Key TakeawaysFed Chair Jerome Powell clarified at his April 30 press conference that officials who voted against the accommodative tone in the policy statement are not advocating for rate increasesPowell drew a clear distinction between dissent over language and dissent over policy direction, saying the debate is about neutrality of tone, not the need to hikeThe clarification softens what could have been interpreted as a hawkish signal from internal Fed disagreementFederal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell moved to calm rate hike fears at his April 30 press conference, clarifying that officials who dissented from the accommodative tone in the latest policy statement should not be read as pushing for higher interest rates."People aren't saying we need to raise rates now; it's more about whether the Fed should maintain a neutral stance on the policy outlook," Powell said, drawing a careful distinction between disagreement over the framing of the Fed's forward guidance and any appetite for actual policy tightening.The clarification is significant for markets that had been watching internal Fed dissent as a potential signal of a more hawkish pivot. Powell's framing suggests the disagreement is semantic and procedural rather than directional -- a debate over whether the Fed's statement should lean dovish, neutral, or noncommittal, rather than a genuine push to restart rate increases.For crypto markets the distinction matters. Bitcoin has been trading cautiously around $77,000 ahead of the Fed decision, with analysts flagging a hawkish statement as a potential catalyst for a pullback toward $72,000--$74,000. Powell's clarification that no officials are actively calling for rate hikes removes one of the more bearish tail risks from today's decision, providing a modest near-term tailwind for risk assets including Bitcoin.