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#夏日创作营 U.S. Congress debut: six key takeaways—“no bailout for crypto,” oppose the CBDC, and establish five working groups “from scratch” to reshape the Federal Reserve
Federal Reserve Chair Kevin Worsh appeared for the first time as chair at the U.S. House Financial Services Committee’s semiannual monetary policy hearing on the evening of July 14, with seven major exchanges happening in an instant:
① “Task not finished” — a CPI cold shower. Worsh refused to interpret a single month’s improvement as a policy pivot, stating that the FOMC has zero tolerance for persistent high inflation, and deliberately did not send any interest-rate path signals;
② “The Federal Reserve won’t do this bailout business” — Democratic Rep. Sherman asked whether, if crypto or stablecoins triggered a bank run-like event similar to the 2008 money market fund crisis, the Fed would step in. Worsh responded clearly: “We do not want to be in the bailout business, full stop,” “including the crypto industry,” while leaving room: “we will do everything possible to mitigate extreme risks”;
③ “The independence of the Federal Reserve is sacred and inviolable” — pushing back hard against White House pressure, reiterating that the Supreme Court’s recent confirmation affirms that monetary policy independence is protected by law;
④ Anti-CBDC stance — explicitly opposed the U.S. central bank’s digital currency, calling the CBDC a “bad policy choice,” aligning with the position of most Republican lawmakers;
⑤ Five working groups “from scratch” — set up five exclusive, fully nonpartisan working groups staffed by top academics and industry experts, aiming to overturn and rebuild the Federal Reserve’s existing operating mechanisms. The first-stage results will be released within the year. Quantitative tightening “won’t go back to a 2006 scale,” but will be “less than $6.74 trillion.” After “full consultation,” it “will never surprise the market”;
⑥ Retreat on AI disinflation theory — previously confident that AI would bring “productivity disinflation” to lower inflation, the attitude shifted from “certain” to “awe.” “At this point, I don’t know to what extent the economy will benefit from building with AI”;
⑦ A major shift in the communication framework — won’t commit to a fixed news release cadence. “It’s better to be more cautious in communications.” The market’s “game rules” of “picking interest-rate path signals from the chair’s mouth” may change. The June FOMC dot plot showed that of 19 officials, 9 expect at least one rate hike this year and 6 expect at least two. Worsh himself refused to submit his own interest-rate forecast.
Market impact assessment: neutral to negative (“no bailout for crypto” clearly stated + anti-CBDC + deliberately withholding interest-rate path signals creates short-term “good news already priced in” pressure; but the odds of a July rate hike falling to 12.3%+ the reform commitments from the five working groups = medium- to long-term expectations of greater policy transparency)
Affected coins: BTC/ETH (“no bailout for crypto” clearly stated = the central bank will no longer backstop crypto systemic risks; neutral-to-bearish in the long run), stablecoins (central bank clearly opposed the CBDC = the regulatory environment for private stablecoins has not changed, indirectly positive for USDC/USDT), SOL/RWA-type tokens (expectations for clearer regulation are muted), the whole market (the new framework where data drives policy will amplify volatility around future data releases)
Federal Reserve Chair Kevin Worsh attended, for the first time as chair, the House Financial Services Committee’s semiannual monetary policy hearing on the evening of July 14. Seven major flashpoints in an instant:
① “Task not complete” douses CPI optimism—Worsh refused to interpret a one-month improvement in data as a policy shift, explicitly stating the FOMC has “zero tolerance for persistent high inflation,” and deliberately not issuing any signals about an interest-rate path;
② “The Federal Reserve won’t do this bailout business”—Democratic Rep. Sherman asked whether, if crypto or stablecoins saw an outflow similar to the 2008 run on money market funds, the Federal Reserve would step in. Worsh responded clearly: “We do not want to be in the bailout business, full stop,” including “the crypto industry,” while leaving room: “we will do everything possible to mitigate extreme risks”;
③ “The sanctity of Fed independence is sacred and inviolable”—a hard pushback against White House pressure, reiterating that the Supreme Court has recently confirmed that monetary policy independence is protected by law;
④ Anti-CBDC stance—explicitly opposed to a U.S. central bank digital currency, saying the CBDC is a “bad policy choice,” consistent with the position of most Republican lawmakers;
⑤ Five task forces “starting from scratch”—establishing five dedicated, fully nonpartisan task forces composed of top scholars and industry experts, aimed at overturning and rebuilding the Federal Reserve’s existing operating mechanisms. The first-phase results will be announced within the year. Balance sheet reduction “will not return to the scale of 2006,” but will be “less than $6.74 trillion,” and “after sufficient communication, we will absolutely never surprise the market”;
⑥ Retreat on the AI disinflation thesis—having previously firmly believed that AI would bring “productivity-driven disinflation” to bring inflation down, his attitude shifted from “confident” to “awe.” “Right now, we don’t know to what extent the economy will benefit from building with AI”;
⑦ A major shift in the communication framework—will not commit to a fixed news-release cadence. “It’s better to be more cautious in communication.” The market’s “game rules” of “extracting the interest-rate path from the chair’s mouth” may change. The June FOMC dot plot showed that of 19 officials, 9 expect at least one rate hike within the year and 6 expect at least two. Worsh himself refused to submit his own interest-rate forecast.
Market impact assessment: neutral to negative (“no bailout for crypto” clearly stated + opposition to the CBDC + deliberately withholding interest-rate-path signals = near-term pressure from “good news already priced in”; but the probability of a rate hike in July falling to 12.3% + the reform commitments from the five task forces = medium- to long-term expectations for greater policy transparency).
Affected assets: BTC/ETH (“no bailout for crypto” clearly stated = the central bank will no longer provide a backstop for systemic crypto risks; long-term neutral-to-bearish), stablecoins (the central bank’s clear opposition to the CBDC = the regulatory environment for private stablecoins has not changed, indirectly positive for USDC/USDT), SOL/RWA-type tokens (expectations for regulatory clarity are held back), the entire market (a new framework in which data determines policy will amplify volatility around future data releases).