3 Crypto Growth Stocks to Park $1,000 in Before the Next Bull Run (August 2025)
Forget Wall Street's tired blue-chips—these digital asset plays are printing generational wealth while hedge funds still debate "blockchain viability."
Layer-1 Titans on Discount
Ethereum killers? More like ETH retirement planners. Solana and Avalanche are trading at 60% off ATHs despite processing transactions at speeds that make legacy finance weep.
DeFi's Dirty Little Secret
The real yield farming happens in protocol treasuries. Projects like Aave and Uniswap now generate more fee revenue than some European banks—with 1/100th the overhead.
The Miner Miracle
Bitcoin mining stocks got decimated in 2024's hash war. Now they're rebounding faster than a shitcoin after Elon's next tweet, with Riot Platforms doubling its hash rate since January.
Warning: Past performance guarantees nothing in crypto. But $1K parked here could either buy a Lambo or become a very expensive lesson in volatility—Wall Street analysts will charge you $500/hr to explain why either outcome was "predictable."
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1. Upstart
Yes,(UPST -1.01%) shares stumbled on Wednesday in response to its second-quarter report. Although revenue of $257.3 million topped analysts' expectations of $226.5 million and adjusted per-share earnings of $0.36 beat expectations of only $0.25, the Q2 earnings call highlighted lingering risks like inflation and competition. Investors took that ball and ran with it, dragging UPST shares down 19% for the day.
The market, however, arguably lost all perspective on the matter. Revenue still doubled year over year, and the company went from an operating loss of $55.5 million in the comparable quarter a year earlier to operating income of $4.5 million this time around.
Best of all, Upstart's guidance for the rest of the year also suggests this degree of growth should persist at least through the end of the year. Indeed, analysts are calling for a top line of more than $1.5 billion for 2027, versus this year's projected revenue of just over $1.0 billion while annual per-share profits are expected to grow from $1.51 to $3.12 during the same three-year span. It looks like Upstart's business is here to stay.
But what is its business? In simplest terms, Upstart is a new kind of credit-scoring bureau.
Although plenty of banks and lenders still rely on information from,, andwhen making lending decisions about potential borrowers, their credit-risk assessments aren't necessarily the most accurate anymore. Using an artificial intelligence algorithm that considers more than 1,600 different data points, Upstart's approach allows for 43% more loan approvals with no more defaults than the more commonly used scoring system from credit bureaus.
Lenders are finally catching on, too. The total number of loans the company's tech facilitated jumped 159% last quarter as well.
2. MercadoLibre
Much like Upstart's stock,(MELI 1.00%) shares initially tanked in response to Monday afternoon's release of its second-quarter earnings. Revenue of $6.79 billion beat estimates of $6.67 billion, but earnings of $10.31 per share fell well short of the expected $11.93.
Although the stock fought its way back to a gain on Tuesday, it's been rough sailing ever since. The stock's now down about 5% from its post-earnings peak, and more than 12% below May's record high and still testing new multi-week lows.
As with Upstart, investors may be missing the much bigger bullish picture here.
See, MercadoLibre is an all-encompassing e-commerce platform that's often compared to, frequently referred to as "the Amazon of Latin America" in a nod to its growing dominance of the region's e-commerce arena.
If it wants to truly become the Amazon of that particular market, though, it must do there what Amazon did here. That's offering free shipping even if it hurts profit margins -- which it did last quarter. But in the long run the trade-off is worth it, particularly given the fragmented nature of Latin America's online shopping industry, making it still up for grabs.
And the opportunity is enormous. With broadband internet and smartphones just now becoming common in the region, Payments and Commerce Market Intelligence expects Latin America's e-commerce industry to double in size between 2023 and 2027, when it will be worth more than $1 trillion.
The thing is, MercadoLibre is clearly cashing in on this growth. Although it missed its second-quarter earnings estimates, revenue was up 34% year over year. And while operating income only improved a relatively modest 14%, the reason is neither surprising nor troubling -- it was the free shipping it offered to Brazil's consumers that ate into its profit margins. Again, the short-term pain is worth the long-term growth the free shipping perk sets up.
3. Apple
Finally, add(AAPL 4.24%) to your list of growth stocks to buy if you've got $1,000 (or more) you're ready to put to work.
No, it's not off the beaten path the way Upstart and MercadoLibre are. Apple is currently the world's third-biggest publicly traded company, sporting a market cap of nearly $3.3 trillion. Like MercadoLibre and Upstart, though, Apple's stock is undervalued thanks to unmerited weakness since late last year.
Blame its fumbled entry into the era of on-device artificial intelligence, mostly.
When Apple Intelligence was first unveiled in June of last year, consumers as well as investors were excited that the tech WOULD turn their iPhones and iPads into stand-alone generative AI devices. September's introduction of the newest mobile devices capable of running Apple Intelligence stoked further optimism. Then October's actual release of Apple Intelligence tech was met with cheers.
By December, however, consumers and analysts were largely in agreement that the onboard AI tool just didn't live up to the hype. Apple's stock has been struggling since, in the shadow of failure that the world's not accustomed to seeing from this iconic company.
There's hope on the horizon, though. While it took a painful wake-up call to get the ball rolling, Apple has spent the past several months restructuring and rethinking its entire approach to consumer-facing artificial intelligence. It's also likely come to appreciate that it's better to wait until a new tech is fully ready before launching it. In this vein, the company now says the next version of its AI-powered digital assistant Siri won't be released until early in the coming year, just to make sure it's truly ready.
While it's been a relatively ugly stretch for the company, just bear in mind that stocks reflect their underlying company's future rather than their past. And Apple's future looks bright in light of Precedence Research's outlook for the intelligence VIRTUAL assistant market, which it expects to grow at an average annual pace of 24% through 2034.
The irony is that investors are already seeing glimmers of hope from Apple even before it's fully regrouped. Last quarter's top line was up 10% year over year, led by iPhone revenue growth despite plenty of nay-saying about the most recent versions of the device.
Analysts are still calling for a slower growth pace ahead, but AAPL stock's strong rally since the late-July release of last quarter's results suggests investors may be expecting more. The thing is, in this instance, the trading crowd may well be right.