Morgan Stanley Proposes 0.14% Fees for ETH and SOL ETFs | Coinlive

Morgan Stanley ETH and SOL ETF fees are the focus of a new SEC filing set, with the brief pointing to a proposed 0.14% charge for both products while keeping the paperwork in draft form rather than at a confirmed launch stage.

The research brief anchors the story to an SEC EDGAR index entry and to amended registration statement pages filed at this S-1/A filing, this companion S-1/A page, and this related SEC filing page. On the evidence available in those URLs, the narrow publishable fact is a proposed fee term for ETH and SOL ETF paperwork, not a launch notice.

What the SEC filing set shows

The clearest term surfaced by the brief is the 0.14% management fee. Because that figure appears in an amended registration statement cited by the brief, it can be reported as a proposed cost disclosure, but not as a final operating term.

The same SEC record also keeps the story at the filing stage. The S-1/A designation and the linked EDGAR index trail show amended paperwork, which means final terms can still change before any approval or trading date is established.

The dual-asset framing also comes from the filing set itself. The brief ties ETH and SOL to the same small cluster of SEC archive links, which is enough to describe this as a single pricing story spanning both assets, but not enough to add claims about product structure beyond what those pages support.

What can be said, and what cannot

A disclosed fee matters because it is one of the few concrete terms visible before launch, and the EDGAR filing trail is the only verified basis in this brief for discussing the proposal. What the brief does not establish is approval timing, investor demand, or how the products would compare with any rival fund once listed.

That distinction keeps this item separate from broader token coverage on Coinlive, including Ethereum Foundation Co-Executive Director Hsiao-Wei Wang Steps Down and SOL, HYPE, ZEC Jump as Bitcoin Reclaims $63K. The SEC filing page cited here supports a disclosure update, not a fresh claim about Ethereum or Solana network activity.

The same caution applies against reading too much market signal into the proposal. Readers following Coinlive coverage such as Top Crypto News Today, June 20: Bitcoin Yield Trade Drops Below Par, Analyst Warns Strategy May Sell 50,000 BTC by 2028, and Bitcoin Moonshot Outlook: When Analysts See a Rebound are looking at wider market narratives, while the SEC material here supports only the proposed ETF fee disclosure.

The next evidence-based checkpoint is another SEC filing update that either revises the amended registration statements again or replaces them with a later-stage document. Until that happens, the proposed fee should be read as a filed term under review, not as a completed ETF launch condition.

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.

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.