Has the Federal Reserve been hijacked by politics? Is Bitcoin's historic opportunity here?

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The Federal Reserve has cut interest rates, but the market is in a panic.

On December 10, 2025, the Federal Reserve announced a 25 basis point rate cut and pledged to purchase $40 billion worth of Treasury securities within 30 days. Traditionally, this is considered a major positive signal, but the market’s reaction was unexpected: short-term interest rates declined, while long-term bond yields rose instead of falling.

Behind this abnormal phenomenon lies a more dangerous signal: investors are pricing in a structural risk of “loss of Federal Reserve independence.” For crypto investors, this is a critical moment to reassess asset allocations.

Rate cuts are not simple

On the surface, a 25 basis point rate cut is a routine response to slowing economic growth. From an economics textbook perspective, rate cuts are generally seen as standard tools to stimulate the economy, reduce corporate financing costs, and boost market confidence.

But the timing is too “coincidental.”

Before the decision was announced, Trump’s economic advisor and leading Fed candidate Kevin Hassett publicly “predicted” a 25 basis point cut. This “precise forecast” from the White House core circle forced the market to question: is this truly an independent decision by the Fed based on economic data, or the result of prior “pre-arranged signals”?

More importantly, Trump has publicly attacked Powell multiple times over the past year, accusing him of “playing politics” and even threatening to seek his removal. This unprecedented political pressure has crossed the line since the Fed’s founding. Historically, even during severe economic crises, few presidents have openly interfered with central bank decisions like this.

The market no longer views rate cuts as purely professional decisions but as products of policy-political compromises.

This collapse of trust is more terrifying than the rate cut itself.

$40 billion bond purchases, covert money printing?

In addition to the rate cut, the more controversial move was the Fed’s announcement to buy $40 billion in short-term Treasury securities within 30 days.

The official explanation is maintaining liquidity stability, technically different from the quantitative easing of 2008. But the market is not convinced.

Against the backdrop of persistent U.S. fiscal deficits, investors tend to interpret any asset purchase as covert quantitative easing or a prelude to fiscal dominance.

Investors are choosing to believe the worst — political interference has led to covert easing, and long-term uncertainty is increasing.

True risks

The independence of the Federal Reserve is the cornerstone of financial stability and the dollar’s global status. According to Daily Economic News, financial experts explicitly state that the loss of Fed independence is like knocking down the first domino in the “Dollar Hegemony,” equivalent to a nuclear strike on dollar credibility.

How does the market price this risk?

Standard Chartered Bank’s latest research shows that although the money market expects short-term rates to decline, fears over Fed independence and fiscal policy are pushing U.S. long-term interest rates higher. This is the market’s early pricing of “fiscal dominance” risk.

The rise in long-term rates is not a response to short-term liquidity shortages but a demand by investors for higher term premiums to hedge against potential future fiscal discipline collapses. The logic is: escalated political interference → market expects the Fed to be forced into fiscal expansion → increased term premiums hedge inflation risks → pushing up long-term Treasury yields.

Once credibility is lost, regaining market trust is extremely difficult. More concerning is that, despite the long-term damage to dollar credibility, in the short term, the dollar is still supported by external geopolitical uncertainties.

This short-term safe-haven support masks the long-term, structural weaknesses caused by the erosion of Fed independence.

Impact on the crypto market

In a macro environment characterized by “loose monetary policy + risk premiums,” traditional assets face complex situations: bond markets are diverging between short and long term, stock market volatility is rising, gold is under dual pressures but still has opportunity costs, and the dollar faces a contradiction between short-term safe-haven demand and long-term depreciation.

For crypto participants, this Fed independence crisis is precisely a critical moment to reassess the value of crypto asset allocations.

Bitcoin: The “Digital Gold” in a shaken dollar credit foundation

When the Fed’s independence is questioned and the dollar’s credit foundation is shaken, Bitcoin’s core value proposition is strengthened like never before.

Scarcity against monetary over-issuance: Bitcoin’s total supply is fixed at 21 million coins, embedded in code that no one can change. In stark contrast, the Fed may yield under political pressure, expanding the money supply without limit.

