Kevin Warsh's public financial disclosure adds a concrete crypto angle to the battle over who will run the Federal Reserve next. In the 69-page OGE filing, Warsh lists named interests tied to Polymarket, Optimism, Compound, dYdX, Blast, Solana, Tenderly, Polychain, and the Lightning Network, alongside a much larger portfolio of private fund interests and venture bets.

What the filing shows

The largest disclosed positions are not the crypto names. Warsh reports two Juggernaut Fund LP holdings valued at more than $50 million each, while many of the digital-asset-related entries appear as smaller underlying positions inside venture structures. The form uses threshold-based disclosure categories, and some endnotes note that certain underlying holdings fall below reporting thresholds.

The key governance point is divestiture. On page two, the ethics review says the report is not yet compliant for a defined set of lines, but adds that "Once the filer divests these assets, he will be in compliance" with the Ethics in Government Act reporting rules.

Why it matters

Fed leadership has become increasingly relevant to crypto policy, from stablecoins and bank custody to how the central bank handles tokenized money infrastructure. The Senate Banking Committee's chairman said Warsh is expected to appear for a hearing next week, which means lawmakers now have a primary-source map of the digital-asset exposure he would need to unwind before taking the job.