

Recent months have seen the ebb and flow of a certain pattern:
US President Donald Trump will take some objectively harmful action
to the US economy, and the markets will crash. Seeing this, Trump
has turned to Jerome Powell, chair of the Federal Reserve, and now
demands he lower the Fed Funds Rate — the rate at which the Fed
lends money to banks. And the steely eyed Powell will say “No.”
Trump wants to lower rates because doing so is an effective cash
injection into the United States economy, stimulating activity and
lifting the market. This, he believes, will make him appear
successful. Powell wants to follow rigorous economic standards to
set rates to carefully balance the Fed’s dual mandates of
maximizing employment and maintaining stable prices.
He also wants to maintain the Fed’s independence from political
pressure and, crucially, maintain the Fed’s appearance of
independence from political pressure. If the markets believe that
the central bank’s independence has failed in the US, it may become
more difficult to sell US Treasury Bills, the United States’
sovereign debt. That is a problem in the fundamental sense that the
US will have to pay more to borrow money, making it poorer — but it
is an especially acute problem now because the US already
has an enormous, $30-trillion pile of debt which it has to
periodically refinance.
If it is forced to refinance at higher rates because markets do
not trust the US government anymore, then an ever greater
percentage of GDP will be absorbed by the cost of interest, and, as
the kids say, the United States will be cooked.
That dance takes us to now. Last week, Trump repeatedly
intimated that he would like to fire Powell, and the market didn’t
like it. On Monday, Trump provoked a crash by
calling Powell a “major loser” on Truth Social. In response,
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has reportedly voiced concerns
with the risks of firing Powell to Trump, who seems, for now, to
have acquiesced, stating Tuesday that he would not fire his Fed
chair.
Trump and Powell in 2017. Source:
Trouw
Still, this process feels more like a spiral than anything else,
and many market watchers are waiting for the next shoe to drop.
That forces the question: if Trump does go through with his base
instincts and axes Powell, what will be the result? In particular,
what effect will this have on the cryptocurrency industry?
Cracking the Fed
It bears mentioning that the President is not supposed to be
able to fire the Fed chair at will. Section 10 of
the Federal Reserve Act of 1913 states that “each member shall hold
office for a term of fourteen years from the expiration of the term
of his predecessor, unless sooner removed for cause by the
President.”
This language may appear ambiguous, but in the 1935 case
Humphrey's Executor v. United
States, the Supreme Court ruled that the Constitution does not
give the President an “illimitable power of removal” and so the
President’s removal power is limited by statutory
language.
This decision ratified the concept of “independent agencies,”
which reside within the executive branch, but have independent
authority. While a number of agencies have this characteristic,
including the SEC, the CFTC, and the FTC, the Fed is the most
important.
Related: US gov’t
actions give clue about upcoming crypto
regulation
Economists do not think much about the political control of
central banks. Politicians have relatively short-term incentives,
thinking in years or election cycles. This inherently pushes them
to prefer short-termist policies, of which hot cash injections are
the purest form. However, fiscal and monetary policy are delicate
arts that often animate painful policy choices.
In a classic example, Richard Nixon pressured then-Fed chair
Arthur Burns to pursue expansionary monetary
policy in the lead up to the 1972 election, believing that it
would help his reelection odds. Nixon won that election in a
landslide, but soon followed catastrophic “stagflation” that
crippled the United States economy for a decade, and indeed
may still be felt in the industries which
hollowed out during that period.
Contrast this with the policies of Paul Volcker, who, after this
devastating period of stagflation, implemented a vicious series of
rate increases between 1979 and 1987, which caused the
“Volcker
Shocks”, a series of painful recessions. However, the effect of
this policy was to eventually strangle inflation and herald in the
boom times of the 90s, facilitating Bill Clinton’s remarkable
fiscal policy.
No politician could have made these choices, none will in the
future, and that is the rub. Economists — and, crucially, markets —
believe deeply that the Fed must remain independent or else the
entire economic fabric of American society risks collapse. This is
no hyperbole — nations with politically controlled central banks
like Weimar Germany, Peronist Argentina and Venezuela have
experienced such crippling hyperinflation that it led variously to
multigenerational geopolitical
backsliding, reports of
citizens starving and eating rats, and the
rise of Adolph
Hitler. This is serious stuff.
To fire Powell, Trump will first have to defeat the Humphrey's
Executor precedent, a prospect that many legal scholars
believe
likely in light of the current Supreme Court composition. This
is a Rubicon which, once crossed, marks a point of no return. Not
just Trump, but every President who follows will have plenary legal
authority to direct all executive officers — Fed Chair included —
at their will. Most believe this will lead to ruin.
