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Kevin Warsh, nominee for the Federal Reserve Board of Governors, holds extensive exposure to Web3, crypto, and adjacent financial infrastructure through venture funds and direct investments, according to his public financial disclosure.
The disclosure also shows stakes in major technology and infrastructure companies, raising potential conflict-of-interest concerns if his nomination is confirmed.
Warsh’s indirect holdings, primarily through venture funds such as DCM Investments and affiliated vehicles, include a broad set of crypto-native and Web3 infrastructure projects:
Core DeFi / Trading / Protocols
Layer 1 / Layer 2 / Scaling
Crypto Infrastructure / Investment / Dev Platforms
DeFi / Trading / Portfolio Infrastructure
NFT / Social / Consumer Web3
Crypto Fintech / Banking
Decentralized Compute / Identity / Data
Creator / DAO / Web3 Commerce
Prediction Markets
Hybrid / Emerging
This breadth indicates exposure across nearly every Web3 vertical: L1/L2 infrastructure, DeFi, NFTs, developer tooling, and crypto-financial services.
Separate from crypto, Warsh also holds positions in globally recognized and high-growth technology companies:
Global Leaders
Top Private / Infra Companies
These holdings reinforce that Warsh’s exposure is concentrated in technology infrastructure layers, not just application-level companies.
Under U.S. ethics rules, Federal Reserve officials are subject to strict conflict-of-interest requirements.
According to the filing, Warsh has already committed to divesting certain assets if confirmed.
If confirmed, Warsh would typically be required to:
Given the Federal Reserve’s increasing involvement in:
his exposure to:
would likely face heightened scrutiny.
Warsh’s nomination was formally filed in early 2026, with review underway by the Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs.
Confirmation would require:
Warsh’s disclosure shows one of the broadest Web3 portfolios among senior U.S. financial nominees, spanning DeFi, L1s, NFTs, and crypto infrastructure.
If confirmed, he will likely need to:
The case highlights the growing intersection between U.S. monetary policy leadership and digital asset markets.
Kevin Warsh’s complete 69-page financial disclosure (OGE Form 278e) was filed with the U.S. Office of Government Ethics on April 14, 2026. Our team has reviewed the full document, which is publicly available here: Download the official filing (69 pages)