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Crypto Stocks Tumble on Jobs Data, Trade Tensions, and Record Government Shutdown

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Published Nov 6, 2025
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Summary:
  • Robinhood shares dropped over 7% and Coinbase fell 6% despite Robinhood beating Q3 estimates, as macro concerns hammered crypto stocks
  • The selloff comes as October job cuts hit 153,074 - nearly triple last year and the highest since 2003 - while the shutdown enters its 37th day
  • Analyst Mark Palmer says crypto stocks are "simply being buffered by macroeconomic events" with no positive catalysts to offset rising risk premiums

The Selloff

Crypto stocks got hammered Thursday in a broader market rout. Robinhood Markets fell more than 7% to $131, dropping as much as 9% at one point to hit its lowest level in over two weeks.

The decline came just a day after Robinhood surpassed analyst estimates for Q3 revenues and earnings. Strong fundamentals didn't matter - macro fears overwhelmed everything.

Coinbase tumbled over 6%. Galaxy Digital dropped 4%. Major miners MARA Holdings fell 3.6%, while CleanSpark and Riot Blockchain both declined over 5%.

Bitcoin treasury company Strategy declined 6.5%. Ethereum treasury firms BitMine Immersion and SharpLink Gaming fell 7% and 6% respectively.

Why Everything Fell

"The entire crypto market is simply being buffered by macroeconomic events and changes in sentiment," Mark Palmer, equity analyst at Benchmark, told Decrypt.

He pointed to interest rate expectations, tariffs, and other macro factors creating an overall negative environment. "As much as they may not directly impact a lot of crypto stocks, they are increasing the risk premium on the market overall, and in the absence of any positive catalysts, that's taking crypto stocks down along with everything else."

The Macro Backdrop

Several factors are spooking investors.

The jobs market is deteriorating rapidly. Challenger, Gray & Christmas reported Thursday that US employers cut 153,074 jobs in October - nearly triple the year-ago total and the highest for the month since 2003.

The government shutdown entered its record 37th day. Trade wars with China and other partners are showing signs of sapping the economy.

Economic indicators are sagging across the board, creating a risk-off environment where speculative assets like crypto stocks get sold first.

The Legislative Delay

Palmer noted another issue: the government shutdown has stalled anticipated crypto legislation. The Clarity Act and a separate market structure bill (RFIA) that could potentially support markets remain stuck due to the impasse.

Without those positive catalysts on the horizon, there's nothing to offset the macro headwinds hitting crypto stocks.

The Irony

Robinhood beating Q3 estimates should have been positive. The company delivered strong results showing business momentum.

But in risk-off environments, fundamentals take a backseat to macro concerns. Investors dumped shares despite good earnings because broader economic worries outweighed company-specific news.

The Bottom Line

Crypto stocks are getting caught in the broader market selloff driven by macro fears. When economic data deteriorates, trade tensions escalate, and the government shutdown drags on, investors flee speculative assets first.

The 37-day shutdown creating legislative gridlock on crypto bills removes potential positive catalysts that might offset the negativity. Without the Clarity Act or market structure legislation moving forward, there's nothing on the horizon to spark a rally.

Palmer's observation that crypto stocks don't directly feel most macro impacts but still get hit by rising risk premiums captures the challenge. These companies have their own fundamentals, but they trade more on sentiment and macro conditions than underlying business performance.

Robinhood falling 7% the day after beating estimates perfectly illustrates this disconnect. Strong earnings don't matter when macro fear dominates.

Disclosure

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