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Gemini-SEC case ends: Both sides reach ‘resolution in principle’

Gemini-SEC case ends: Both sides reach 'resolution in principle'

Gemini-SEC case ends: Both sides reach 'resolution in principle'

Key takeaways

What happened between Gemini and the SEC?

Gemini and the SEC have reached a resolution in principle over the Earn program dispute, which began in 2023 after customers were unable to withdraw their funds.

Why is this settlement important now?

The deal comes right after Gemini’s $425 million IPO and reflects a broader shift in Washington, where crypto enforcement is softening.


Gemini is making peace with regulators.

A resolution in principle has been struck with the SEC over its shuttered Earn program, closing a chapter that’s been open since 2023.

This comes just days after Gemini’s blockbuster $425 million IPO, as the regulatory climate shifts in Washington.

Gemini mends loose ties

The Earn saga has followed Gemini since January 2023, when the program froze withdrawals and left customers fighting to recover their assets.

What followed was a drawn-out legal battle with the SEC accusing Gemini and its partner Genesis Global Capital of running an unregistered securities offering.

Source: SDNY

Now, according to a joint filing in federal court, both sides have agreed to a resolution in principle. This would bring the case to a formal close once the Commission signs off.

The final paperwork is expected to be submitted on the 15th of December, but there may still be a few residual processes.

On the heels of an IPO

AMBCrypto previously reported that Gemini’s IPO turned into one of 2025’s hottest tickets on Wall Street.

Demand for shares was so overwhelming that the offering was oversubscribed more than 20 times, forcing bankers to shut the books early.

In the end, Gemini raised $425 million; slightly below its revised $433 million target, but still among the biggest Web3 listings to date.

The exchange priced shares at the top of its range, after bumping guidance from $17-$19 to $24-$26. Adding to the momentum, Nasdaq itself stepped in with a $50 million buy.

A softer line from Washington

In many ways, Gemini’s settlement is less about one exchange and more about the broader change.

Under President Trump’s second term, federal agencies have scaled back their pursuit of high-profile crypto cases, with several probes either delayed or quietly shelved.

The SEC had already dropped an earlier investigation into Gemini, while the CFTC has faced political pushback over leadership choices tied to the Winklevoss twins.

The latest agreement doesn’t directly tie into those disputes, but it fits the pattern: enforcement pressure is easing, and industry influence in shaping the regulatory landscape is stronger than ever.

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