Gemini Exchange In Peril: Are The Winklevoss Tweens Going Broke?
$900M Lost! Either Gemini or DCG Going Down.

The leading participants of the crypto market also constitute its greatest vulnerability. All reached sizes they could not handle, overextended, and failed to defend their companies against the difficulties that always arrive with the bear market.
While some of these institutions hold vast experience in the field, they still lapsed into unprofessional behaviors and mistakes that led to business viability issues.
Genesis, a DCG subsidy, is in deep trouble after the FTX collapse with a gap worth more than a billion dollars, and DCG (the parent company) stands in an even worse position.
Genesis owes $900 million to Gemini, money the exchange was lending out (via its Gemini Earn program) to traders (shorters) that coordinated trades (attacks) to crash prices of selected (if not all) cryptocurrencies.
More or less, a similar model was transpiring with every other custodian in space, be it Celsius, Gemini (“Rocketship!”), Crypto.com, Nexo, and similar schemes.
After the FTX collapse, everyone is wondering who is next.
Will that be Barry Silbert’s DCG or Gemini, the Winklevoss Tweens crypto exchange?

Winklevoss Tweens Going Broke?

Gemini profited vastly from the 2020–2021 bull run, but the structural problems of its custodian scheme didn’t take long to appear.
The Gemini Earn program (similar to Celsius and BlockFi) is lending out crypto to funds that attacked most (if not all) cryptocurrencies.
Dave Portnoy clearly never understood the crypto market or the purpose of cryptocurrency, but perhaps Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss did not either. They saw this as a business, a way to make more dollars, but actual support was close to null. All these custodians were never interested in adoption outside of the speculation phase, never promoted the usage of cryptocurrencies, and never cared for merchant adoption.
Portnoy is a fun guy to watch for sure, but seriously, during a bull run, everyone is a genius.
During the bear market, men walk separately from the boys.
2023 didn’t start with the best omens.
Cameron Winklevoss announced an open letter to Barry Silbert (DCG CEO), with Gemini exchange having paused withdrawals since November 30th.

Time is running out indeed, but essentially for Gemini.
DCG can drag this situation out for a long time since DCG is the partner holding the funds.

Barry Silbert was disinterested in Cameron’s speech:
A single mom who lent her son’s education money to you. A father who lent his son’s bar mitzvah money to you. A husband and wife who lent their life savings to you. A school teacher who lent his children’s college funds to you. A policeman, and so many more.
This part also raises another question:
What did Gemini do to protect all those customers?
Did they provide explicit warnings about the dangers of investing, and why would they accept the life savings of someone on their high-risk yield-bearing scheme?
That’s not just the fault of DCG, but the poor decisions and weak lending scheme Gemini operates.
Everyone with enough experience understands the dangers.
I have previously analyzed DCG and its subsidies Grayscale and Genesis. We were waiting for an escalation, and with the current market conditions, it seems impossible for DCG to cover a $2 billion gap.
There is no time. The bullish sentiment of 2020 and 2021 shifted to tears and dismay.
DCG is in deep trouble for the first time while various other top market players are attempting to gather their pieces and strengthen the weak fundamentals of the fractional reserves models they operated for several years.








