Shares of Gemini Space Station, Inc. (GEMI) slid more than 15%, falling to around $6.52–$6.39, after the company disclosed a sweeping executive shakeup and broader restructuring plans.
The decline adds to mounting pressure on the crypto firm, which went public in September 2025 and has struggled to regain post-IPO momentum.
The market reaction was immediate, with investors responding sharply to the sudden departure of three top executives.
Three Senior Executives Exit Five Months After IPO
Gemini announced the immediate departure of:
- Chief Operating Officer Marshall Beard
- Chief Financial Officer Dan Chen
- Chief Legal Officer Tyler Meade
The exits come just five months after the company’s public listing, raising questions about internal stability during a critical post-IPO phase.
Interim Leadership Structure
Rather than fully replacing all roles, Gemini opted for interim appointments and structural adjustments:
- Cameron Winklevoss, co-founder, will assume most COO responsibilities, particularly revenue-generating functions.
- Danijela Stojanovic, currently Chief Accounting Officer, has been named interim CFO.
- Kate Freedman, formerly Associate General Counsel, will serve as interim General Counsel.
Notably, the company stated it does not plan to permanently refill the COO position.
Strategic Retrenchment and Global Exit
The executive departures follow broader cost-cutting and operational changes:
- Gemini will shut down operations in the UK, EU, and Australia by April 2026.
- The company is cutting approximately 25% of its global workforce, or around 200 jobs.
- Management will concentrate on U.S. and Singapore markets, focusing on regulated derivatives and prediction market services.
These moves suggest a significant narrowing of Gemini’s international ambitions as it pivots toward core markets and regulated product lines.
XRP Whale Transfers Jump as Large Holders Re-Engage
The restructuring news compounds an already difficult year for the stock:
- GEMI is down roughly 35% year-to-date.
- The current price near $6.50 marks an 80% drop from its post-IPO high of $32.52 in September 2025.
- Operating expenses in 2025 reportedly rose above $520 million, intensifying scrutiny over profitability.
The sharp selloff reflects investor unease over leadership turnover, shrinking geographic reach, and rising costs. For a company that debuted publicly less than half a year ago, the scale and speed of restructuring signal a pivotal moment in Gemini’s transition from high-growth crypto startup to publicly traded entity navigating tighter market conditions.
The post Gemini Stock Sinks 15% After Executive Exodus and Global Pullback appeared first on ETHNews.
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