After five years seeking a Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) license, Gemini can now compete directly with established rivals Kalshi and Polymarket. Gemini first applied for a Designated Contract Market (DCM) license in March 2020, though the regulator approved it only in December 2025. Gemini’s leadership framed the approval as a benefit of a more supportive political environment. “We thank President Trump for ending the Biden Administration’s War on Crypto,” CEO Tyler Winklevoss said in a pointed statement. “It’s incredibly refreshing to have a President and a financial regulator who are pro-crypto, pro-innovation, and pro-America.” Gemini’s stock (NASDAQ: GEMI), publicly listed since September 2025, rose 13.7% after-hours as investors weighed the impact of a well-capitalized exchange entering a key crypto sector.The CFTC has not commented on any political factors surrounding the approval. What Is Known About Gemini’s Prediction Markets The new license allows Gemini Titan – a wholly owned subsidiary of Gemini Space Station – to offer prediction markets to U.S. customers. Initially, the company plans to launch simple yes-or-no event contracts, directly competing with Kalshi's and Polymarket's flagship products. The new trading contracts will be available “soon” on Gemini’s web interface, with mobile trading to follow. U.S. customers of the cryptocurrency exchange will be able to trade them from their USD accounts. Gemini signaled that prediction markets are just the first step in a broader derivatives strategy. The firm outlined plans to expand into crypto futures, options, and perpetual contracts. “Prediction markets have the potential to be as big or bigger than traditional capital markets,” said Cameron Winklevoss, Gemini’s president. What It Means for the U.S. Prediction Markets Gemini’s approval immediately shifts the U.S. prediction market landscape from a stable two-player scene—Kalshi as the sole fully CFTC-regulated venue and Polymarket with strong on-chain growth—to a three-way contest. With a public-market footprint, strong capital base, and mainstream distribution, Gemini enters as a competitor poised to challenge both competitors. Its arrival is expected to intensify the race for liquidity, product depth, and user acquisition, prompting more aggressive platform differentiation.Kalshi CEO Tarek Mansour previously described the rivalry between Kalshi and Polymarket as the kind of “ferocious” duel that forces a young market to mature. Gemini’s entry turns a duopoly into a competitive triangle, spurring faster innovation and sharper rivalry in prediction markets. This article was written by Tanya Chepkova at www.financemagnates.com.After five years seeking a Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) license, Gemini can now compete directly with established rivals Kalshi and Polymarket. Gemini first applied for a Designated Contract Market (DCM) license in March 2020, though the regulator approved it only in December 2025. Gemini’s leadership framed the approval as a benefit of a more supportive political environment. “We thank President Trump for ending the Biden Administration’s War on Crypto,” CEO Tyler Winklevoss said in a pointed statement. “It’s incredibly refreshing to have a President and a financial regulator who are pro-crypto, pro-innovation, and pro-America.” Gemini’s stock (NASDAQ: GEMI), publicly listed since September 2025, rose 13.7% after-hours as investors weighed the impact of a well-capitalized exchange entering a key crypto sector.The CFTC has not commented on any political factors surrounding the approval. What Is Known About Gemini’s Prediction Markets The new license allows Gemini Titan – a wholly owned subsidiary of Gemini Space Station – to offer prediction markets to U.S. customers. Initially, the company plans to launch simple yes-or-no event contracts, directly competing with Kalshi's and Polymarket's flagship products. The new trading contracts will be available “soon” on Gemini’s web interface, with mobile trading to follow. U.S. customers of the cryptocurrency exchange will be able to trade them from their USD accounts. Gemini signaled that prediction markets are just the first step in a broader derivatives strategy. The firm outlined plans to expand into crypto futures, options, and perpetual contracts. “Prediction markets have the potential to be as big or bigger than traditional capital markets,” said Cameron Winklevoss, Gemini’s president. What It Means for the U.S. Prediction Markets Gemini’s approval immediately shifts the U.S. prediction market landscape from a stable two-player scene—Kalshi as the sole fully CFTC-regulated venue and Polymarket with strong on-chain growth—to a three-way contest. With a public-market footprint, strong capital base, and mainstream distribution, Gemini enters as a competitor poised to challenge both competitors. Its arrival is expected to intensify the race for liquidity, product depth, and user acquisition, prompting more aggressive platform differentiation.Kalshi CEO Tarek Mansour previously described the rivalry between Kalshi and Polymarket as the kind of “ferocious” duel that forces a young market to mature. Gemini’s entry turns a duopoly into a competitive triangle, spurring faster innovation and sharper rivalry in prediction markets. This article was written by Tanya Chepkova at www.financemagnates.com.

Gemini Breaks Into Prediction Markets After 5-Year Wait, Challenging Kalshi and Polymarket

2025/12/11 18:00

After five years seeking a Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) license, Gemini can now compete directly with established rivals Kalshi and Polymarket.

Gemini first applied for a Designated Contract Market (DCM) license in March 2020, though the regulator approved it only in December 2025. Gemini’s leadership framed the approval as a benefit of a more supportive political environment.

“We thank President Trump for ending the Biden Administration’s War on Crypto,” CEO Tyler Winklevoss said in a pointed statement. “It’s incredibly refreshing to have a President and a financial regulator who are pro-crypto, pro-innovation, and pro-America.”

