3 US Crypto Stocks Primed for Action Post US-China Trade Deal – Don’t Miss These Plays
The US-China trade deal just dropped—and crypto stocks are already buzzing. Here’s where smart money’s looking.
Mining Giants: Power Plays or Powder Kegs?
With tariffs easing, publicly traded miners could see cheaper hardware imports. But let’s be real—these firms still live and die by Bitcoin’s volatility.
Exchange Titans: Liquidity Tsunami Ahead
Coinbase and friends stand to benefit from renewed cross-border capital flows. Just don’t ask about their compliance teams’ overtime pay.
Blockchain Infrastructure: The Silent Winners
Enterprise blockchain providers quietly rack up contracts while traders fixate on price charts. Classic case of ‘picks and shovels’ outperforming the gold rush.
Remember: In crypto markets, ‘trade deal’ often means ‘temporary pump before the next dump.’ But hey—this time might be different (said every analyst since 2017).
Circle Internet Group (CRCL)
Circle (CRCL) has surged nearly 260% since its Nasdaq debut and is up more than 6.5% in the last 24 hours, continuing its explosive post-IPO momentum.
Currently trading around $112, the stock has drawn attention from both institutional and retail investors, with some now speculating whether CRCL could eventually reach $300.
This bullish case is supported by Circle’s strong revenue engine tied to USDC reserves, scalable financial infrastructure offerings, and a capital-light business model that positions it as a future leader in global digital finance.
If momentum holds, CRCL could test resistance levels at $118 and $123 and potentially climb toward $138. However, if it fails to hold support at $106 or $101, downside risks could drag it back to the $76 range.
Robinhood Market (HOOD)
Robinhood Markets (HOOD) has climbed 96% year-to-date and is trading NEAR its all-time highs, reflecting strong investor enthusiasm.
Despite this rally, the average one-year price forecast from 19 analysts is $65.26, with an implied downside of -11.13%. Still, sentiment remains largely bullish, with 12 out of 22 analysts rating it a “Strong Buy” and another six recommending “Hold.”
If current momentum continues, HOOD could soon break into new highs around the $80 mark, though a drop below the key support at $63.84 could trigger a correction.
Strong operating metrics from May 2025 support the bullish momentum. Robinhood reported a 10% monthly increase in Total Platform Assets, now at $255 billion—up 89% year-over-year.
Trading activity surged across the board, with equity volumes up 108% YoY, options contracts up 36%, and crypto volumes up 65%.
The platform maintained 25.9 million funded accounts, added $3.5 billion in net deposits, and saw securities lending revenue rise 43% YoY.
GameStop Corp. (GME)
GameStop (GME) dropped over 5% in the last 24 hours following the release of its Q1 2025 earnings report. Despite posting a net income of $44.8 million—compared to a net loss of $32.3 million in the same quarter last year—investors reacted negatively to a sharp decline in revenue.
Net sales were $732.4 million, down from $881.8 million a year earlier, signaling continued headwinds for the company’s Core retail business.
While adjusted net income reached $83.1 million and operating losses narrowed significantly, a $35.5 million impairment charge tied to international restructuring and the top-line revenue miss likely weighed on sentiment.
So far in 2025, GME is down 8% year-to-date, with the stock now testing key technical levels. If the support at $28.35 fails to hold, it could trigger further downside toward $25.69.
The earnings report showed clear progress in cost-cutting, with SG&A expenses reduced from $295.1 million to $228.1 million, and a healthier cash position of $6.4 billion.
However, unless GameStop finds a way to reignite revenue growth, investor skepticism may continue to pressure the stock.