Kevin Warsh’s Fed nomination hints at Bitcoin-friendly future

President Donald Trump announced he will nominate former Federal Reserve Governor Kevin Warsh to lead the US central bank.

In a Jan. 30 post on Truth Social, the president confirmed the selection, writing:

“I have known Kevin for a long period of time, and have no doubt that he will go down as one of the GREAT Fed Chairmen, maybe the best. On top of everything else, he is ‘central casting,’ and he will never let you down.”

Trump’s move follows months of internal jockeying over who would replace Chair Jerome Powell when his term ends in May. Warsh, 55, served on the Fed’s board from 2006 to 2011 and later worked in economic policy, finance, and academia.

His return to the central bank is viewed by industry players as a shift toward a leader more willing than Powell to shrink the Fed’s balance sheet and rein in liquidity. This outcome typically pressures speculative assets, even if the policy-rate path eventually turns more dovish.

Meanwhile, the nomination lands as investors are already trying to price a leadership change into the 2026 rate path. The Fed held rates steady this week, pausing its easing cycle, and interest-rate futures have pointed to June as the next likely cut, which would occur under the next chair.

A rate-cut nominee with a balance-sheet plan

Trump has repeatedly criticized Powell for not lowering rates faster, and he has signaled he wants a chair aligned with pushing down borrowing costs.

This message resonates with households facing higher mortgage rates and with a White House focused on growth and federal financing costs.

Warsh, however, is not being interpreted as a simple “rates down” pick.

While his current stance on interest rates is that they should be lower and he has argued that AI-driven innovation can help contain inflationary pressures, his history at the Fed matters for how markets handicap the risk of swift easing.

At the time, Warsh took a tougher stance on inflation than his latest commentary suggests.

This contrast has led some investors to view him as a moderate choice unlikely to pursue aggressive cuts immediately.

Notably, this tension has shown up most clearly in the dollar reaction. Robin Brooks, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, wrote that Warsh is a “really good pick” for Fed chair and is known as a hawk.

However, Brooks said the market is asking what Warsh promised to get the nod, which is why the dollar (after a sharp decline in recent days) is not rallying despite news that should normally support its uptrend.

Meanwhile, some macro commentary pushed the “two levers” thesis even further.

Financial analysis platform MacroMicro summarized the prospective shift as “Shrink the Fed, Ease the Rate,” framing it as a hawkish-dove paradox.

This approach entails aggressive balance-sheet reduction in exchange for modest rate cuts and marks a broader shift away from demand management toward a supply-side growth model.

Warsh’s crypto posture: software first, dollar first

Warsh has not consistently pitched himself as a crypto booster, and his public writing often separates blockchain infrastructure from the idea of private tokens functioning as money.

In a 2022 Wall Street Journal op-ed, Warsh argued that “cryptocurrency” is a misnomer and framed it primarily as software. At the same time, he urged the US to pursue a stronger “digital dollar” approach tied to privacy and dollar competitiveness.

According to him:

“The US should announce the essential design features of a digital dollar to be used exclusively for wholesale transactions. The existing wholesale payment system is slow, cumbersome, opaque, and expensive. The new regime would more effectively intermediate payments among the government, financial firms, and foreign central banks. Settlements would be made faster. Payments would be cheaper. Cross-border transfers would be seamless. Money creation would be more transparent.”

For Bitcoin, that framing cuts both ways. On the one hand, a Fed chair who treats crypto primarily as technology could be more comfortable modernizing payments plumbing and clarifying how regulated institutions interact with tokenized rails, developments that often benefit stablecoins, custody, and on-chain settlement.

On the other hand, his dollar-first lens and tacit support for a wholesale central bank digital currency (CBDC) in the guise of a digital dollar are less aligned with the “Bitcoin as alternative money” storyline.

Still, crypto industry figures such as Bitwise’s CEO, Hunter Horsley, have portrayed Warsh as a critical supporter of the industry.

They describe him as pro-crypto and cited his advisory roles, arguing that he understands Bitcoin’s macro narrative, has invested in crypto, fintech, and AI companies, and brings a policymaker’s understanding of how liquidity and regulation intersect.

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