The Federal Reserve held interest rates steady on June 17 for the fourth consecutive meeting. But the real story is what comes next: roughly half of Fed policymakers signaled they could support at least one rate hike before the year is out.
Kevin Warsh, appointed by President Donald Trump and confirmed in May 2026, chaired his first FOMC meeting with a clear message: this isn’t Jerome Powell’s Fed anymore. Where Powell favored detailed forward guidance and granular dot-plot projections, Warsh is moving in the opposite direction. Less hand-holding, more ambiguity.
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent had already floated the concept of a single “tap the brakes” rate hike, framing it as a manageable, surgical move rather than the start of an aggressive tightening cycle. Having the Treasury Secretary publicly endorse the possibility of a rate hike is unusual. It signals coordination, or at least alignment, between the White House and the central bank at a moment when inflation remains stubbornly persistent due to rising energy prices and broader economic pressures.
The crypto market didn’t wait around to interpret the nuance. Bitcoin traded near $64,500 following the FOMC announcement, a clear downward move reflecting the market’s recalibration toward tighter monetary policy. Higher interest rates strengthen the US dollar and raise the opportunity cost of holding non-yielding assets like Bitcoin. During the Fed’s aggressive tightening cycle in 2022 and 2023, Bitcoin cratered from nearly $69,000 to below $16,000.






