Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said the Justice Department served the Fed with grand jury subpoenas and threatened criminal charges, framing the move as political retaliation tied to rate policy rather than the Fed’s $2,500,000,000 building renovation.
Bitcoin (BTC) ticked higher on the headline, trading around $90,822 (+0.1% 24h) on CoinGecko and $91,226 (+0.42% 24h) on CoinMarketCap as macro desks repriced U.S. institutional risk.
Political Pressure Claim Hits Markets
Powell put the allegation in writing on January 11, 2026, and he used an unusually direct line for a sitting Fed chair.
“The threat of criminal charges is a consequence of the Federal Reserve setting interest rates based on our best assessment of what will serve the public, rather than following the preferences of the President.”
Reuters reported that Powell described the indictment threat as a “pretext” to pressure the FOMC toward lower rates, after DOJ subpoenas hit on Friday, January 9. The Associated Press separately reported that Powell said the DOJ threatened an indictment tied to his June testimony on the renovation project, a detail that matters because it anchors the legal theory to Congressional testimony risk instead of a monetary-policy statute.
The market’s cross-asset tell showed up outside crypto first. The Washington Post reported intraday equity volatility alongside a weaker dollar and a spot-gold spike to fresh records, while former Fed chairs and ex-Treasury leadership publicly warned the probe risks damaging confidence in U.S. institutions.
Goldman Sachs chief economist Jan Hatzius said the episode “adds to” independence concerns, while keeping his base case that the Fed stays data-driven, and he pointed to a revised Goldman path that places cuts in June and September 2026. That schedule matters for BTC because the narrative splits cleanly between “political capture” (risk premium higher, dollar weaker) and “macro easing” (liquidity tailwind).
What Desks Are Watching
BTC’s +1% reaction is the cleanest micro-signal desks get on “rule-of-law risk” in the U.S. without waiting for a CPI print.
If subpoenas evolve into an actual indictment threat with a docketed case number, expect a second-order trade: higher term premium, softer USD, wider rates vol, and a bid for non-sovereign collateral (BTC, gold) that looks less like a Nasdaq beta proxy and more like a jurisdiction hedge, particularly for funds that already run basis books and can finance BTC exposure against stablecoin liabilities.
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