May 14, 2025
11 11 11 AM
Latest Post
Slow Blockchain Governance Leaves Crypto Exposed to Quantum Threats EToro Goes Public At $52 A Share, Far Exceeding Marketed Range Cantor Equity Partners Discloses $458M Bitcoin Acquisition Bitcoin Eyes $105K as Coinbase Surges 24%; Rally Has More Room, Says Analyst DeFi Savings Protocol Sky Slumps to $5M Loss as USDS Interest Payments Wipe Out Profit Crypto and Stock Trading Platform EToro IPO Pricing Looking Strong: Bloomberg Gibraltar to Establish Crypto Derivatives Clearing, Settlement Rules to Enhance Market Integrity Morgan Stanley Crypto Chief Exits to Launch DeFi Fund in Switzerland: Bloomberg Bitcoin Will Replace U.S. Dollar In 10 Years, Says Billionaire VC Tim Draper Wyoming Taps Inca Digital to Secure First State-Issued Stablecoin Ahead of July Launch

Gemini Agrees to Pay $5M Settlement in CFTC Case

Crypto exchange Gemini agreed to pay $5 million to settle a case with the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission over allegedly misleading statements it made more than seven years ago about how easily the price of a bitcoin futures contract could be manipulated.

Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss’ exchange settled without admitting or denying liability, according to a letter from the CFTC’s attorney, K. Brent Tomer. A trial for the case had been set to start Jan. 21, but that will no longer proceed.

The CFTC sued Gemini in 2022, alleging it had misled the U.S. regulator during in-person meetings that occurred in 2017.

Part of the deal also included an injunction to prevent Gemini from making false or misleading statements to the commission in the future. These types of injunctions are common in settlements or lawsuits by federal securities and commodities regulators.

Gemini also faces another case with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). A judge ruled in March that the SEC could sue the exchange for violating securities laws.

In the absence of legislation relating specifically to the crypto industry, U.S. regulators have sued a number of crypto exchanges, including Coinbase and Binance, for violating securities laws.

Many observers have said pro-crypto comments made by President-elect Donald Trump indicate he will appoint regulators with a less confrontational attitude to the industry and a reduction in so-called regulation by enforcement.

This post was originally published on this site