Gemini’s stock (NASDAQ: GEMI), publicly listed since September 2025, rose 13.7% after-hours as investors weighed the impact of a well-capitalized exchange entering a key crypto sector.

Gemini Space Station (NASDAQ: GEMI) stock price. Source: TradingView

The CFTC has not commented on any political factors surrounding the approval.

What Is Known About Gemini’s Prediction Markets

The new license allows Gemini Titan – a wholly owned subsidiary of Gemini Space Station – to offer prediction markets to U.S. customers. Initially, the company plans to launch simple yes-or-no event contracts, directly competing with Kalshi's and Polymarket's flagship products.

  • Gemini Eyes Entry Into Prediction Markets With Planned Derivatives Exchange
  • Winklevoss Twins Strike Deal to End SEC's $900M Crypto Case
  • Crypto Companies Figure and Gemini Lead $1.2 Billion Bitcoin IPO Bonanza

The new trading contracts will be available “soon” on Gemini’s web interface, with mobile trading to follow. U.S. customers of the cryptocurrency exchange will be able to trade them from their USD accounts. Gemini signaled that prediction markets are just the first step in a broader derivatives strategy.

The firm outlined plans to expand into crypto futures, options, and perpetual contracts. “Prediction markets have the potential to be as big or bigger than traditional capital markets,” said Cameron Winklevoss, Gemini’s president.

What It Means for the U.S. Prediction Markets

PlatformSource of RevenueTarget Audience
Gemini TitanContract spreads + institutional partnershipsInstitutions + crypto-native users
KalshiContract fees + settlement fees + partnerships (e.g., Robinhood)Traditional traders; sports and politics traders
PolymarketLiquidity incentives + token economics (POLY)Global crypto users

Gemini’s approval immediately shifts the U.S. prediction market landscape from a stable two-player scene—Kalshi as the sole fully CFTC-regulated venue and Polymarket with strong on-chain growth—to a three-way contest.

With a public-market footprint, strong capital base, and mainstream distribution, Gemini enters as a competitor poised to challenge both competitors. Its arrival is expected to intensify the race for liquidity, product depth, and user acquisition, prompting more aggressive platform differentiation.

Kalshi CEO Tarek Mansour previously described the rivalry between Kalshi and Polymarket as the kind of “ferocious” duel that forces a young market to mature.

Gemini’s entry turns a duopoly into a competitive triangle, spurring faster innovation and sharper rivalry in prediction markets.

Sorumluluk Reddi: Bu sitede yeniden yayınlanan makaleler, halka açık platformlardan alınmıştır ve yalnızca bilgilendirme amaçlıdır. MEXC'nin görüşlerini yansıtmayabilir. Tüm hakları telif sahiplerine aittir. Herhangi bir içeriğin üçüncü taraf haklarını ihlal ettiğini düşünüyorsanız, kaldırılması için lütfen service@support.mexc.com ile iletişime geçin. MEXC, içeriğin doğruluğu, eksiksizliği veya güncelliği konusunda hiçbir garanti vermez ve sağlanan bilgilere dayalı olarak alınan herhangi bir eylemden sorumlu değildir. İçerik, finansal, yasal veya diğer profesyonel tavsiye niteliğinde değildir ve MEXC tarafından bir tavsiye veya onay olarak değerlendirilmemelidir.

Ayrıca Şunları da Beğenebilirsiniz

Aave V4 roadmap signals end of multichain sprawl

Aave V4 roadmap signals end of multichain sprawl

The post Aave V4 roadmap signals end of multichain sprawl appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Aave Labs has released its official launch roadmap for V4, laying out the final steps ahead of the major upgrade’s Q4 mainnet launch.  Alongside new architectural and security improvements, the roadmap introduces a fundamental shift in how user balances are tracked and highlights a strategic pullback from economically underperforming deployments across layer-2 and alternative layer-1 networks. The V4 release moves away from aTokens’ rebasing-style mechanics toward ERC-4626-style share accounting, a change that promises cleaner integrations, easier tax treatment, and better compatibility with downstream DeFi infrastructure.  In a recent technical development update, Aave Labs confirmed that “tokenization is to remain optional and built using ERC 4626 vaults,” and that internal accounting will eliminate the use of exchange rates or scaled balances. The goal is to “further improve the overall reliability of the protocol.” ERC-4626 is a widely adopted Ethereum standard that expresses user deposits as shares of a vault rather than balances that grow over time. In Aave V3, aTokens accrue interest by increasing a user’s balance directly — behavior that resembles rebasing tokens and often confuses integrations and portfolio accounting tools.  By contrast, ERC-4626 tracks yield through a rising price-per-share metric, leaving token balances unchanged. The result is more predictable behavior for integrators, auditors and tax software, as well as a clearer cost basis for users. The roadmap also outlines a series of release milestones, including a formal codebase publication, a public testnet launch with a redesigned interface, and the completion of a multi-layered security review involving formal verification and manual audits. Aave Labs said the roadmap reflects the protocol’s “final stages of review, testing, and deployment,” and that additional documentation and launch preparation materials will be released in the coming weeks. But the most pointed strategic shift comes not from the codebase, but from Aave’s own governance forums. “Aave…
Paylaş
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 07:40