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Kevin Warsh filed a 69-page financial disclosure revealing assets worth well over $100M, with investments spanning crypto, AI, and Elon Musk's SpaceX.
President Donald Trump's nominee to lead the Federal Reserve submitted the filing to the U.S. Office of Government Ethics on Tuesday as part of his Senate confirmation process.
The document shows two investments in the Juggernaut Fund LP each valued at more than $50 million, tied to his advisory work with billionaire investor Stanley Druckenmiller's family office.
His crypto holdings span a wide range of projects.
They include blockchain network Solana(SOL), Ethereum(ETH) layer-2 networks Blast and Optimism, DeFi lending protocol dYdX, NFT company Dapper Labs, and crypto venture firm Polychain. Warsh also holds positions in Bitcoin(BTC) trading platform Flashnet, Ethereum developer platform Tenderly, and on-chain social media startup DeSo.
Beyond crypto, Warsh disclosed stakes in prediction market Polymarket, SpaceX, and dozens of AI and biotech startups.
Those include a "reversible male contraceptive solution" company called Contraline and "bionic movement-enhancing wearable clothing" maker Cionic.
Warsh has pledged to divest from these holdings if confirmed.
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Despite broad support on Capitol Hill, Warsh faces a complicated path to confirmation. Republican Sen. Thom Tillis of North Carolina has vowed to block any Fed nominee until the Department of Justice drops a criminal investigation into current Fed Chair Jerome Powell.
Powell disclosed in January that he was under investigation related to the $2.5 billion renovation of the Fed's headquarters in Washington.
He has said the threat of criminal charges stems directly from his refusal to bow to Trump's demands for faster rate cuts. Though the DOJ case has faced major setbacks, the administration appears intent on continuing the probe.
Trump first announced Warsh as his pick on Jan. 30, 2026, and the White House formally transmitted the nomination to the Senate on Mar. 4. The Senate Banking Committee had initially targeted an Apr. 16 hearing, but delayed it after failing to receive Warsh's financial paperwork in time.
With the disclosure now filed, a hearing could come as early as the week of Apr. 21.
Powell's term as Fed chair expires May 15, and the administration has said it remains confident Warsh will be in place by then. Warsh previously served as a Fed governor from 2006 to 2011, when he was the youngest person ever appointed to the board. During that stint, he played a central role in the bank bailouts that followed the 2008 financial crisis.
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