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I just saw something very interesting coming out of the disclosure documents of Kevin Warsh, the Federal Reserve chair candidate nominated by Trump. The guy discloses Bitcoin, Ethereum, and more than 20 crypto assets in his financial filings—and it changes the game quite a bit.
Why does this matter? Simple: if confirmed, Warsh would be the first Fed chair with real exposure to venture capital in DeFi and blockchain infrastructure. This isn’t just theory—the 69-page document he submitted to the OGE on April 14 shows that he truly put his money where his mouth is.
The details are fascinating. Warsh has indirect holdings in Solana, Optimism, and the Lightning Network through the AVGF I fund. Through DCM Investments 10 LLC, he holds interests in dYdX and Polychain Capital, as well as dozens of other projects such as Compound, Blast, and Lemon Cash. There’s more: Dapper Labs, Deso, Eulerian, and even Zero Gravity ( an L2 AI platform 2). He also directly owns a stake in Metatheory Inc., a Web3 company.
His portfolio covers practically every segment: L1 blockchains, L2 layers, DeFi protocols, NFT infrastructure, prediction markets, and Bitcoin payments—virtually everything. Most of these positions are small bets ( under US$1,000 each ), but they show a well-thought-out diversification strategy.
Now, the full context: Warsh’s combined assets with his wife Jane Lauder ( the granddaughter of Estée Lauder’s founder ) total approximately US$192 million. He received US$10.2 million in advisory fees from Stanley Druckenmiller and another US$1.55 million from GoldenTree Asset Management—institutions that trade digital assets. He promised to sell everything if confirmed, so there will be no conflict of interest.
What makes this even more relevant is Warsh’s track record with crypto. Back in 2011, he saw the Bitcoin white paper at a dinner with Marc Andreessen. In 2018, he wrote in The Wall Street Journal that Bitcoin could be a sustainable store of value like gold. Now, in 2025, he declared that Bitcoin doesn’t replace the dollar, but works as a “policeman” for monetary policy—and that developing crypto software is part of the United States’ economic competitiveness.
For the industry, this is a double-edged sword. On the one hand, a Fed chair with real technical understanding of blockchain and DeFi could be more receptive to innovation. On the other hand, forced-sale obligations might limit his ability to turn these visions into concrete actions in the first few months. The confirmation hearing was scheduled for April 21, but there is still political resistance in the Senate.
What’s clear is that Warsh isn’t just a crypto sympathizer—he genuinely believes in the space enough to put real capital on the line. That changes the conversation about what the tone of monetary policy will be in the coming years.