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#Gate13周年
TRUMP VS THE FED THE SHOWDOWN WALL STREET FEARED
A Constitutional Crisis Hidden Inside an Economic Debate
THE ULTIMATUM IN TRUMP'S OWN WORDS
On April 15, 2026, in an interview on Fox Business with "Mornings with Maria," President Donald Trump issued his clearest threat yet against Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell:
"I'll have to fire him, okay, if he's not leaving on time. I've held back firing him. I've wanted to fire him, but I hate to be controversial. I want to be uncontroversial. But he will be fired."
Three sentences. Enormous market implications.
THE CONTEXT — WHY THIS MATTERS SO MUCH RIGHT NOW
Jerome Powell's term as Federal Reserve Chair expires on **May 15, 2026** approximately 30 days from the date of Trump's statement.
Under normal circumstances, that would simply mean Powell leaves, Trump's nominated replacement Kevin Warsh takes over, and the transition proceeds through Senate confirmation. But circumstances in April 2026 are not normal.
THE THREE PRESSURE POINTS MAKING THIS EXPLOSIVE
01 — THE CRIMINAL INVESTIGATION
Federal prosecutors are actively investigating cost overruns in the renovation of the Federal Reserve's headquarters building. Powell has stated publicly that he will not step down from his position not just as Chair, but from the Fed's governing board entirely until the Justice Department resolves this probe. Powell's board seat extends to **2028**, meaning even after his Chairmanship ends on May 15, he could legally remain as a Fed Governor.
Trump's statement did not merely threaten to prevent Powell from staying as Chair it doubled down on the criminal investigation, making clear the administration has no intention of halting prosecutorial pressure on the central bank.
02 — THE WARSH NOMINATION PROBLEM
Trump's chosen replacement, Kevin Warsh, requires Senate confirmation. That confirmation process was already reported as "shaky" heading into April 2026, with mounting scrutiny from Senate members over the administration's approach to the Fed and the ongoing criminal investigation. If Warsh's confirmation is delayed, Powell could remain as Chair past May 15 precisely the scenario Trump said would trigger a firing.
03 — THE INTEREST RATE BATTLE
At the core of Trump's frustration with Powell is a dispute that has defined their relationship since Trump returned to office in January 2025: interest rates. Trump has repeatedly demanded Powell lower rates. Powell and the Fed's economists have maintained a cautious, data-driven approach that has kept rates higher than Trump prefers.
Trump stated again on April 15 that Powell is doing a "bad job" and "should be lowering interest rates."
THE LEGAL AND CONSTITUTIONAL DIMENSION
The question of whether a U.S. President can legally fire a Federal Reserve Chair is not fully settled law and markets know it.
The Federal Reserve Act specifies that Fed governors serve fixed terms and can only be removed "for cause." Whether policy disagreement such as refusing to cut interest rates on presidential request constitutes legal "cause" for removal has never been definitively tested in court.
If Trump attempts to fire Powell and Powell contests it, the resulting legal battle would create an unprecedented crisis of institutional independence for the world's most important central bank. Markets globally would face an uncertainty premium unlike anything since 2008.
MARKET IMPACT — WHAT INVESTORS ARE WATCHING
Fed Chair Term Expiry → May 15, 2026
Powell Board Seat (if he stays) → Until 2028
Warsh Senate Confirmation Status → Shaky / Under scrutiny
Trump's Stated Position → "He will be fired"
Powell's Stated Position → Not stepping down during probe
Interest Rate Dispute → Ongoing since Jan 2025
Key Investor Concern → Fed independence erosion
NY Times DealBook noted on April 15 that "just as war jitters are beginning to subside in the markets, investors are bracing for new uncertainty over leadership of the Fed."
The S&P 500 had just broken 7,000 for the first time a record driven partly by ceasefire optimism in the U.S.-Iran conflict. That same day, the Fed leadership crisis re-entered the headlines with full force, creating a counterweight to equity optimism.
CRYPTO MARKET ANGLE
The Fed Chair standoff is directly relevant to crypto investors for two reasons:
**Rate Expectations**: If Trump successfully pressures a new Fed leadership toward rate cuts whether through replacing Powell or appointing a more accommodative Chair the resulting liquidity expansion would be broadly constructive for risk assets including crypto. Lower rates reduce the opportunity cost of holding non-yielding assets and historically correlate with BTC outperformance.
**Dollar & Institutional Trust**: Conversely, if the firing of a Fed Chair erodes confidence in U.S. monetary institutions, the resulting dollar volatility could create short-term turbulence across all asset classes, including crypto. Uncertainty about who controls U.S. monetary policy is not automatically bullish it is first volatile, then potentially bullish.
WHAT HAPPENS NEXT
Four possible paths:
PATH A → Powell exits May 15, Warsh confirmed, smooth transition
PATH B → Powell stays as Governor post-May 15, Trump fires him
PATH C → Senate delays Warsh, Trump extends ceasefire deadline
PATH D → Legal challenge — Powell contests firing in federal court
Path D would be the most market-disruptive scenario and the one that would force the Supreme Court to define executive power over the Fed for the first time in modern history.
HISTORICAL CONTEXT
No sitting U.S. President has ever successfully fired a Federal Reserve Chair. The Fed's independence from direct executive control is considered a cornerstone of dollar credibility and U.S. financial stability. Investors in every asset class equities, bonds, commodities, and crypto are watching this situation with the understanding that its resolution will define macro conditions for the remainder of 2026.
#CreatorCarvinal
#TrumpUltimatumtoPowell