Morgan Stanley y Charles Schwab se apresuran hacia las criptomonedas: ¿qué ven venir?
Burns Brief
Las entradas netas acumuladas de ETF de Bitcoin al contado negociados en EE. UU. alcanzaron aproximadamente 59 dólares. El sentimiento del mercado se está volviendo positivo, y los comerciantes y analistas señalan un posible impulso de seguimiento en las próximas sesiones. Esté atento a la reacción de $BTC: un movimiento decisivo por encima o por debajo de niveles clave confirmará la próxima tendencia.
The cumulative net inflows of US-traded spot Bitcoin ETFs has reached roughly $59.7 billion, with BlackRock's IBIT alone holding $66.7 billion in assets. Morgan Stanley and Charles Schwab are now pushing direct crypto trading into ordinary brokerage accounts. The driver is that both firms can already see demand within their own client base, with clients executing trades elsewhere. Charles Schwab's clients hold about 20% of US spot crypto exchange -traded products, which helps explain the timing. Demand is already concentrated inside Schwab's franchise, and every trade those clients execute on Coinbase or Robinhood is revenue and behavioral data leaving the brokerage. Morgan Stanley faces the same math as E*Trade's 8.6 million self-directed clients, who generated 1.029 million average daily revenue trades in 2025 through a channel holding $1.67 trillion in assets. The ETF era created a specific problem for both firms, as the products gave clients Bitcoin exposure inside familiar accounts, while spot trading, execution, and account stickiness went elsewhere. A Schwab client who holds IBIT and then trades spot Bitcoin on Coinbase is splitting their financial life in two. Schwab gets assets under management, and Coinbase gets the trading relationship. An infographic highlights four client metrics, including Schwab's 20% share of U.S. spot crypto ETPs, showing why both brokerages believe crypto demand already sits inside their platforms. Why attack now Both firms chose to move while the pure-play crypto model is threatened. Robinhood's first-quarter results show app crypto notional volume down 48% year over year to $24 billion, with crypto revenue down 47%. The infrastructure costs of building a crypto product are fixed regardless of market conditions, but launching into a lull gives compliance, pricing, and service teams time to work out the friction before retail enthusiasm returns at scale. Incumbents rarely attack pure-play competitors at the peak of a cycle, moving
Key Takeaways
- The cumulative net inflows of US-traded spot Bitcoin ETFs has reached roughly $59
- Morgan Stanley and Charles Schwab are now pushing direct crypto trading into ordinary brokerage accounts
- The driver is that both firms can already see demand within their own client base, with clients executing trades elsewhere
- Charles Schwab's clients hold about 20% of US spot crypto exchange -traded products, which helps explain the timing
- Demand is already concentrated inside Schwab's franchise, and every trade those clients execute on Coinbase or Robinhood is revenue and behavioral data leaving the brokerage