March 21, 2026 ChainGPT

Investors Sue Gemini and Winklevosses, Claim IPO Hid 'Gemini 2.0' Strategic Pivot

Investors Sue Gemini and Winklevosses, Claim IPO Hid 'Gemini 2.0' Strategic Pivot
Investors have filed a securities class action against crypto exchange Gemini and its co-founders Tyler and Cameron Winklevoss, alleging the company hid a major strategic pivot from the market when it went public. The suit, lodged in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, claims Gemini misled IPO investors by failing to disclose plans to abandon its core crypto trading business in favor of a prediction-market–focused strategy dubbed “Gemini 2.0.” The complaint targets Gemini Space Station, Inc. and several senior executives, saying the alleged concealment was material to investor decisions when the company priced its offering at $28 a share on September 12, 2025. Since the IPO, Gemini’s stock has crashed to $6.30 — a roughly 77.5% decline — which plaintiffs say wiped out significant retail and institutional investor value tied to the offering. Plaintiffs argue the turmoil that followed the IPO was not a string of unforeseeable events but the predictable result of a preexisting strategic overhaul. Since going public, Gemini has announced a 25% workforce reduction (February 2026), pulled back from major international markets including the U.K., EU and Australia, and seen the departures of several top executives — notably CFO Dan Chen, COO Marshall Beard and Chief Legal Officer Tyler Meade. The suit contends these moves were all downstream effects of the switch to Gemini 2.0 and should have been disclosed to investors. Gemini has long marketed itself as a compliance-first, institutionally focused exchange since its 2014 founding by the Winklevoss brothers. The lawsuit strikes at that image: plaintiffs allege the company’s public filings painted a very different picture than the internal strategy it allegedly pursued. The Winklevosses and other named executives have not yet publicly responded to the litigation. Beyond the immediate stakes for Gemini and its shareholders, the case could reverberate across the crypto sector. Regulators and investors are increasingly demanding the same transparency from crypto firms that is expected of traditional public companies. If the plaintiffs prevail, the ruling could tighten expectations around IPO disclosures for crypto businesses — particularly around strategic shifts, executive departures and market exits — and invite closer regulatory scrutiny of prospectuses and public filings. The lawsuit is still unfolding in the Southern District of New York. Its outcome could set an important precedent for how crypto companies disclose business plans ahead of public offerings and how courts interpret disclosure obligations in a fast-evolving industry. Read more AI-generated news on: undefined/news