
Investors sue Gemini, alleging its IPO hid plans to abandon core crypto trading for a prediction market pivot, after shares crashed and layoffs followed.
Summary
- Investors allege Gemini concealed a preplanned pivot to a Gemini 2.0 prediction-market model in its IPO filings.
- The suit follows a 77% stock plunge, mass layoffs, and withdrawals from key international markets after the IPO.
- Plaintiffs say these post-IPO shocks were foreseeable outcomes of a strategy Gemini chose not to disclose.
Cryptocurrency exchange Gemini and its co-founders Tyler and Cameron Winklevoss are facing a securities class action lawsuit filed in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, alleging the company misled investors during its initial public offering and concealed a major strategic overhaul from the public.
The lawsuit, which targets Gemini Space Station, Inc. along with several senior executives, claims the exchange made materially misleading statements in its IPO documents when it went public on September 12, 2025. According to plaintiffs, Gemini failed to disclose that it was planning to fundamentally transform its business — abandoning its core cryptocurrency trading platform in favor of a prediction market-centered model it has since dubbed “Gemini 2.0.”
The fallout since the IPO has been severe. Gemini’s stock, which priced at $28 per share at launch, has since collapsed to $6.30 — a loss of roughly 77.5% — inflicting significant damage on retail and institutional investors who bought in at the offering. The decline has been compounded by a series of damaging developments that critics argue should have been disclosed to investors ahead of the listing.
In February 2026, just months after going public, Gemini announced a sweeping 25% reduction in its workforce. Around the same time, the exchange confirmed it was pulling out of several key international markets, exiting operations in the United Kingdom, the European Union, and Australia. The company has also seen significant leadership turnover, with its Chief Financial Officer Dan Chen, Chief Operating Officer Marshall Beard, and Chief Legal Officer Tyler Meade all departing in recent months.
The lawsuit argues that these events were not isolated incidents but rather the predictable consequence of a strategic direction the company had already decided upon before its IPO — one it chose not to share with investors.
The Winklevoss brothers, who founded Gemini in 2014 and have long positioned the exchange as a compliance-first, institutionally focused platform, have not yet issued a public response to the litigation. The suit names other unnamed executives alongside the founders.
The case arrives at a delicate moment for crypto exchanges more broadly. With regulatory scrutiny intensifying across the U.S. and global markets, the pressure on publicly listed crypto firms to meet the same disclosure standards as traditional financial institutions has never been higher. For Gemini, which built much of its brand identity around regulatory cooperation and trustworthiness, the allegations of investor deception carry particular reputational weight.
The outcome of the lawsuit could have broader implications for how crypto companies structure and disclose their business strategies ahead of public offerings — and may prompt closer regulatory examination of IPO documents across the industry.

