Bitcoin’s rally now hinges on “shadow chair” bet that demands violent, immediate dollar collapse
Bitcoin’s recent rebound came as traders raised the probability of a December Federal Reserve rate cut, the dollar eased, and attention turned to who will lead the central bank after Jerome Powell’s term ends in 2026. Futures markets moved the odds of a 25-basis-point cut this month into the mid-to-high 80% range, a shift that loosened financial conditions and coincided with a ninth straight daily decline in the dollar.
The move helped pull BTC out of the $84,000–$87,000 range back toward $93,000 after a volatile November that saw leveraged crypto products and proxy equities whipsawed.
Spot levels hovered near $92,300 in mid-week trading while the 10-year Treasury yield held around 4.1%, a backdrop that has historically aligned with risk-on positioning across crypto.
Fed “shadow chair” speculation adds a fresh catalyst
The policy narrative added a second catalyst. According to Reuters, President Trump plans to name his nominee for Fed chair in early 2026, ahead of Powell’s term ending on May 15, 2026.
Reporting points to former White House economist, and former Coinbase advisor, Kevin Hassett as the leading candidate, with Fed Governor Christopher Waller, Vice Chair for Supervision Michelle Bowman, former Governor Kevin Warsh, and BlackRock’s Rick Rieder also discussed.
Prediction-market pricing tilted toward Hassett as traders mapped a potentially easier policy path next year, though any nominee would not affect actual votes until confirmation and seating.
Fed chair nomination betting (Source: Polymarket)
The Federal Reserve notes that Powell’s current chair term runs through May 2026, and he may remain a governor until Jan. 31, 2028.
The sequencing matters for Bitcoin because the effect before mid-2026 is driven by expectations and financial conditions rather than by near-term policy changes.
Markets already pushed toward an easier stance as the probability of a December cut rose, the dollar weakened, and long yields stabilized.
That rate impulse explains most of the crypto bounce, with the chair chatter reinforcing the same theme by nudging investors to price a higher chance of a dovish successor.
Positioning helped too. BTC slid through November while US spot bitcoin ETFs saw heavy redemptions, then snapped back as short covering met a softer dollar.
Sizable November outflows following a single-day record earlier in the month left room for a mechanical bounce once macro pressure eased.
Federal Reserve contenders: what their views could mean for rates, the dollar, and Bitcoin
The candidate mix carries different reaction functions that investors are already mapping into forward curves. Hassett has argued that inflation is “way down” and has urged faster cuts in recent interviews, a stance investors view as an easing bias that could weigh on the dollar if adopted at the top of the Fed.
Waller, a sitting governor, recently advocated a December cut while framing decisions as data-dependent.
Bowman has favored gradualism with a financial-stability lens. See her statement here.
Warsh, a former governor and longtime critic of balance-sheet expansion, would likely be read as firmer on inflation and the pace of runoff.
Rieder has emphasized market plumbing and has also pushed for cuts given housing strains.
Those profiles matter most for term premium and the dollar through 2026, but they are already shaping sentiment in crypto through the discounting of liquidity conditions.
The near-term macro channel remains dominant.
The stronger odds of a December cut lined up with a weaker dollar and steadier real yields, conditions that have historically supported BTC beta.
If those odds climb further into the policy statement and projections, dollar softness and easier financial conditions would continue to provide a tailwind.
Conversely, a hawkish surprise or an upside inflation shock would firm the dollar, lift yields, and pressure risk assets, including crypto.
After November’s outflows, a sustained re-acceleration of net inflows would validate the rebound and absorb supply from profit-taking miners, while continued redemptions would cap upside even if macro remains supportive.
Confirmation timing also tempers the leadership story. Trump’s planned “early 2026” reveal means months of hearings and Senate dynamics before a chair is seated.
Until then, Powell and the current committee steer policy. The practical impact for Bitcoin, therefore, is the “shadow chair” effect: markets adjust curves and the dollar based on the perceived bias of the presumptive successor, and crypto trades those changes.
Investors say a Hassett choice could pressure the dollar at the margin, particularly if paired with guidance that keeps cuts front-loaded and quantitative tightening on a slower glide path, according to Reuters.
A Warsh drumbeat would imply the opposite through a higher-for-longer stance and potential focus on balance-sheet runoff.
What happens next: the Fed chair path into 2026 and why it matters for BTC
To frame the path into 2026, the rate–USD–BTC linkage is the cleanest hinge. With the 10-year near 4.1% and the dollar easing, crypto is trading a classic liquidity impulse that does not require a personnel change at the Fed to persist.
The chair race is additive because it nudges those same variables by altering expectations about next year’s policy mix.
Scenario
Chair outcome and bias
Policy path into 2026
USD
10Y UST
BTC framing (tactical, not advice)
Dovish continuity
Hassett or Rieder, easing bias
25–50 bps more easing than current pricing
Softer
Lower to stable
Risk-on bid if ETF flows re-accelerate
Data-dependent glide
Waller or Bowman, incremental
Cuts broadly track futures
Range-bound
~3.9–4.3%
Chop tied to macro oscillations and flows
Hawkish pivot
Warsh or inflation re-acceleration
Delayed cuts, balance-sheet priority
Firmer
Yields higher
De-risking across crypto
First, CME FedWatch probabilities into the December decision and the Summary of Economic Projections will steer the dollar and long rates.
Second, daily ETF net flows from trackers such as Farside, along with weekly ETP snapshots from CoinShares, will show whether the rebound can attract sticky demand.
Third, any White House signals that narrow the shortlist will guide curve positioning, with a Hassett drumbeat leaning toward a softer dollar and a Warsh drift pointing the other way.
According to Reuters, investors already debate how a Hassett Fed might affect the currency. At the same time, The Wall Street Journal’s commentary on Warsh highlights a more restrictive posture on balance-sheet policy.
The through-line for crypto readers is simple: the latest BTC bounce lines up primarily with a rates trade rather than a personality trade, and the chair narrative matters mostly through how it shapes the dollar and yields before any successor takes the gavel in May 2026.
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Filed under: Bitcoin - @ December 3, 2025 11:05 pm