Jerome Powell stepped down as Fed Chair on May 15, 2026, closing an eight-year run at the head of the central bank. He guided the Federal Reserve through a pandemic, the sharpest inflation spike in four decades, and a long-running fight with the White House over independence. However, Powell is not leaving the building. He confirmed at his final FOMC press conference that he will stay on as a Fed governor “for a period of time to be determined.” His underlying governor term runs through January 2028, giving him a continuing vote on monetary policy. Notably, that decision breaks decades of precedent, since most outgoing chairs leave the board entirely.
Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell’s tenure ends Friday, during which he faced a pandemic, an acute bout of inflation and a criminal probe.
ABC News’ Elizabeth Schulze reports on Powell’s legacy. https://t.co/8cvHHYWPDK pic.twitter.com/0qZIxpBoCj
— ABC News (@ABC) May 15, 2026
Kevin Warsh Steps Into the Chair
The Senate confirmed Kevin Warsh as the 17th Federal Reserve Chair on May 13, 2026, by a 54-45 vote. Warsh served as a Fed governor from 2006 to 2011 and has long criticized prolonged easy-money policy. Importantly, he is the first incoming chair with direct, disclosed exposure to digital assets. His holdings include an equity stake in Flashnet, a Bitcoin payments startup, alongside positions in Bitwise and the Basis stablecoin project. In a 2025 Hoover Institution interview, Warsh called Bitcoin “an important asset” and a “very good policeman for policy.”
Warsh’s stance on the dollar reshapes the conversation. He opposes a US central bank digital currency outright. Additionally, he favors private, dollar-backed stablecoins as the rails for digital payments. That position lines up directly with the framework Congress is now finalizing. His first FOMC meeting as chair will run June 16-17, 2026.
The CLARITY Act Reaches Its Inflection Point
The Senate Banking Committee advanced the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act on May 14, 2026, by a 15-9 bipartisan vote. The bill assigns spot market authority over digital commodities like Bitcoin and Ether to the CFTC. Meanwhile, it leaves token-based securities under the SEC, ending years of jurisdictional fog. It also creates a path for protocol tokens to graduate out of securities status once they decentralize. Additionally, it sets registration, custody, and disclosure rules for digital asset trading platforms.
The bill still needs 60 votes in the full Senate to clear the filibuster. The White House has set a July 4, 2026 target for passage, and Senator Kirsten Gillibrand has signaled that any final vote must happen by August. As a result, the next 60 days will determine whether the United States locks in the first comprehensive crypto market structure law of any major economy.
Stablecoin Rails Are Already Live
The GENIUS Act, signed into law on July 18, 2025, has been operating for nearly a year. It requires payment stablecoins to be backed one-for-one by US dollars or short-duration Treasuries. Furthermore, the Treasury Department chairs a new interagency review committee that licenses issuers. Last September, Treasury opened a state-level pathway for smaller stablecoin issuers, expanding the field beyond the largest banks. In effect, the dollar-backed stablecoin layer is already a regulated piece of US financial infrastructure.
The Convergence
These three threads now meet in the same window. A crypto-literate Fed chair takes office. Congress finalizes a market structure bill that ends regulation by enforcement. Meanwhile, dollar stablecoins move from experiment to licensed infrastructure under Treasury supervision. Each piece reinforces the next. Together, they position the United States to anchor the next layer of global settlement on digital dollar rails rather than concede that ground to foreign CBDCs or offshore platforms.
What the Reset Looks Like
The practical effect is a quiet rewiring of how value moves. Tokenized Treasuries, on-chain settlement, and stablecoin payments now have a sitting Fed chair who supports them, a legal framework that defines them, and a Treasury that licenses them. As a result, major banks, payment networks, and asset managers can build on these rails without regulatory ambiguity. Foreign jurisdictions will need to respond, either by aligning with the US framework or by accelerating their own. For the global dollar system, the Powell-to-Warsh handover is less a personnel change and more the start of a new operating layer.
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Recent Updates
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Jerome Powell Steps Down as Fed Chair, Setting the Stage for a Digital Dollar Era
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CLARITY Act Heads to Full Senate, Opening the Path to U.S. Tokenization Leadership
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Senate Confirms Pro-Crypto Kevin Warsh as Federal Reserve Governor
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