The Senate Banking Committee is preparing to hold a confirmation hearing for Kevin Warsh, President Trump’s nominee for Federal Reserve Chair, as early as the week of April 13, 2026. With current Chair Jerome Powell’s term ending May 15, the Senate faces a narrow window to confirm the man who once called Bitcoin “a very good policeman for policy.”
Who Is Kevin Warsh and Why Crypto Markets Are Watching
Trump formally nominated Warsh on March 4, 2026, for both a four-year term as Fed Chairman and a fourteen-year term as a Member of the Board of Governors beginning February 1, 2026. Warsh is no stranger to the Fed: he served as the youngest-ever Federal Reserve Governor from 2006 to 2011 under President George W. Bush, joining the board at age 35.
The hearing timeline, first reported by Punchbowl News, is described as “fluid.” The committee was still waiting on required paperwork from Warsh as of mid-March, and without that submission, no firm date can be locked in.
Confirmation Window
Week of April 13
Earliest expected Senate Banking Committee hearing for Kevin Warsh, leaving ~32 days before Jerome Powell’s term ends on May 15, 2026. The timeline is “fluid” pending Warsh’s submission of required paperwork. Source: CoinTelegraph / Punchbowl News
Powell’s term as Fed Chair ends May 15, 2026, but he will remain in the position until a successor is confirmed by the Senate. That gives lawmakers roughly 32 days from the earliest possible hearing date to complete the full confirmation process, a timeline that leaves little margin for procedural delays.
For crypto markets, the nomination carries a unique dimension. Warsh has publicly described Bitcoin as “an important asset that can help inform policymakers when they are doing things right and wrong,” adding that it “can be a very good policeman for policy.” That framing positions him as potentially the most Bitcoin-friendly Fed Chair candidate in the institution’s history.
🇺🇸 President Trump’s next FED Chair pick, Kevin Warsh on Bitcoin:
"I think of it as an important asset that can help inform policymakers when they are doing things right and wrong."
"It can be a very good policeman for policy."
"It’s the newest and coolest software that will… pic.twitter.com/g9GS358rfg
— Bitcoin Magazine (@BitcoinMagazine) January 30, 2026
Source: @BitcoinMagazine on X
MicroStrategy’s Michael Saylor echoed the optimism, stating that Warsh would become “the first pro-Bitcoin Chairman of the Federal Reserve.”
Soon, Kevin Warsh will be the first pro-Bitcoin Chairman of the Federal Reserve.pic.twitter.com/afEBrBFeWX
— Michael Saylor (@saylor) January 30, 2026
Source: @saylor on X
A confirmed Warsh chairmanship could shift the tone on stablecoin oversight and digital asset regulation at the Fed level, a topic that has increasingly intersected with broader questions about whether crypto enforcement can proceed without clear regulatory rules.
What Senators Are Expected to Probe at the Hearing
The confirmation path is not smooth. Senator Thom Tillis, a Republican on the Banking Committee, has vowed to oppose Warsh’s nomination, along with all Fed nominees, until a DOJ investigation into outgoing Chair Jerome Powell regarding Fed office renovation expenses is fully resolved.
According to unconfirmed reports from a single CNBC source, Senate Majority Leader John Thune has indicated Warsh will “probably not” be confirmed without Tillis’s support. If accurate, the Republican blockade adds a significant procedural hurdle beyond the standard partisan divide.
From the other side of the aisle, Senator Elizabeth Warren sent a formal letter opposing the nomination. Warren accused Warsh of having learned “nothing from your failures” during his prior Fed tenure and warned he would become a “rubber stamp for President Trump’s Wall Street First Agenda.”
Key policy topics senators are likely to probe include inflation targets, the future rate trajectory, and Fed independence from political pressure. For crypto-focused observers, the hearing could surface Warsh’s positions on central bank digital currencies, stablecoin regulation, and the Fed’s role in overseeing digital assets.
These questions directly affect how institutional players approach products like crypto ETFs and ETNs, which have seen growing demand from traditional finance firms in recent months.
The bull case for markets: a smooth hearing signals policy continuity and reduces uncertainty, historically a positive for risk assets. The bear case: a contentious or delayed hearing prolongs Fed leadership limbo, and markets tend to price in that ambiguity with higher volatility.
How Crypto Has Reacted to Past Fed Leadership Transitions
Fed Chair transitions have historically created volatility windows for risk assets, including Bitcoin. When Jerome Powell was first nominated in November 2017, Bitcoin was in the midst of its run toward $20,000. His 2022 reconfirmation coincided with the early stages of a bear market driven by aggressive rate hikes.
The pattern is less about who sits in the chair and more about the uncertainty gap between nomination and confirmation. Markets dislike open questions about monetary policy direction, and each week without a confirmed Fed Chair extends that uncertainty.
With Warsh, the dynamic is compounded by his known hawkish stance on inflation paired with his unusually positive Bitcoin commentary. That combination creates a split outlook: crypto bulls see a potential ally at the top of the world’s most powerful central bank, while bears note that an inflation hawk could tighten conditions regardless of personal views on digital assets.
The broader macro backdrop matters too. As Ethereum builders propose structural changes to address protocol-level fragmentation, the regulatory environment set by the next Fed Chair will shape how much institutional capital flows into decentralized finance and Layer 2 ecosystems.
What is concrete: the earliest hearing date is the week of April 13, Powell stays until a successor is confirmed, and the Tillis blockade remains unresolved. If the hearing slips past April, the confirmation timeline compresses against Powell’s May 15 term end, raising the prospect of an extended holdover period with no clear policy mandate.
Traders watching for a confirmation relief rally or a delay-driven sell-off have a defined calendar: the next two weeks will determine whether Warsh’s paperwork lands and whether the April hearing date holds.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.
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