Trump’s Fed Pick, Kevin Warsh, Warns of Tighter Liquidity: What It Means for BitcoinOn Tuesday, Kevin Warsh, Donald Trump’s choice to replace Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, testified before the Senate Banking Committee.
He promised to be independent from the White House but did not promise to cut rates right away, leaving market watchers to try and figure out what a Warsh-led Fed would mean for liquidity and risk assets like Bitcoin (BTC).
A Fed Shift From Rates to Balance Sheet
The hearing had plenty of headline moments. Warsh told senators the Fed has “lost its way” and needs fundamental reform.
He said under sworn testimony that Trump never asked him to commit to rate cuts at any specific meeting, a claim that clashed directly with Trump’s own statement to CNBC the same morning, where the president said he’d be “disappointed” if Warsh doesn’t cut immediately after taking office.
Sen. Ruben Gallego did not let that slide:
“Someone here is lying then; it’s either you or President Trump.”
When Sen. John Kennedy asked if he’d be anyone’s “human sock puppet,” Warsh was blunt:
“Absolutely not. I’ll be an independent actor if confirmed as chairman of the Federal Reserve.”
On crypto, he was straightforward: “Crypto is now part of the US financial system,” and he ruled out a central bank digital currency on his watch.
But the signal that actually matters for Bitcoin wasn’t about rates. Analysis published Tuesday by XWIN Research Japan argued that Warsh’s testimony pointed toward something more structural: balance sheet reduction. That’s quantitative tightening, which works by shrinking the Fed’s bond holdings and pulling liquidity out of the system.
As XWIN put it, this targets not just the “price” of money via rates, but the “quantity” of liquidity itself. The uncomfortable scenario they describe is one where short-term rates fall while long-term yields rise, a combination that has historically been rough for risk assets.
Warsh fed that interpretation directly. He told senators the Fed’s balance sheet is too large, should shrink, and that the central bank has no business holding long-term Treasuries.
He also said he’d end the practice of Fed officials as publicly telegraphing rate moves in advance, arguing it locks policymakers into forecasts long after the data has changed.
On-Chain Data Points the Other Way
Bitcoin’s reaction during the hearing was quick. It dropped below $75,000 before recovering, and was trading around $78,000 at the time of writing, up about 2.7% over 24 hours and 5.4% on the week.
What XWIN Research finds interesting, though, is what’s happening on-chain underneath all that noise. The Long-Term Holder SOPR, which tracks whether Bitcoin holders are selling at a profit or loss, is sitting around 1.0. That means they’re not aggressively cashing out.
Historically, XWIN noted, it reflects reduced sell pressure and constrained supply. Put simply, despite the macro tightening, the available Bitcoin supply isn’t growing.
Their read on the situation: macro liquidity is weakening while Bitcoin’s internal structure is holding up. That divergence, they argue, points to an accumulation phase rather than a clean breakdown, with the potential for a sharp move higher if ETF demand returns once liquidity conditions shift.
The post Trump’s Fed Pick, Kevin Warsh, Warns of Tighter Liquidity: What It Means for Bitcoin appeared first on CryptoPotato.
read the full story
On Tuesday, Kevin Warsh, Donald Trump’s choice to replace Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, testified before the Senate Banking Committee.
He promised to be independent from the White House but did not promise to cut rates right away, leaving market watchers to try and figure out what a Warsh-led Fed would mean for liquidity and risk assets like Bitcoin (BTC).
A Fed Shift From Rates to Balance Sheet
The hearing had plenty of headline moments. Warsh told senators the Fed has “lost its way” and needs fundamental reform.
He said under sworn testimony that Trump never asked him to commit to rate cuts at any specific meeting, a claim that clashed directly with Trump’s own statement to CNBC the same morning, where the president said he’d be “disappointed” if Warsh doesn’t cut immediately after taking office.
Sen. Ruben Gallego did not let that slide:
“Someone here is lying then; it’s either you or President Trump.”
When Sen. John Kennedy asked if he’d be anyone’s “human sock puppet,” Warsh was blunt:
“Absolutely not. I’ll be an independent actor if confirmed as chairman of the Federal Reserve.”
On crypto, he was straightforward: “Crypto is now part of the US financial system,” and he ruled out a central bank digital currency on his watch.
But the signal that actually matters for Bitcoin wasn’t about rates. Analysis published Tuesday by XWIN Research Japan argued that Warsh’s testimony pointed toward something more structural: balance sheet reduction. That’s quantitative tightening, which works by shrinking the Fed’s bond holdings and pulling liquidity out of the system.
As XWIN put it, this targets not just the “price” of money via rates, but the “quantity” of liquidity itself. The uncomfortable scenario they describe is one where short-term rates fall while long-term yields rise, a combination that has historically been rough for risk assets.
Warsh fed that interpretation directly. He told senators the Fed’s balance sheet is too large, should shrink, and that the central bank has no business holding long-term Treasuries.