But disaster or no, it will be a test for
cryptocurrency. The original Bitcoin White Paper aimed to
disintermediate financial transactions from “financial institutions
serving as trusted third parties.” If the Fed falls, and US
monetary policy is unmoored from sound judgment, the thesis of
cryptocurrency’s early years will be put in stark relief.
As Trump has provoked capital flight in recent weeks, investors
have sought safety in various assets. Traditionally, any time there
was a crisis, sophisticated parties fled risk assets into US
Treasurys. The thinking was that these were riskless assets. Well,
those days may be done. Ten year bond yields
approached 5% during the peak of the Tariff Crisis and have not yet
fully returned to previous lows. If Trump breaks the Fed, these
outflows will be a drop in a bucket in a river, and that money may
move into cryptocurrencies.
Trump
admonishes Powell, referred to here as “Mr. Too Late.” Source:
Trump
Historically, the price of Bitcoin has tightly tracked the
Nasdaq (albeit with a multiplier). However, since the Tariff
Crisis, while US securities prices have remained largely depressed,
Bitcoin has miraculously begun to pump. This has led some to
speculate that we are witnessing the long-prophesied “decoupling”,
wherein crypto-assets will fulfill their original purpose and move
independently from centralized assets.
It is impossible to say if this will or will not happen, but if
Trump gives Powell the boot, we will find out for
sure.
Out of the frying pan, and into the fire
Of course, world-historical collapse can’t be all good for
crypto, and there will be significant pain across a variety of
surfaces from this crisis as well. In the first instance,
stablecoins will feel dire consequences almost
immediately.
In the last decade, two USD-denominated stablecoins — USDC and
USDT — have dominated the market. Their issuers, Circle and Tether,
are both important systemic institutions and major buyers of US
Treasurys, which collateralize the majority of their stablecoin
obligations.
An immediate result of a Fed Crisis could be a Treasury default.
The economist Noah Smith has speculated that
Trump might try to write down the US’s sovereign debt:
“I suspect Trump will do something more like what he used to do
as a businessman when his debt went bad — look for a cheap bailout,
and if one doesn’t emerge, declare bankruptcy.”
Indeed, the President has hinted darkly at this prospect
himself, in February suggesting
that they might rely on pretense to mark the bills down:
"There could be a problem - you've been reading about that, with
Treasuries and that could be an interesting problem…It could be
that a lot of those things don't count. In other words, that some
of that stuff that we're finding is very fraudulent, therefore
maybe we have less debt than we thought.”
Related: Atkins becomes next SEC chair: What’s next for
the crypto industry
A sovereign default would immediately affect Circle and Tether
by marking down the value of their collateral. This, in turn, could
leave the stablecoins undercollateralized, which might
provoke a bank run. The markets may ultimately stabilize, but
events could easily turn the other way, leading to collapse of
major stablecoins.
This in turn would have numerous second-order effects, as smart
contracts holding stables as collateral began liquidating
positions, and contagion swept the rest of the market.
Interestingly, these mechanical consequences may be less dire
than the political costs of a Fed Crisis, because treasuries are
not the only asset that has systemic importance to crypto. The US
dollar has been the world's reserve currency for many, many years.
There are lots of good reasons for this; it is relatively strong
and stable, so it is good to settle trade with. But if the
government backing it ceases to be strong and stable, this paradigm
will likely shift.
And as more trade is executed in euro or yuan-denominated
accounts, regulators in the EU and China will, in turn, have much
more control of the flows of fiat currency through cryptocurrency.
One prominent cryptocurrency attorney, who chose not to be named
for fear of political reprisal, speculated exactly this:
“I think China will fill a lot of the void and EU will fill
most of the rest. Neither would be good for crypto generally
between CCP and EU over-regulating in different ways for different
goals. This seems bad.”
This might prompt flight to uncollateralized crypto-primitive
assets, but there is essentially no precedent for such assets being
used at scale for real-world transactions. It is just as likely
that a stablecoin crisis could simply kneecap the industry for
years as it is catching its stride.
Ultimately, nobody knows whether Trump will fire Powell, or even
if he can. Nobody knows what consequences might flow downstream
from his decisions. But if a butterfly flapping its wings in
Argentina can cause a tornado in Prague, then Donald Trump
muttering incantations in the West Wing might vindicate or
destabilize the blockchain forever.
Like it or not, we’re all along for the ride.
Magazine: UK’s
Orwellian AI murder prediction system, will AI take your job? AI
Eye
...
Continue reading If Trump fired Powell, what would
happen to crypto?
The post
If Trump fired Powell, what would happen to
crypto? appeared first on
CoinTelegraph.
Bitcoin (COIN:BTCUSD)
Gráfico Histórico do Ativo
De Abr 2025 até Mai 2025
Bitcoin (COIN:BTCUSD)
Gráfico Histórico do Ativo
De Mai 2024 até Mai 2025