Economy January 30, 2026

Bitcoin Falls to Two-Month Low as Fed Chair Speculation Roils Risk Assets

Markets react to reports on a potential Fed nominee and renewed liquidity concerns, pressuring cryptocurrencies and lifting the dollar

By Ajmal Hussain
Bitcoin Falls to Two-Month Low as Fed Chair Speculation Roils Risk Assets

Bitcoin slid to a two-month low amid mounting speculation that former Fed Governor Kevin Warsh could be chosen to replace Jerome Powell as chair of the U.S. Federal Reserve. The prospect of a tighter approach to liquidity pushed the dollar higher and accelerated selling across cryptocurrencies, with ether also retreating. Market nervousness was compounded by a sharp drop in a major technology stock after mixed AI-related results.

Key Points

  • Bitcoin dropped 2.5% to $82,300, heading toward a fourth straight month of losses and its longest losing streak in eight years; it has lost about a third of its value since October highs.
  • Speculation that former Fed Governor Kevin Warsh could be nominated as Fed chair, and his calls for a smaller Fed balance sheet, intensified selling in cryptocurrencies and lifted the dollar.
  • A 10% fall in Microsoft stock after large AI spending and a modest revenue beat heightened market fears and contributed to the selloff; ether fell 2.9% to $2,735.48.

Bitcoin tumbled to a two-month trough on Friday as growing speculation that the next chair of the U.S. Federal Reserve could pursue tighter conditions in money markets put pressure on cryptocurrencies and bolstered the dollar.

The market-leading digital currency fell 2.5% on the day to trade at $82,300, extending losses from the prior session and moving toward a fourth consecutive month of declines - its longest losing streak in eight years. Bitcoin has now given up roughly a third of its value since hitting record highs in October.

Selling intensified as reports circulated that former Federal Reserve Governor Kevin Warsh was poised to be named by President Donald Trump to succeed Fed Chair Jerome Powell. Warsh has publicly advocated for what he describes as regime change at the central bank and has argued for a smaller Fed balance sheet.

Market participants have often treated cryptocurrencies and other speculative assets as beneficiaries of a large Federal Reserve balance sheet, which historically has supported rallies by injecting liquidity into money markets. That dynamic, some strategists say, has been a key backstop for risk assets.

"As you start to talk about pulling the rug out from underneath that ... all the hedges against balance sheet expansion that people have been going for - gold, crypto, obviously bonds start to sell a little bit," said Damien Boey, portfolio strategist at Wilson Asset Management in Sydney.

Ether likewise slipped to a two-month low, trading 2.9% lower at $2,735.48 as crypto markets continued to struggle for direction after last year’s sharp downturn. Both bitcoin and ether have lagged rallies in other asset classes such as gold and stocks, which at times they had tracked.

Sean Dawson, head of research at Derive.xyz, a crypto options trading platform, said correlations between markets persist and highlighted another driver behind the selloff: concerns tied to AI-related market excitement. He pointed to a 10% drop in Microsoft stock after the company disclosed a large AI-related expenditure but delivered only a modest revenue beat, an outcome that sent a tremor through global markets overnight.


Cryptocurrencies remain without clear direction, having been buffeted by both the macro narrative around central bank policy and episodic equity shocks. The interplay between Fed balance sheet expectations and episodic equity moves tied to AI spending has contributed to volatile trading conditions for risk assets, including crypto, bonds and equities.

For now, investors are monitoring developments around the potential Fed appointment and corporate earnings updates closely, as both continue to shape sentiment across currencies, stocks, and digital assets.

Risks

  • Uncertainty over the next Fed chair and potential policy shifts toward shrinking the Fed balance sheet could reduce liquidity, affecting cryptocurrencies, gold, bonds and other speculative assets.
  • Ongoing volatility in major technology stocks tied to AI spending - exemplified by a 10% decline in Microsoft after its report - can trigger broader risk-off moves across global markets, impacting equities and crypto.
  • Cryptocurrencies remain directionless after last year’s collapse and are vulnerable to correlation shifts with other asset classes such as gold and stocks, which could amplify swings in digital-asset prices.

More from Economy

Economists Say Warsh Nomination Unlikely to Shift Fed Policy This Year Feb 2, 2026 Pound Holds Near $1.37 Ahead of Bank of England Decision Feb 2, 2026 UK Manufacturing PMI Climbs to Highest Level Since August 2024 as New Orders Accelerate Feb 2, 2026 German Retail Sales Seen Rising 2% in 2026, Real Growth Near-Stagnant Feb 2, 2026 Warsh Signals Desire to Shrink Fed Balance Sheet — Practical Limits Make Rapid Change Unlikely Feb 2, 2026