On one side, you have Morgan Stanley pulling in $100 million during its Bitcoin ETF’s first week. Goldman Sachs filing its first-ever crypto product. Institutional money is flooding in at a pace that would have been unthinkable three years ago. On the other side, Bitcoin can’t hold $76,000 for more than a few hours.
These two facts shouldn’t coexist, but they do. Let’s figure out what exactly is happening in the current crypto market.
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The ETF Arms Race Is Real
Morgan Stanley’s MSBT launched on April 8 and immediately became the firm’s most successful ETF debut across any asset class. The fund charges 0.14% annually, cheaper than anything else in the category, including BlackRock’s IBIT at 0.25%. That fee gap matters less than the distribution network behind it. Morgan Stanley has roughly 16,000 financial advisors who now have an in-house Bitcoin product to offer clients instead of pointing them to a competitor.
Six days later, Goldman Sachs filed for something different: a Bitcoin Premium Income ETF. It doesn’t hold Bitcoin, but buys shares of existing spot BTC ETFs and sells covered call options against them, generating monthly income for shareholders. If you’ve ever looked at JPMorgan’s JEPI fund, $35 billion AUM, you know the template. Goldman is applying that same playbook to Bitcoin because the plain spot ETF race is already over. BlackRock won it with $53 billion in IBIT. Competing head-on would be pointless.
Morgan Stanley went for straightforward spot exposure, while Goldman went for a yield product. Neither firm is treating crypto like a fad they’re humoring. You don’t build income-oriented instruments around assets you expect to disappear.
So Why Isn’t the Price Cooperating?
Bitcoin touched $76,000 on Tuesday and immediately reversed to below $74,000. This has happened repeatedly since February. The $75K–$76K range is a brick wall.
Funding rates on Binance’s Bitcoin perpetual contracts have been negative for 46 consecutive days, even as open interest climbs. Traders keep opening new short positions rather than unwinding them. The market is leaning bearish while institutions are leaning in.
K33 Research’s Vetle Lunde notes that extended negative-funding regimes like this one have historically preceded sharp upside moves. The comparison points are late 2022 (post-FTX) and mid-2021 (China mining ban). Both were ugly periods that turned out to be excellent entries. But “historically preceded” is doing a lot of heavy lifting in that sentence, and anyone who’s traded crypto for more than a cycle knows that pattern recognition has a mixed track record here.
Institutional demand through ETFs and retail/derivative positioning are operating on completely different timelines. ETF buyers are allocating quarterly. Perp traders are reacting hourly. The two groups barely interact, and right now the short-term crowd is setting the price.
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Ethereum’s Quiet Improvement
ETH has been getting some attention for the first time in months, and it’s mostly deserved. The ETH/BTC ratio climbed to a three-month high near 0.0313, up from a low of 0.028 in February. Ethereum outpaced Bitcoin over the past week, 4% versus 3.9%, which doesn’t sound like much until you consider how relentlessly ETH has underperformed since late 2024.
The on-chain picture looks better than the price. Stablecoin supply on Ethereum reached $180 billion, an all-time high and roughly 60% of the global stablecoin market. Large wallets holding 100,000+ ETH have returned to profitability for the first time since the February drawdown. The Ethereum Foundation also launched a $1 million audit subsidy program, covering up to 30% of smart contract audit costs.
None of this has translated into a price breakout yet. ETH still trades more than 50% below its 52-week high. If you hold ETH you already know how wide the gap between “improving fundamentals” and “price goes up” can be.
Geopolitics as the Actual Catalyst
Last week’s rally had nothing to do with crypto. US–Iran peace talks produced reports of an extended ceasefire over the weekend. Stocks jumped, oil fell, and crypto tagged along. BTC gained 5%, ETH gained 7%, and the total market cap rose to $2.6 trillion.
By last Thursday, the gains were fading. Profit-taking kicked in, and the usual dynamic returned: crypto participates in risk-on moves but doesn’t drive them. The S&P 500 set another record on Wednesday, yet Bitcoin didn’t.
Crypto’s correlation to traditional risk assets has tightened since the tariff chaos earlier this year. When equities rally on geopolitical relief, crypto rallies a bit less. When equities sell off on macro fear, crypto sells off a bit more. The “uncorrelated asset” thesis is on pause.
What to Watch
Can BTC close above $76,000 on a weekly basis? Two months of failed attempts make that level mean something. If it breaks, the crowded-short positioning could unwind fast.
The bigger issue is whether institutional ETF flows eventually overwhelm derivative market dynamics. Morgan Stanley’s advisors haven’t even started recommending MSBT to most clients yet. Goldman’s product hasn’t launched. The supply of new institutional demand is growing, and Bitcoin’s supply isn’t.
None of that matters if the macro deteriorates. Tariff uncertainty hasn’t gone away. Oil prices are still elevated, and crypto hasn’t figured out how to decouple from traditional markets during stress.
For now, we’re stuck with a market where the buyers are patient and the sellers are nervous. That combination always resolves, but not on anyone’s preferred schedule.
Disclaimer: Please note that the contents of this article are not financial or investing advice. The information provided in this article is the author’s opinion only and should not be considered as offering trading or investing recommendations. We do not make any warranties about the completeness, reliability and accuracy of this information. The cryptocurrency market suffers from high volatility and occasional arbitrary movements. Any investor, trader, or regular crypto users should research multiple viewpoints and be familiar with all local regulations before committing to an investment.