Bitcoin Braced For $30 Trillion Fed Bombshell After Trump Confirms ‘Immediate’ Price Game-
December 10, 2025
12/10 update below. This post was originally published on December 09
Bitcoin and crypto are treading water after wild swings that BlackRock’s chief executive warned could be about to get a lot worse.
Sign up now for CryptoCodex—A free crypto newsletter that will get you ahead of the market
The bitcoin price, down on this time last year as traders scramble to get ahead of what could be a devastating January shock, has struggled since hitting a peak of $126,000 per bitcoin in October.
Now, as Shark Tank star investor Kevin O’leary issues a Federal Reserve warning, traders are looking past the Fed’s December interest rate decision to whether its going to start growing its $6.5 trillion balance sheet.
12/10 update: U.S. president Donald Trump is stealing the limelight from Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell, holding interviews for his replacement just as Powell is due to reveal the Fed’s latest interest rate decision and hold his all-important press conference.
Sign up now for the free CryptoCodex—A daily five-minute newsletter for traders, investors and the crypto-curious that will get you up to date and keep you ahead of the bitcoin price and crypto market swings
Trump and Treasury secretary Scott Bessent are scheduled to meet former Fed governor Kevin Warsh today, it was reported by the Financial Times, citing anonymous sources.
“We’re going to be looking at a couple of different people, but I have a pretty good idea of who I want,” Trump told reporters on Air Force One.
Kevin Hassett, the director of Trump’s National Economic Council and a loyalist who served in Trump’s first term, remains the front-runner, with Fed governors Kevin Warsh, Christopher Waller and Michelle Bowman and BlackRock’s Rick Rieder still in the running.
Hassett is the firm favorite on Polymarket, though no decision is expected until January after Trump said he was delaying the announcement until the new year.
Hassett would be a dovish choice to lead the Fed, with bond investors sounding the alarm earlier this month on fears he could cut interest rates so rapidly as to destabilise the $30 trillion Treasury market.
Trump told Politico in an interview that a willingness to immediately cut rates are effectively a litmus test for picking the next Fed chair.
“I want to ask about interest rates because a lot of Americans agree with you that they’re too high. You’re going to pick a new Fed chair soon. Is it a litmus test that the new chair lower interest rates immediately,” Politico’s Dasha Burns asked Trump.
“Yes,” Trump replied.
Divisions at the Fed over the pace of interest rate cuts make the “eventual choice of Powell’s successor in May 2026 even more consequential for bond yields, the dollar, and risk assets–including bitcoin,” analysts with Tagus Capital wrote in an emailed note.
“Are they going to hold it flat or start growing it,” Michael Kelly, global head of multi-asset at the $215 billion PineBridge Investments, told MarketWatch, referring to the Fed’s balance sheet that it has shrunk from over $9 trillion in the aftermath of huge Covid-era expansion.
Strategists at Bank of America have predicted the Fed will this week announce it will grow its balance sheet by $45 billion per month from January, with the Fed buying at least $20 billion a month “for natural balance sheet growth purposes” and another $25 billion a month “to reverse the reserve over drain, for at least the first six months” of 2026.
“We are out of consensus early and in size,” Bank of America analysts led by Mark Cabana wrote in a client note seen by ZeroHedge.
Others have forecast the Fed will start growing its balance sheet later next year.
“If you zoom out, the Fed naturally will start bill purchases next year as part of a reverses management operation,” Roger Hallam, Vanguard fixed-income group’s global head of rates, told MarketWatch. “Because as the economy’s demand for reserves expands, the Fed naturally will meet that.”
The Fed’s quantitative tightening program, which began in 2022, has reduced the Fed’s balance sheet to $6.5 trillion, from around $9 trillion at its peak, putting pressure on risk assets such as bitcoin as the Fed tries to suck liquidity from the system.
The Fed ended its quantitative tightening program at the beginning of December.
Cathie Wood, the chief executive of technology and disruption investor Ark Invest, earlier pointed to the Fed’s easing liquidity conditions when she reaffirmed Ark’s long-term $1.5 million bitcoin price prediction.
The market is meanwhile pricing in a near-90% chance of the Fed cutting interest rates at the end of the December Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting on Wednesday.
“For now, attention is on the Federal Reserve’s interest rate decision on December 10, where a cut is largely expected. On its own, such a move may offer little upside to bitcoin’s price, as it’s likely already priced in,” Koinly chief executive Robin Singh said via email.
“The greater risk lies in deviation from expectations. Any surprise that runs counter to market assumptions could unsettle sentiment and trigger further downside, particularly with the volatile confidence in recent times.”
Traders are closely watching for any indication of whether interest rates will continue to fall in early 2026.
Sign up now for CryptoCodex—A free crypto newsletter that will get you ahead of the market
“The uncertainty with which bitcoin is hovering around the $90,000 mark reflects a prevailing fear that tomorrow’s FOMC meeting will be somewhat of an anticlimax,” Nic Puckrin, investment analyst and co-founder of The Coin Bureau, said in emailed comments.
“Though a rate cut is now expected by nearly 90% of market participants and largely priced in, it’s the forward guidance that matters, and investors appear to be betting on a ‘hawkish cut’ tomorrow.”
Search
RECENT PRESS RELEASES
Related Post
