
Boston Fed President Susan Collins backed holding rates steady and urged the Fed to strip out language that implicitly points to cuts as the next move, reinforcing a higher‑for‑longer stance that has repeatedly whipsawed crypto when markets price in dovish pivots too early.
Collins told reporters she backed the latest decision to keep rates on hold but “hopes to adjust the wording of the statement to avoid implying a rate cut,” according to a summary of her remarks carried by Jinshi and echoed in recent coverage of her speeches. She added that “an increasing number of officials” want the Federal Open Market Committee to signal that the next policy move “could be either a rate cut or a rate hike,” rather than embedding a dovish bias into forward guidance.
That message is consistent with Collins’s recent comments. In late February, she said it was “quite likely” the central bank would keep rates unchanged “for some time,” arguing that after cumulative easing, policy was already “mildly restrictive, perhaps quite close to neutral,” and that a “patient and deliberate approach is appropriate at this stage.” In March, she told another audience she saw “no urgency” to change rates and would need “clear evidence” that inflation is moving sustainably toward 2% before supporting cuts.
Collins has for months been part of the Fed’s higher‑for‑longer camp. In prior cycles, she repeatedly set a “high bar” for additional easing, saying she would be “reluctant to support further interest rate cuts anytime soon with inflation still high,” and warning that premature easing could “delay – or potentially halt – the return of inflation to the target level.”
Her latest push to strip out language that hints at cuts matters for markets that have spent much of 2026 front‑running dovish pivots. The crypto market has already seen how sensitive it is to Fed surprises: when the central bank delivered a widely expected 25 basis point cut earlier this year, Bitcoin and Ethereum failed to extend their pre‑meeting rally because “the move was fully priced in,” as one post‑mortem explained, leaving $BTC stuck around $92,000 and $ETH near $3,400.
If Collins and other hawks succeed in shifting the statement to a more symmetric “either way” framing, it will likely reinforce the idea that policy can stay tight even as growth cools, a backdrop that tends to cap speculative excess in crypto. A recent crypto.news analysis showed how hints of more cuts from other Fed officials briefly lifted sentiment before fading as traders realized the timing was uncertain. Another crypto.news report contrasted Bitcoin’s choppy reaction to the last Fed decision with gold’s cleaner safe‑haven bid, while a broader crypto.news macro piece argued that as long as rate cuts remain a moving target, “macro chop” will continue to dominate price action across $BTC, $ETH, and altcoins.