Federal Reserve Chair Kevin Warsh announced before the House Financial Services Committee that the central bank does not intend to bail out the cryptocurrency industry during periods of financial distress. This statement came during his first semiannual monetary policy testimony as chair, highlighting a shift in approach compared to previous crisis responses.
Fed draws clear line on crypto bailouts
During the session, Representative Brad Sherman of California, a long-standing critic of digital assets, questioned whether the Federal Reserve would support struggling cryptocurrency firms in the same manner it aided money market funds during the 2008 financial crisis. Warsh was resolute, rejecting any future Fed intervention for the sector.
“We do not want to be in the bailout business, full stop. We want to be in a position where we’re not bailing out anybody, including crypto,” Warsh stated.
Kevin Warsh, who began his tenure as Federal Reserve Chair on May 15, has previously served as a Fed governor and played a key role during the 2008 crisis. Reflecting on that era, Warsh remarked, “I still have the scars from the 2008 financial crisis. That is not something we want to repeat.” He believes the bailouts a decade ago created moral hazard and wants to avoid repeating similar policies in the digital asset market.
Stablecoin market faces pivotal regulatory deadline
Warsh’s comments coincided with an upcoming deadline to implement the GENIUS Act, a law passed in 2025 to regulate stablecoins. Rules under the act are due within days, with the market for stablecoins now approaching $310 billion. Warsh confirmed that the Federal Reserve is working urgently to release its proposals in accordance with the deadline.
The GENIUS Act establishes that stablecoin holders have priority over other creditors if an issuer collapses, and requires issuers to maintain full reserves. Representative Sherman warned that a run on a single stablecoin issuer could quickly spread through the market.
Although Warsh did not guarantee that the Fed would never act in extraordinary situations, he emphasized that intervention would be reserved only for truly systemic threats. This posture introduces a new era of stricter market discipline for the crypto industry.
Mini dictionary: GENIUS Act, a law enacted in 2025, sets out stablecoin requirements in the US, including full-reserve backing and payment priority for holders in insolvency events.
| Key Feature | 2008 Bailouts | GENIUS Act (2025+) |
|---|---|---|
| Bailout policy | Fed assisted traditional markets | No bailout commitment for crypto, limited intervention only for systemic risks |
| Creditor priority | Standard order | Stablecoin holders prioritized |
| Reserve requirements | Not required for all entities | Full reserves required for each coin |
Call for regulatory coordination
Addressing the Senate Banking Committee the following day, Warsh called on federal banking regulators to strengthen collaboration on the GENIUS Act’s rulemaking. He warned that inconsistent oversight could allow companies to seek out jurisdictions with lighter regulation, potentially undermining the law’s effectiveness.
For crypto firms seeking legitimacy and federal backing, Warsh insisted that responsibility for risk would remain with individual companies—not with the central bank.
Warsh additionally emphasized the importance of Federal Reserve independence on monetary policy and reiterated his intention to reduce the Fed’s balance sheet, which currently stands near $6.7 trillion.
With this approach, the Federal Reserve signals a future in which digital asset firms must bear the consequences of their actions, instead of relying on central bank intervention in times of trouble. Kevin Warsh, identified as the first crypto-native Fed chair, views Bitcoin as an economic signal but maintains his distance from seeing it as a replacement for the US dollar.




