Gemini's revenue improved 42% year-over-year to $50.3 million, helping narrow its net loss by 27% from $149.3 million a year earlier.Updated May 15, 2026, 1:41 p.m. Published May 15, 2026, 12:12 p.m. 2 min readMake preferred on The Winklevoss twins infused $100 million into Gemini for operational expenses as the company continues on a net loss streak since 2024. (Jesse Hamilton/CoinDesk)What to know: Gemini Space Station shares jumped more than 25% in pre-market trading even as the company reported a first-quarter net loss of $109 million, or 93 cents a share, missing Wall Street estimates.Revenue rose 42 percent from a year earlier to $50.3 million, helping narrow losses from $149.3 million, but operating expenses surged 73% to $144.5 million on higher compensation, severance and marketing costs.Gemini is betting that layoffs, exits from the U.K., European Union and Australia, a $100 million bitcoin-funded investment from Winklevoss Capital and a new CFTC-cleared derivatives business will eventually turn its capital-intensive expansion into profitability.Gemini Space Station Inc’s (GEMI) shares jumped more than 25% in pre-market trading despite recording a net loss of $109 million in the first quarter of 2026.The crypto exchange founded by the Winklevoss twins' revenue improved 42% year-over-year to $50.3 million, according to Gemini's latest earnings report. This helped narrow its net loss by 27% from $149.3 million a year earlier.However, the $109 million loss, or 93 cents per share, still missed analysts' estimates of a 61-cent loss.Gemini has been on an ongoing streak of unprofitable periods as the firm spends to transform its business model. Heavy spending, particularly on marketing and IPO-related costs, led to a net loss of $159.5 million in the third quarter of last year. In September, the company reported a net loss of $283 million in the first half of the year.Operating expenses ballooned 73% year-over-year to $144.5 million. This surge was led by a 91% rise in compensation costs, which included $6.5 million in severance for a recent round of layoffs, and a doubling of sales and marketing outlays to $19.1 million.The firm is betting that a “leaner” workforce and the $100 million bitcoin-funded investment from Winklevoss Capital Fund, LLC will provide the runaway it needs to achieve profitability.Gemini shuttered operations in the U.K., the European Union (EU) and Australia in February. It also reduced its workforce by 25%, in a move it said was aimed at focusing on the U.S. markets and into prediction markets. Its shares rose following this move from $6.19 in late February to a low of $4.04 on March 30.In April, it secured its Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) approval for a derivatives clearinghouse (DCO) license, allowing it to enter regulated derivatives and crypto’s fastest-growing, most-contested sector, prediction markets. Since then, its shares have gradually climbed to a current price hovering over $6.60 after a pre-market surge of over 25%.More For YouDeFi insurance protocols debuted with huge ambitions during the 2020 crypto boom. But as hacks evolved and users chased yields over protection, most of the sector collapsed under the same risks it was built to cover.What to know: Despite billions of dollars flowing through DeFi, less than 2% of total value locked is insured, leaving most users exposed to mounting hacks and exploits.Early DeFi insurance efforts faltered as attackers shifted from smart contract bugs to harder-to-price offchain risks like private key compromises and phishing, which now account...Read full storyTop Stories
Winklevoss’ Gemini (GEMI) jumps 25% on $100 million bitcoin infusion despite deepening losses
Gemini's revenue improved 42% year-over-year to $50.3 million, helping narrow its net loss by 27% from $149.3 million a year earlier.











