Morgan Stanley Seeks U.S. National Trust Bank Charter to Hold Crypto
Morgan Stanley has submitted an application to the U.S. Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) for a de novo national trust bank charter. The aim is to establish a federally regulated trust bank that can directly custody digital assets such as Bitcoin, Ethereum, and other tokens on behalf of clients. The OCC filing was first reported by Bloomberg and appeared on the regulator’s public listing on February 18, 2026.
Charter and Business Model
The proposed entity, to be named Morgan Stanley Digital Trust, National Association (MSDTNA), would operate as a national trust bank under federal oversight. A national trust charter is a specialized banking license focused on fiduciary services including custody, asset safekeeping, and related trust activities, rather than traditional deposit-taking or commercial lending.

Under this structure, Morgan Stanley intends to:
- Hold digital assets in custody for institutional and high-net-worth clients.
- Support client-directed transactions such as purchases, sales, swaps, and token transfers.
- Provide staking services on a fiduciary basis.
- Potentially engage in trading activities within a regulated framework.
This approach reflects a strategic shift toward bringing critical infrastructure in-house. A federally chartered trust bank can reduce reliance on third-party custodians and align custody operations with regulated control environments.
Context: Institutional Crypto Adoption
Traditional banks and crypto-native firms have increasingly pursued national trust charters as the regulatory environment in the U.S. clarifies. Conditional approvals for trust bank charters have been granted to several firms, including crypto infrastructure providers and exchanges, under OCC oversight. The charter trend is part of a broader regulatory push to bring digital asset custody and related services under uniform federal supervision.
Morgan Stanley’s filing follows other institutional moves such as applications from established crypto firms and conditional approvals for entities like Crypto.com and BitGo, reinforcing a competitive landscape for regulated crypto infrastructure.
Strategic Drivers and Services
Morgan Stanley has gradually expanded its digital asset offerings in recent years. The bank has:
- Filed registrations to launch spot Bitcoin, Ethereum, and Solana exchange-traded funds (ETFs) in early 2026.
- Enabled retail digital asset trading through partnerships on its E*Trade platform.
- Appointed senior leadership to oversee digital asset strategy.
A trust charter could accelerate these initiatives by internalizing custody and staking services and offering them alongside trading and advisory products within a regulated banking framework.
Implications for the Financial System
The application signals a mainstreaming of crypto custodial services into the regulated banking system. If approved, Morgan Stanley would compete directly with crypto-native custodians, potentially attracting institutional capital that prioritizes federally supervised custody.
National trust charters may also tighten operational risk controls by consolidating custody and transaction services under established bank governance. At the same time, the expansion of regulated crypto infrastructure highlights the increasing intersection between traditional finance and digital asset markets, with broader consequences for institutional adoption and regulatory norms.
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Fintech Monster
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