Gemini’s Bombshell IPO Filing: Ripple Credit Deal & $282M Loss Exposed for 2025
Gemini's IPO paperwork just dropped like a ledger on a bull market—and the numbers don't lie. The crypto exchange's 2025 financials reveal a Ripple-powered credit deal... and a gaping $282M net loss.
The Ripple Effect
Buried in the S-1? A strategic credit line with Ripple Labs—timed suspiciously close to Gemini's pre-IPO cash crunch. Because nothing says 'trust us' like leaning on an XRP-adjacent lifeline.
Red Ink Rising
That $282M deficit isn't just bad optics—it's a flaming haystack in a rate-hike environment. Turns out even crypto's golden children bleed fiat when compliance costs moon and trading volumes crater.
The Bottom Line
Gemini's betting big that Wall Street will ignore the bloodstains and focus on the 'web3 infrastructure' buzzwords. Given how 2025's IPO pipeline looks? They might just get away with it—VCs have made dumber bets on shinier PowerPoints.
Financial performance and Ripple partnership
Gemini’s losses widened considerably from $41.4 million in the first half of 2024 to $282.5 million during the same period in 2025.
The exchange posted total revenue of $67.9 million for the six months, down from $74.3 million year-over-year. For the full year 2024, Gemini recorded a net loss of $158.5 million on revenue of $142.2 million.
The filing revealed the exchange entered a credit agreement with Ripple Labs in July. The deal permits lending requests of at least $5 million each up to an aggregate commitment of $75 million.
The agreement allows increases up to $150 million based on specific metrics.
Once the initial commitment exceeds $75 million, lending requests may utilize USD-denominated Ripple’s RLUSD stablecoin upon mutual consent.
All lending bears interest rates of 6.5% or 8.5% annually and requires collateral security with repayment in US dollars.
Industry momentum under
The crypto IPO trend gained momentum after Trump’s Jan. 20 inauguration, with multiple exchanges and crypto-native companies pursuing public listings.
Circle completed its NYSE debut in June,and seeing shares surge 472% relative to Bitcoin since launch.
The stablecoin issuer’s market capitalization reached $66.9 billion, exceeding its USDC circulating supply of $61.27 billion.
Hougan and Rasmussen specifically identified Circle, Kraken, Anchorage Digital, Chainalysis, and Figure as the five strongest candidates for IPO listings in 2025.
Their prediction proved prescient as Circle completed its blockbuster NYSE debut in June, Bullish, and now Gemini is pursuing its public offering.
Galaxy Digital had already transferred its listing from Toronto to Nasdaq in May, while crypto trading platform eToro debuted with services including crypto investments.
The momentum reflects broader institutional confidence in crypto’s regulatory outlook under Trump.
Hougan emphasized that the TRUMP administration’s pro-crypto stance creates unprecedented opportunities for digital asset companies to access traditional capital markets. Additionally, he stated that 2025 represents a “warmer political environment” for crypto IPOs compared to previous years.
Regulatory strategy and structure
Gemini plans to operate through a dual-entity structure, separating operations between New York-based Gemini Trust and Florida-based Moonbase.
The Moonbase entity will serve as the primary platform for most users, allowing the exchange to navigate New York’s restrictive BitLicense regulations that limit staking services.
This structure reflects the company’s approach to maintaining operational flexibility while addressing complex state-level regulatory requirements.
Goldman Sachs, Citigroup, Morgan Stanley, and Cantor serve as lead bookrunners for the offering. The IPO terms remain undisclosed, with completion subject to SEC review and market conditions.