gemini s nasdaq ipo ambitions

Gemini just dropped its IPO filing on the SEC’s desk, gunning for a Nasdaq listing under the ticker GEMI. The Winklevoss twins‘ crypto exchange wants to raise $400 million, joining the parade of digital asset companies hitting public markets. Goldman Sachs is leading the charge as underwriter.

Here’s the twist: Gemini lost $282.5 million in the first half of 2025. That’s not a typo. Their losses exploded sixfold from the $41.4 million hole they dug in the same period last year. Revenue? Down to $68.6 million from $74.3 million. Not exactly the growth story investors love to see.

The company’s sitting on $2.1 billion in debt. That’s billion with a B. They owe money to major crypto lenders, and those bills aren’t paying themselves. Management blames “challenging market conditions” and regulatory pressures. Sure, blame the weather while you’re at it.

Despite the red ink, Gemini’s pushing forward. They’re operating in over 60 countries, claiming 523,000 active users who traded $2.85 trillion worth of crypto in H1 2025. The New York-based exchange offers everything from spot trading to staking, custody services to their own stablecoin. Their Gemini Dollar (GUSD) maintains a 1:1 peg to the U.S. dollar, positioning them in the regulated stablecoin market. They’re calling themselves a blockchain “super app.” Because apparently being a regular exchange isn’t ambitious enough.

The timing isn’t random. Circle and Bullish recently went public, with Circle hauling in over $1 billion. Bullish’s shares surged 228% on their first trading day, hitting a $10 billion valuation. Crypto exchanges are hot right now, dominating the IPO scene. Bullish and Circle cracked the top 10 U.S. IPOs by proceeds in the past 90 days. Gemini wants in on that action, aiming to become the third U.S.-listed crypto exchange after Coinbase and Bullish.

But let’s be real. Those losses are brutal. Revenue’s shrinking. Debt’s massive. They’re betting on continued crypto market euphoria and friendlier regulations to save the day. The IPO proceeds will go toward “general corporate purposes” and debt repayment – translation: keeping the lights on and paying back what they owe.

Whether investors will bite remains to be seen. The crypto market’s been bullish, but throwing money at a company bleeding hundreds of millions takes serious conviction. Or serious stupidity.

References

You May Also Like

Musk’s Dogecoin Experiment: A Spectacular Collapse Beyond Market Expectations

Musk promised to slash $2 trillion from federal spending but delivered only $171 million in savings—the most expensive failure in government history.

Stablecoin Bill Signed by Trump Creates Alarming Presidential Conflict of Interest

Trump signs stablecoin bill while owning crypto—democracy meets digital dollars in Washington’s most brazen conflict of interest yet.

Terraform Founder’s Guilty Plea Shatters Billions in Crypto Dreams

Do Kwon’s guilty plea exposes how $60 billion vanished overnight, leaving investors devastated while he fled with fake passports.

Robinhood’s $250M WonderFi Buyout Shakes Canadian Crypto Landscape

Robinhood boldly disrupts Canada’s crypto scene with a jaw-dropping $250M WonderFi acquisition, offering a 41% premium over market value. The U.S. giant’s first Canadian power move reshapes the digital currency landscape.