01 Apr
01Apr

The "Gemini Space Station" was supposed to take us to the moon. 

Instead, it looks like it was stuck in a high-speed orbit around the founders' own bank accounts.Yesterday’s SEC 10-K filing from Gemini has pulled back the curtain on a financial "carousel" that would make even the most seasoned DeFi degens dizzy. While retail investors were buying into the 2025 IPO hype at $28 a share, the Winklevoss twins were busy turning private debt into "Super-Voting" power at a massive discount.

Here is the breakdown of the circular scheme that has the Web3 world calling foul.


The Carousel: How to Print Voting Power

The mechanics of the deal were simple but devastatingly effective for the founders. It essentially followed a three-step "loop":

  1. The Loan: The Winklevoss Capital Fund (WCF)—the twins’ private firm—lent Bitcoin and Ether to their own exchange, Gemini.
  2. The Collateral: Gemini took that borrowed crypto and pledged it to third-party lenders like Galaxy Digital and NYDIG to secure US Dollar loans used for "operating expenses."
  3. The Swap: When Gemini went public in September 2025, they didn't pay the twins back in cash. Instead, they converted $695.6 million of that debt into Class B stock.

The Kick in the Teeth: While the public paid $28.00 per share, the twins converted their debt at $22.40—a 20% discount. This move handed Cameron and Tyler 94.7% of the total voting power.

A "Controlled Company" in Freefall

Despite being a publicly traded entity on the Nasdaq ($GEMI), the 10-K confirms that Gemini is, for all intents and purposes, a private fiefdom. Because of the super-voting shares, the twins retain absolute control over every major decision.The market response has been nothing short of a catastrophe:

  • IPO Price: $28.00
  • Current Price: $4.42
  • Value Wiped: Over 88% of share value has evaporated since the launch.
  • Market Cap: Collapsed from $3.8 billion to a measly $520 million.

The Deloitte "Clean" Bill of Health

Perhaps the most shocking part of the filing is that Deloitte issued a clean audit report. This is despite the fact that the Winklevoss Capital Fund could technically demand the repayment of 4,619 BTC (worth roughly $400 million) at any time.Essentially, the founders hold a "kill switch" over the exchange’s liquidity. If they call the loan, the exchange—and its public shareholders—could be left holding an empty bag.

"The twins could destabilize the exchange they control with a single written notice." — Protos Analysis

While Web3 was built on the promise of decentralization and transparency, the Gemini saga feels like a throwback to the worst "Old Boys Club" tactics of Wall Street. By using a circular lending loop to consolidate power and secure discounted equity, the founders protected their upside while retail investors shouldered the 88% crash.As class-action lawsuits begin to pile up, the industry is left asking: Is this a legitimate business pivot, or just a sophisticated exit ramp?

تعليقات
* لن يتم نشر هذا البريد الإلكتروني على الموقع.