TLDR
- Investors filed a class action lawsuit against Gemini over alleged misleading IPO disclosures.
- The lawsuit names co-founders Tyler and Cameron Winklevoss along with other executives.
- Plaintiffs claim Gemini failed to disclose a planned restructuring before and after its IPO.
- Gemini priced its IPO at $28 per share before shifting to a prediction market model.
- The company later cut 25% of its workforce and exited several international markets.
Gemini faces a class action lawsuit in New York over alleged misleading IPO disclosures and a business shift. Shareholders claim Gemini misrepresented its growth plans and failed to disclose a restructuring. The complaint targets Gemini, its founders, and executives, and seeks damages for post-IPO losses.
Gemini IPO Disclosures Face Legal Challenge
Investors filed the complaint in New York against Gemini and its leadership. The suit names co-founders Tyler Winklevoss and Cameron Winklevoss, along with other executives. Plaintiffs allege the IPO documents contained “materially false and misleading” statements.
They claim Gemini described itself as a growing crypto exchange expanding globally. However, the company later shifted toward a prediction market-focused model called “Gemini 2.0.” Plaintiffs argue the documents failed to disclose that Gemini was “poised for an expensive and disruptive restructuring.”
The complaint states that Gemini committed to entering “key global markets” before the IPO. Yet the company later exited markets including the UK, the EU, and Australia. Investors argue that these actions contradicted statements in the Offering Documents.
Gemini priced its IPO shares at $28 in September and listed on Nasdaq. The filings described the exchange as its “core product” at the time. Plaintiffs say the pivot to prediction markets occurred soon after the public listing.
Workforce Cuts and Business Changes Follow Listing
After the IPO, Gemini reduced its workforce by 25% as part of cost-cutting measures. The company also shut down its NFT platform, Nifty Gateway, in February. These moves formed part of what plaintiffs call an undisclosed restructuring plan.
The lawsuit claims these changes caused investors to suffer losses as the stock declined. Plaintiffs state they purchased shares at “artificially inflated prices” after the IPO. They now seek a jury trial and compensation for the alleged damages.
Several executives announced departures last month during the restructuring process. The complaint links these exits to the broader corporate shift. Plaintiffs argue that the Offering Documents did not warn of these internal changes.
Gemini has not publicly responded to the specific allegations in the lawsuit. The filing focuses on statements made before and shortly after the IPO. It centers on whether those disclosures reflected the company’s actual plans.
Gemini reported its fourth-quarter earnings on Thursday. The company posted a 39% rise in revenue, exceeding analyst expectations. The results followed months of restructuring and operational changes.
Shares closed Thursday’s session up 0.81% on Nasdaq. The stock then climbed another 5.8% in after-market trading. The lawsuit continues in New York as trading activity reflects recent earnings data.







