Gemini Space Station, the crypto exchange run by Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss, has filed to go public on the Nasdaq Global Select Market, where it plans to trade under the ticker “GEMI.” The company announced on Tuesday that it will sell 16,666,667 shares of Class A common stock in an initial public offering, with a target price range between $17 and $19 per 0 filing was disclosed through a Form S-1 registration submitted to the 1 and Exchange Commission (SEC). The announcement comes during a hot period for public listings, with IPO volumes climbing across 2 in recent 3 to Gemini, the deal includes a 30-day option that lets underwriters buy up to 2,396,348 extra shares from the company and 103,652 shares from existing holders if demand exceeds 4 shares are meant to cover any over-allotments once trading 5 the SEC makes the registration effective, though, no shares can be sold or 6 company made clear that this offer depends fully on market conditions, and there’s no guarantee the offering will close or price within the suggested 7 submits Nasdaq application as crypto IPO wave builds The IPO will only be available through an official 8 of that prospectus can be requested from Goldman Sachs, which is serving as a lead 9 option is Citigroup, also a lead bookrunner, who’s handling 10 with Goldman Sachs and Citigroup, the underwriter list includes Morgan Stanley and Cantor, also acting as lead 11 bookrunners are Evercore ISI, Mizuho, Truist Securities, Cohen & Company Capital Markets, Keefe, Bruyette & Woods, which is part of Stifel, Needham & Company, and 12 IPO attempt places Gemini in line to become the third publicly traded crypto exchange in the U.
S., right after Coinbase, which joined the S&P 500 earlier this year, and Bullish, which went public months 13 timing aligns perfectly with the current surge in IPO activity on Wall Street thanks to strong debut sessions and rising investor interest, which are helping revive public markets after a dry spell that stretched through the last crypto 14 Winklevoss and Tyler Winklevoss, who founded Gemini, first gained public attention through their legal dispute with Facebook and its CEO Mark 15 2008 lawsuit resulted in a settlement that the twins used to invest in Bitcoin, a decision that made them among the earliest crypto 16 bet on Bitcoin, back when it was still trading in the low double digits, earned them the nickname “Bitcoin twins.” Since then, they’ve built Gemini into a recognizable brand in the crypto industry, with global operations and a push toward regulatory 17 up to Bybit and start trading with $30,050 in welcome gifts
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