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#WarshLeadsFedChairRace
Kevin Warsh is now sitting at roughly 95% probability on prediction markets to become the next Federal Reserve Chair, with Powell’s term expiring on May 15. Trump’s nomination back in January initially looked like a straightforward path — but it’s no longer that simple.
The confirmation process has hit a political wall.
Senator Thom Tillis is currently blocking the committee vote, refusing to move forward until the DOJ drops its investigation into Powell over Federal Reserve renovation costs. What makes this more unusual is that Tillis actually supports Warsh — yet his procedural hold has pushed the nomination into a full impasse, at least for now. The Senate Banking Committee is still aiming for hearings the week of April 13, but timing is no longer guaranteed.
At the same time, the macro environment is becoming increasingly unstable.
Oil prices have surged following U.S.-backed strikes on Iran. Inflation remains sticky. And according to CME FedWatch, markets are not pricing in any rate cuts before mid-2026. This is not a calm backdrop — it’s a stress environment.
And that’s where things get interesting.
Warsh has been framed as a dovish shift aligned with Trump’s push for lower rates. But that narrative is incomplete. His actual stance is more complex — and potentially contradictory. He has signaled support for cutting rates while simultaneously shrinking the Fed’s $6.7 trillion balance sheet and reducing forward guidance to markets.
That combination is not easy to execute.
Cutting rates injects liquidity. Shrinking the balance sheet removes it. Reducing communication adds uncertainty. Put all three together, and you don’t get clarity — you get volatility.
Political resistance is also building early. Senator Elizabeth Warren has already come out strongly against him, labeling him a “rubber stamp for a Wall Street–first agenda” and pointing back to his role during the 2008 financial crisis. That signals this won’t be a quiet confirmation process.
For crypto and broader risk assets, the takeaway isn’t as simple as “dovish = bullish.
A Warsh-led Fed could initially be interpreted as supportive for markets. But if his policy mix creates liquidity tension or communication gaps, it may actually amplify volatility rather than suppress it.
The key point:
Markets may be pricing in who gets the chair — but they are not pricing in how that chair behaves once in power.
And that difference is where the real opportunity — and risk — sits.