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Kevin Warsh Senate Hearing Set for April 16 – Crypto Markets Are Already Watching

Kevin Warsh Senate Hearing Set for April 16 – Crypto Markets Are Already Watching

Kevin Warsh, Trump's nominee for Federal Reserve chairman, is set to appear before the Senate Banking Committee on April 16. Bitcoin is trading around $67,000, market sentiment is deep in fear territory, and investors are tracking the hearing not for the ceremony but for Warsh's concrete positions on interest rates and the Fed's balance sheet.

Key takeaways:
  • Hearing is scheduled for April 16 – Powell’s term expires May 15.
  • Warsh plans to shrink the Fed’s $6.7 trillion balance sheet before cutting rates – direct pressure on risk assets.
  • Market odds for a June rate cut have collapsed to just 11%.
  • Warsh sees Bitcoin differently from most Fed figures but remains skeptical of the broader crypto market.

The process is not guaranteed to go smoothly. Senator Thom Tillis has stated he will not vote for any Fed nominee while the Department of Justice investigation into Jerome Powell remains open – an investigation tied to expenses from a costly renovation of Fed office buildings.

Senator Elizabeth Warren has opposed the nomination from the start, describing Warsh as a tool of the White House. The two opposition positions are independent of each other, which complicates vote-counting for Republican leadership on the committee.

For crypto markets, the political maneuvering is secondary. What matters is what Warsh actually thinks about monetary policy – and here the picture is not straightforwardly bearish. He has publicly criticized the Fed for dragging its feet on rate cuts, called the current stance a mark against the institution, and spoken about a “regime change” in how the Fed manages its balance sheet. But that regime change has a specific sequence: shrink the balance sheet first – currently sitting around $6.7 trillion – and only then discuss rate cuts. The distinction is significant and markets are already pricing it in.

Why Crypto Is Nervous

That sequence is precisely what is making crypto investors uneasy. Quantitative tightening pulls liquidity out of the system. Fewer dollars in circulation means less appetite for risk. It was the opposite environment – cheap money and an expanding balance sheet – that pushed Bitcoin from $16,000 in late 2022 to above $73,000 in early 2024. If Warsh moves in the other direction, assets like Bitcoin and Ethereum face sustained pressure, particularly if a stronger dollar tightens conditions further.

Polymarket data shows how markets have already recalibrated: the probability of a rate cut at the April meeting sits at just 1%, June carries an 11% chance, and July has dropped to 21% – down 36 percentage points from earlier expectations. Even December is down 21 points. Bitcoin is at $67,000 and the broader sentiment index remains in fear territory.

Warsh and Bitcoin: More Nuanced Than It Looks

Warsh is not simply another hawk with contempt for digital assets. He has repeatedly described Bitcoin as a “policeman of monetary policy” – an indicator of confidence in central banks rather than just a speculative instrument.

He has told younger investors directly that Bitcoin is their generation’s gold. But that sympathy stops at Bitcoin. He remains skeptical of altcoins, viewing them as a symptom of an era of easy money, and is an outspoken opponent of retail CBDCs, citing privacy concerns. Instead he backs a wholesale digital dollar designed for settlements between financial institutions, not for public use.

What to Watch on April 16

As reported by CNBC, on April 16, senators will press Warsh on all of this – and his answers will move markets. If he confirms that balance sheet reduction is the priority and rate cuts are a distant prospect, the reaction will be negative for risk assets. If he signals flexibility – particularly given Trump’s ongoing pressure for cheaper credit and geopolitical uncertainty around Iran pushing oil prices higher – the damage may be contained. Some analysts have already pushed their first rate cut forecast from June to September 2026, and a hawkish performance at the hearing could push that further.

The formal process does not end with the committee either – after a recommendation vote, the nomination goes to a full Senate floor vote where a simple majority confirms. Whether that happens before Powell’s May 15 exit depends on how quickly Tillis and others decide to act.


The information provided in this article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, or trading advice. Coindoo.com does not endorse or recommend any specific investment strategy or cryptocurrency. Always conduct your own research and consult with a licensed financial advisor before making any investment decisions.

Author

Reporter at Coindoo

Alex is an experienced financial journalist and cryptocurrency enthusiast. With over 8 years of experience covering the crypto, blockchain, and fintech industries, he is well-versed in the complex and ever-evolving world of digital assets. His insightful and thought-provoking articles provide readers with a clear picture of the latest developments and trends in the market. His approach allows him to break down complex ideas into accessible and in-depth content. Follow his publications to stay up to date with the most important trends and topics.

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