Federal Reserve Governor Stephen Miran has reaffirmed his expectation of four interest rate cuts in 2026, putting him sharply at odds with the Fed's own median projection of just one cut this year. The dovish outlier on the Federal Open Market Committee is scheduled to speak at the Digital Asset Summit in New York on March 25, making his stance directly relevant to crypto investors searching for policy signals in a market gripped by extreme fear.
Fed Forecast · Gov. Milan
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Rate cuts expected in 2026
Milan Stands Alone Against the Fed's One-Cut Consensus
Miran, often transliterated as "Milan" in Asian media coverage, stated plainly that four interest rate cuts are still expected in 2026, equivalent to 100 basis points of total easing. He cautioned against making policy decisions based on short-term headlines, arguing that rising oil prices have not yet materialized into actual inflation.
The Fed held rates steady at its March 18 FOMC meeting. Miran dissented, voting for a 25 basis point cut. He has dissented at every FOMC meeting since his confirmation, making him the board's most persistent advocate for faster easing.
His dovish case rests on a technical argument: shelter inflation is declining faster than PCE data reflects, and imputed services costs artificially inflate readings by roughly 40 basis points. In Miran's view, underlying inflation is already near the 2% target.
"A quicker pace of easing policy, as I have advocated, would appropriately move us closer to a neutral stance."
Fed Chair Jerome Powell offered a different picture after the March meeting, noting that four or five FOMC members moved from expecting two cuts to just one. The official median stayed at one cut for 2026, and the Fed raised its inflation forecast to 2.7%.
The gap between Miran's four-cut view and the committee's one-cut median is the widest internal divergence on rate policy in recent memory. For traders tracking institutional developments around crypto ETFs, the question is whether Miran's position represents where the committee is heading or where it refuses to go.
Why Four Rate Cuts Would Matter for Crypto
Rate cuts reduce the opportunity cost of holding non-yielding assets like Bitcoin. In previous easing cycles, notably the 2019 Fed pivot and 2020 emergency cuts, crypto markets rallied as cheaper capital flowed into risk assets and the dollar weakened.
The current environment is the opposite. Bitcoin fell below $72,000 following the March 18 hold decision. Total crypto liquidations hit $451.93 million in the 24 hours after the announcement, with $382 million of that on the long side, reflecting severe downside pressure.
The Fear & Greed Index sits at 8 out of 100, deep in "Extreme Fear" territory. Some traders have pushed rate cut expectations out to 2027 entirely. Against that backdrop, a sitting Fed governor maintaining a four-cut forecast is a notable counter-signal, even if it remains a minority view.
If Miran's projection were to gain traction among other FOMC members, it would imply 100 basis points of easing, a level that historically loosens financial conditions enough to support risk-asset rallies. Markets watching for altcoin breakout patterns and broader crypto momentum would likely see renewed inflows if the rate path shifted dovishly.
That said, this remains a macro tailwind, not a guaranteed catalyst. The Fed's official position is one cut, and inflation at 2.7% gives hawks on the committee ample reason to hold firm.
What Could Shift the Rate Path Before Year-End
The FOMC has six remaining meetings in 2026. Each one is a potential inflection point, but the data between meetings matters more than the meetings themselves. Upcoming CPI and PCE releases will determine whether Miran's argument, that inflation is overstated by measurement quirks, gains empirical support.
The labor market is the other variable Miran has cited. He argues it continues to need monetary policy support. If job growth slows materially in the next two Non-Farm Payrolls reports, other FOMC members could begin shifting toward his position.
Miran's appearance at the Digital Asset Summit on March 25 is itself a signal. He will be the first sitting Fed governor to speak at a major crypto-focused conference, a move that suggests institutional openness to digital assets even as the broader policy stance remains restrictive.
For now, the Fed's consensus and Miran's forecast point in the same direction but at very different speeds. The next PCE inflation print and the May FOMC meeting will reveal whether the gap is narrowing or widening.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.