The Standard (St. Catharines)

Winklevoss twins consider taking Gemini public

Billionair­e bitcoin advocates ‘definitely considerin­g’ option as cryptocurr­encies make comeback

- OLGA KHARIF

Bitcoin billionair­es Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss said they’re considerin­g taking Gemini Trust Co. public amid the resurgence of interest in cryptocurr­encies.

“We are definitely considerin­g it and making sure that we have that option,” Cameron Winklevoss, co-founder and president of the New York-based digital-asset firm, said in an interview. “We are watching the market and we are also having internal discussion­s on whether it makes sense for us at this point in time. We are certainly open to it.”

Bitcoin has more than quadrupled in the past year, evoking memories of the 2017 mania that first made cryptocurr­encies a household name before prices collapsed the following year. Volatility remains a defining characteri­stic of the dominant cryptocurr­ency, with it spiking to almost $42,000 (U.S.) last week before dropping back to around $37,000.

An initial public offering, direct listing or even a merger with special purpose acquisitio­n company would be the latest attempt by early advocates of Bitcoin such as the Winklevoss brothers to unlock their digital wealth. Coinbase Global Inc., the biggest U.S. cryptocurr­ency exchange, filed in December with the Securities and Exchange Commission to go public. Bakkt Holdings LLC, the cryptocurr­ency platform majorityow­ned by Interconti­nental Exchange Inc., plans to go public through a merger with a blank-check firm.

The twins, initially known for suing Mark Zuckerberg for stealing their idea for Facebook Inc., have been long-time supporters and holders of Bitcoin. They started Gemini — now a New York trust company regulated by the New York State Department of Financial Services — in 2014, and the business includes an exchange and a custody service. The brothers are worth about $2 billion each, according to the Bloomberg Billionair­es Index.

To drive new U.S. customers to the exchange, the company announced Thursday the launch of the Gemini Credit Card, which will function like a traditiona­l card but offer up to three per cent back in Bitcoin or other cryptocurr­encies on every purchase made. Rewards will be automatica­lly deposited into cardholder­s’ Gemini accounts.

“Cash is trash,” Gemini chief executive Tyler Winklevoss said, repeating a common theme among crypto advocates that inflation will erode the purchasing power of the dollar. “So as you spend your cash you get Bitcoin.”

Gemini bought startup Blockrize in the third quarter for an undisclose­d sum for the credit-card effort. Overall, the company has about 350 employees.

The Winklevoss twins are still interested in offering a Bitcoin exchangetr­aded fund. They were the first to file for such an ETF in the U.S. years ago, but were rejected by the SEC in 2017 due to the immaturity of the crypto market and lack of regulatory oversight.

In December, Gemini hired David Abner as Gemini’s global head of business developmen­t. Abner previously ran ETF efforts at Wisdomtree Europe, BNP Paribas and Bear Stearns.

The Winklevoss brothers have been among the most optimistic forecaster­s for the price of Bitcoin, saying it will reach $500,000 within 10 years.

 ?? DON BARTLETTI LOS ANGELES TIMES FILE PHOTO ?? Tyler and Cameron Winklevoss said they are having “internal discussion­s” on whether it makes sense to take Gemini Trust Co. public.
DON BARTLETTI LOS ANGELES TIMES FILE PHOTO Tyler and Cameron Winklevoss said they are having “internal discussion­s” on whether it makes sense to take Gemini Trust Co. public.

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