He also said he’d end the practice of Fed officials as publicly telegraphing rate moves in advance, arguing it locks policymakers into forecasts long after the data has changed.
On-Chain Data Points the Other Way
Bitcoin’s reaction during the hearing was quick. It dropped below $75,000 before recovering, and was trading around $78,000 at the time of writing, up about 2.7% over 24 hours and 5.4% on the week.
What XWIN Research finds interesting, though, is what’s happening on-chain underneath all that noise. The Long-Term Holder SOPR, which tracks whether Bitcoin holders are selling at a profit or loss, is sitting around 1.0. That means they’re not aggressively cashing out.
Historically, XWIN noted, it reflects reduced sell pressure and constrained supply. Put simply, despite the macro tightening, the available Bitcoin supply isn’t growing.
Their read on the situation: macro liquidity is weakening while Bitcoin’s internal structure is holding up. That divergence, they argue, points to an accumulation phase rather than a clean breakdown, with the potential for a sharp move higher if ETF demand returns once liquidity conditions shift.
The post Trump’s Fed Pick, Kevin Warsh, Warns of Tighter Liquidity: What It Means for Bitcoin appeared first on CryptoPotato.
read the full storyBears Are Fully In Control Of Bitcoin And It Will Crash Below $60,000, Here’s Why
A crypto analyst has suggested that Bitcoin (BTC) is still in a bear market despite its recent price…
US Military Runs Bitcoin Node for Cybersecurity Tests, Admiral Confirms
Admiral Paparo told the Senate that INDOPACOM runs a Bitcoin node and is testing the protocol for…
‘Really important for cybersecurity’ – U.S. admiral puts Bitcoin in new light
Why, in Samuel Paparo's opinion, is Bitcoin a tool of American national power?
Adam Back Emerges as Top Satoshi Candidate as New Evidence Surfaces in Bitcoin Creator Hunt
The hunt continues. Bitcoin’s creator still hides behind the Satoshi Nakamoto pseudonym, and…
‘First phase of bull cycle?’- Here’s why Grayscale is now bullish on Bitcoin
Short squeeze has accelerated recent Bitcoin's recent rally, but will it lift it above $80K?
US Military Runs Bitcoin Node, Conducts Operational Tests, Indo-Pacific Commander Tells Senate
U.S. Indo-Pacific Command is running a live Bitcoin node and conducting operational tests on the…
Coinbase Lists First GBP Stablecoin as UK Push Accelerates
Coinbase listed tGBP, its first GBP-backed stablecoin, expanding UK crypto access as the stablecoin…
Keel, Hive Shares Jump as Companies Continue Shift From Bitcoin Mining to AI
Hive raised $115 million while Keel (formerly Bitfarms) sold off a mining facility as both Bitcoin…
Banks seek to slow down implementation of crypto's GENIUS Act on stablecoin oversight
U.S. banking groups argued that a number of federal agencies are moving quickly on stablecoin…
Squeeze Dynamics: Why Analysts Say Bitcoin’s Rise to $79,500 Lacks Conviction
Bitcoin added $5,000 to its value in 72 hours, reaching its highest level since February. The total…
Analyst Predicts Bitcoin Price Is Going To $200,000, Reveals When To Buy
Bitcoin is back in a place where bold upside calls are starting to circulate again, and while…
Ethereum risks 10% decline versus Bitcoin despite record ETH staking
Ethereum’s record 32.33% staking ratio is shrinking liquid supply, reducing sell pressure and…
ZachXBT Warns Users Against Bitcoin Depot ATMs After Reviewing the Numbers
TL;DR ZachXBT warned users against Bitcoin Depot ATMs after an elderly victim paid $25,000 in cash…
Bitcoin only 21 days away from real bull market rally? Shorts pile in just as spot demand starts pushing back
Bitcoin is approaching a point where the market may have to choose between two very different…
Bitcoin Could Strengthen US National Security, Top Military Commander Says
US lawmakers are pushing to bring Bitcoin mining equipment manufacturing back to American soil — a…
Clarity Act Markup Slips to May as Tillis Seeks More Time, But OCC Advances Stablecoin Rules
Sen. Tillis pushes the Clarity Act markup to May while Sen. Lummis warns delay risks losing the…
$138M Bitcoin Play Triggers Rally, Signals Shift In Big Money Sentiment
While the market still remembers the sharp drops of the past, Bitcoin held its ground at $75,000…
Bitcoin Tops $79,000 as Trump Extends US-Iran Ceasefire, S&P 500 Climbs
Bitcoin climbed to an 11-week high above $79,000 on Wednesday, after President Donald Trump extended…
Infinite Launches Fiat and Stablecoin Bank Accounts Powered by Erebor Bank for US Businesses
Infinite, a B2B stablecoin payments company, launched Infinite Accounts on Wednesday, giving…