April 23, 2026 ChainGPT

Warsh Vows Fed Independence as Senate Hold Over Powell Probe Keeps Crypto Markets on Edge

Warsh Vows Fed Independence as Senate Hold Over Powell Probe Keeps Crypto Markets on Edge
Kevin Warsh — President Trump’s pick to lead the Federal Reserve — told senators on April 21 that he would not take orders on interest rates, but his confirmation is stalled after a Republican senator put a procedural hold on the vote. The standoff adds another layer of uncertainty for markets already sensitive to Fed policy — including crypto. At a Senate Banking Committee hearing, Warsh insisted he has made no commitments to the White House on rate policy and pledged independence if confirmed. “The president never once asked me to commit to any particular interest rate decision, and nor would I agree to it if he had,” Warsh said. He also told senators, according to CNBC, that elected officials expressing views on rates does not meaningfully threaten Fed independence — a position Democrats pushed back on as downplaying White House pressure. Senator Elizabeth Warren called Warsh a “sock puppet,” accusing him of shifting positions to line up with Trump. Despite broad GOP backing, Republican Senator Thom Tillis announced he will block the nomination from leaving the Banking Committee until the Department of Justice drops a criminal probe into current Fed Chair Jerome Powell. That investigation concerns alleged cost overruns tied to a renovation of the Fed’s Washington headquarters and is being led by the U.S. attorney for D.C.; a subpoena against Powell was blocked in court and the prosecutor has vowed to appeal. Tillis framed his hold as a procedural demand rather than a personal objection to Warsh, telling him at the hearing: “Let’s get rid of this investigation, so I can support your confirmation.” Timing raises stakes: Powell’s term as Fed chair expires May 15, and Tillis’s move leaves Warsh’s path to confirmation unresolved ahead of that deadline. Warsh also agreed that, if confirmed, he would divest roughly $100 million in personal assets within 90 days of being sworn in. Why crypto traders should care The Fed chair’s views and the institutional independence of the Fed have direct consequences for liquidity and rate expectations. Crypto markets have been highly sensitive to U.S. rate policy during this cycle; traders have already priced in fewer Fed rate cuts in 2026, a shift that tightens the liquidity backdrop that has historically helped fuel crypto rallies. Any suggestion that a new chair could face political pressure over rate decisions adds policy risk, which can increase volatility and make it harder for digital-asset investors to price future risk and returns. Bottom line: Warsh professed independence in the hearing, but political and legal wrangling — and the looming May 15 deadline — mean the Fed leadership question remains unresolved, keeping macro and crypto markets on edge. Read more AI-generated news on: undefined/news