06/22/2026
Jun 22: Morgan Stanley Reveals World’s Cheapest Crypto ETF Fees at 0.14%
Bank of England Sets $50 Billion Stablecoin Issuance Cap, Drops Retail · Michael Saylor’s Strategy Buys 520 More BTC, Now Holds Over 4% of All · Secret Network Bridge Exploited for $4.7 Million via ‘Infinite Mint’ B
Market Snapshot
- Bitcoin (BTC): $65,161.99 (+1.52% 24h)
- Ethereum (ETH): $1,764.43 (+2.24% 24h)
- Solana (SOL): $74.43 (+1.09% 24h)
- Notable: Morgan Stanley to launch ETFs with 0.14% fees, the lowest globally
Top Stories
- Bank of England Sets $50 Billion Stablecoin Issuance Cap, Drops Retail Limits
- Michael Saylor’s Strategy Buys 520 More BTC, Now Holds Over 4% of All Bitcoin
- Secret Network Bridge Exploited for $4.7 Million via ‘Infinite Mint’ Bug
- Morgan Stanley Reveals World’s Cheapest Crypto ETF Fees at 0.14%
Key Takeaways
- Regulators are easing restrictions on stablecoins, signaling a shift toward mainstream adoption.
- Institutional players continue to accumulate bitcoin, leading to increased supply concentration.
- Security gaps in cross-chain infrastructure remain a major risk, with multi-million dollar exploits persisting.
- ETF fee wars are intensifying, with Morgan Stanley setting a new global low at 0.14%.
What to Watch
The U.K.’s stablecoin market launch in 2027 will test the impact of the new $50 billion issuance cap and relaxed retail limits. Watch for further institutional bitcoin accumulation and potential regulatory responses to large holders. Security in cross-chain bridges remains a critical area as exploits continue to surface. The ETF fee race could prompt further cuts from competitors, reshaping the investment landscape for crypto assets.