Historical data clearly confirms this. Every time the Fed expands its balance sheet massively, Bitcoin tends to rally strongly. The quantitative easing during the pandemic in 2020 pushed Bitcoin from $3,800 to $69,000, an increase of over 17 times. This is not coincidence; the market is voting with real money for “hard currency.”

Although this time it involves only $40 billion in Treasury securities, a scale far smaller than the 2020 “money printing,” worries about “fiscal dominance” have already begun to ferment. If the Fed is politicized, future scale could be $400 billion, $4 trillion, or even more. Such expectations are revaluing Bitcoin’s anti-inflationary value.

Decentralization as resistance to political interference: The essence of the Fed’s loss of independence is the politicization of monetary policy. Bitcoin’s decentralized nature makes it inherently immune to interference by any single government or institution.

No one can force the Bitcoin network to “cut rates” or “buy bonds,” and no president can threaten to remove the “Chairman” of Bitcoin. This censorship resistance, in the face of trust crises in traditional finance, shows its unique value. When people no longer trust central banks to resist political pressure, decentralized monetary systems become the last safe haven.

Ethereum and DeFi: Alternatives to financial infrastructure

When trust in traditional financial systems is challenged, decentralized finance (DeFi) offers an alternative that does not rely on sovereign credit.

The loss of Fed independence is essentially a “trust” collapse — markets no longer believe that central banks can make professional decisions independently of political pressure. In this context, trustless financial systems gain an advantage.

DeFi protocols on Ethereum use smart contracts for automated execution. Lending and borrowing interest rates are determined by algorithms and market supply-demand, not by a politically pressured committee. You deposit funds, and the contract automatically executes; you lend out funds, and rates are transparent and verifiable. The entire process requires no trust in banks or central banks, only trust in the code.

This “code is law” feature shows its unique appeal during a financial trust crisis. When you worry that banks might freeze your assets due to political reasons, or that central banks might over-issue money due to fiscal pressure, DeFi provides an exit.

Note that mainstream stablecoins (USDT, USDC) are still pegged to the USD and subject to dollar credit risk transmission. If the dollar depreciates long-term, these stablecoins’ purchasing power will also decline.

But this also creates new opportunities: decentralized stablecoins (DAI) or stablecoins pegged to a basket of assets are exploring paths away from single-sovereign credit. Although still in early stages, under the broader skepticism towards dollar credit, these projects might usher in new growth opportunities.

Risks and opportunities coexist in the crypto market

It’s important to emphasize that the crypto market itself is highly volatile and not suitable for all investors. A 10% daily fluctuation in Bitcoin can trigger panic in traditional finance, but in the crypto world, it’s common.

In the current environment of challenged Fed independence and conflicting safe-haven assets, crypto assets as “non-correlated assets” deserve a fresh look at their allocation value. In the past, Bitcoin was often viewed as a “risk asset” that moved in tandem with tech stocks. But as the trust foundation of traditional finance begins to shake, this correlation could fundamentally change.

More importantly, this Fed independence crisis might become a watershed. Historically, Bitcoin was seen as a “toy for speculators”; in the future, it could become a “hedge against sovereign credit risk.” This narrative shift will redefine the role of crypto assets in the global financial system.

Summary

This Fed decision is not just a simple rate cut; it is a product of the compromise between monetary policy professionalism and political demands.

The real test will come during an overheated economy. If inflation rises in the future and the Fed is forced to delay rate hikes due to political pressure, independence will be completely lost. At that point, not only the dollar but the entire dollar hegemony system will face reconstruction.

For crypto investors, don’t be fooled by short-term benefits of rate cuts. When the trust foundation of traditional finance is challenged, the role of crypto assets is undergoing a fundamental transformation — from “speculative tools” to “structural options for hedging sovereign credit risk.”

History always shifts unexpectedly. When people begin to question the independence of central banks and the dollar’s credibility starts to wobble, decentralized monetary systems are no longer just “Utopian,” but an increasingly viable option.

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