Prime.
Staking: Earning Yield on Held Assets
Staking, as referenced in the documents, involves committing the held assets to help secure the underlying networks in exchange for rewards. Assigning that function to a named provider separates it from routine custody, because staking introduces an active yield component rather than passive safekeeping.
What the Filing Changes Could Mean for Ethereum and Solana ETF Momentum
Updated filings typically signal that an issuer remains engaged and is refining product terms. Naming service providers for both Ethereum and Solana can be read as part of assembling the infrastructure a fund would need before launch.
That said, a documentation update does not guarantee launch timing or approval. Both the Ethereum and Solana products remain proposals, and the presence of named providers speaks to readiness rather than a confirmed outcome.
Institutional interest in Solana-linked products has been visible elsewhere, including record activity in Solana tokenized stock volume. Baseline spot references for the two assets are tracked on public market pages for Ethereum and Solana.
Regulatory Context Around Staking in Crypto ETF Structures
Staking references in ETF-related documents carry structural and regulatory relevance. Because staking generates rewards through active network participation, it can raise questions that go beyond the simpler mechanics of holding an asset.
Why Staking Language Draws More Scrutiny Than Custody
Custody language is largely routine, describing who holds the assets. Staking language attracts more attention because it introduces yield and network participation, and document wording may be revised over time to address compliance considerations tied to that activity.
FAQ on Morgan Stanley’s Ethereum and Solana ETF Document Update
Are the Ethereum and Solana ETFs approved? No. The update is a revision to product documents, not a regulatory approval.
What changed in the filing? The revised documents name Coinbase for custody and staking services tied to the proposed Ethereum and Solana products.
What is Coinbase’s role? Coinbase is named to provide custody, the safekeeping of the underlying assets, and staking services. Morgan Stanley’s broader crypto footprint also includes bitcoin holdings exceeding 4,700 BTC.
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.