Gemini, the crypto exchange founded by Tyler and Cameron Winklevoss, has made public its filing for a US initial public offering, joining a wave of digital asset companies seeking to go public. The IPO was already anticipated, but the newly released filing confirms key financial and operational details, including plans to list on Nasdaq under the ticker GEMI. The exchange did not disclose the size or price range of the offering.
The filing shows Gemini reported a net loss of $282.5 million on total revenue of $68.6 million for the six months ended June 30, 2025, compared with a net loss of $41.4 million on revenue of $74.3 million in the same period a year earlier. The exchange said it had 14.6 million verified users and $12 billion in assets under custody as of June 30. Trading fees remain its largest revenue driver, supplemented by its Earn program and staking services.
The Federal Reserve has unveiled a new proposed rule that would require certain payment stablecoin issuers to…
Shares of HIVE Digital Technologies jumped more than 10% after the company announced a major $220 million, three-year…
Illinois has officially become the first U.S. state to impose a transaction-based tax on cryptocy activity…
The cryptocy market was hit by a sharp wave of volatility after the Federal Open Market…
Algorand is accelerating its push toward becoming one of the world's first fully quantum-resistant blockchains, announcing…
The long-awaited Digital Asset Market CLARITY Act is moving closer to becoming law as momentum continues building…