On Wednesday, June 17, the Federal Reserve will hand down its latest interest-rate decision — and it lands at a pivotal moment for crypto. It is one of the first meetings chaired by Kevin Warsh, who took over from Jerome Powell in May, and it comes just as Bitcoin tries to recover from a 53% drawdown to around $59,000. Markets are pricing at roughly an 86% chance . The Fed holds rates at 3.50%–3.75%, where they've sat since December. But with April inflation still running at 3.8% and oil elevated, the bigger question isn't whether the Fed holds — it's how hawkish the message sounds.
For crypto, the words and the projections may matter more than the rate itself.
Bitcoin and other risk assets are highly sensitive to the path of rates and liquidity: a hawkish hold can cap a rebound, while any dovish hint can ignite one. Here's what to expect from the June meeting, why the new Chair changes the calculus, and how traders can prepare.
Key Takeaways
The FOMC meets June 16–17, with the decision and updated projections due Wednesday, June 17; market price ~86% odds of a hold at 3.50%–3.75%.
It's among the first meetings under new Fed Chair Kevin Warsh, who is seen as unlikely to quickly cut — a hawkish tilt versus markets hoping for easing.
Inflation remains sticky: April CPI (released May 12) came in at 3.8% year-over-year, well above the Fed's 2% target.
The April meeting was the most divided FOMC vote since 1992 (8–4 to hold), showing how split policymakers are.
For crypto, the dot plot and the Chair's tone may move markets more than the rate itself: a hawkish hold pressures Bitcoin, dovish hints could spark a rally.
Wildcards: a possible US–Iran peace deal could lower oil and inflation, while a Bank of Japan rate hike could unwind the yen carry trade and pressure liquidity.
What the Fed Is Expected to Do on June 17
The base case is another hold at 3.50%–3.75%, the range in place since December 2025 after a round of late-2025 cuts. The CME FedWatch tool prices roughly an 86% probability of no change, and prediction markets lean even more heavily toward a hold. This meeting also brings an updated Summary of Economic Projections, including the closely watched "dot plot", against a backdrop of April CPI at 3.8% and GDP growth projected near 2.4%. The April 28–29 meeting underlined how divided the committee is: policymakers held in an 8–4 vote, the most dissents since October 1992, with one official pushing for a cut and three opposing an easing bias.
The New Chair Factor: Kevin Warsh
Powell's chairmanship ended in mid-May, and he remains on the board as a governor. Kevin Warsh, confirmed by the Senate, now leads the Fed, and June 16–17 is one of his first meetings at the helm. Analysts broadly expect a Warsh Fed to be in no rush to cut, given a resilient economy and still-elevated inflation. That makes his first press conference a key event in its own right: markets will parse his tone for how the new leadership weighs inflation risk against growth. A hawkish hold is the consensus expectation.
Why the Fed Matters So Much for Bitcoin
Crypto trades as a high-beta risk asset tied to liquidity and real yields. Higher-for-longer rates and rising Treasury yields tend to pressure
Bitcoin; rate-cut expectations and falling yields support it. The early-June crypto rout coincided with rising yields and elevated oil, and Standard Chartered's recent “crypto spring” thesis partly hinges on rate cuts arriving later in 2026. That makes the June dot plot — how many cuts the Fed still projects this year — a critical input for crypto, arguably more important than the June rate decision itself.
Scenarios for Crypto
Hawkish hold (base case) — rates unchanged, the dot plot shows fewer 2026 cuts, and Warsh stresses inflation vigilance. Likely risk-off: Bitcoin could retest support and liquidations rise.
Dovish hold (bullish surprise) — the Fed holds but signals cuts are coming or acknowledges inflation progress. Likely a relief rally in BTC and ETH.
Surprise cut (low odds) — would probably spark a sharp crypto rally, but markets currently see this as unlikely.
The Macro Wildcards
Two outside forces could overshadow the Fed. A US–Iran peace deal would likely push oil lower, cooling inflation and giving the Fed more room to ease, a crypto positive. Conversely, a Bank of Japan rate hike could trigger an unwind of the yen carry trade, draining risk-asset liquidity worldwide — a crypto negative. Both are worth watching alongside the FOMC decision.
How to Prepare on MEXC
Event-driven volatility spikes around FOMC announcements. The sensible playbook is to avoid over-positioning into the release, use take-profit and stop-loss orders, and keep leverage controlled. Check the CME FedWatch tool the day before, then focus on the dot plot and Warsh's tone rather than the headline rate. You can trade
BTC/USDT and
ETH/USDT on MEXC, with
futures risk tools to manage the swings.
Conclusion
The Fed is widely expected to stand pat on June 17, so the real signal will be in the projections and the new Chair's tone. A hawkish hold that pushes rate cuts further out would be a headwind for a crypto market still trying to find its footing; a dovish surprise could supercharge the "crypto spring" narrative. Either way, expect sharp moves — size positions accordingly and let the data, not the noise, guide your decisions.
Disclaimer: This content is for educational and reference purposes only and does not constitute any investment advice. Digital asset investments carry high risk. Please evaluate carefully and assume full responsibility for your own decisions.