Gemini adds drag‑to‑modify tools to ActiveTrader, chasing speed‑focused traders even as GEMI stock trades well below its IPO price and users still complain about lag.
Gemini has rolled out a new order modification feature for its ActiveTrader interface, allowing users to “drag order lines on charts to modify price and click order line pills to modify quantity,” according to co‑founder Tyler Winklevoss in a post on X. Winklevoss framed the update squarely around speed, telling followers that “markets move fast and you can too with @Gemini Active Trader,” alongside a short product demo video that had drawn roughly 29,400 views within hours of posting. The feature targets high‑frequency retail and professional users who need to adjust orders intraday without leaving the chart.
The enhancement builds on a broader Gemini push to make ActiveTrader more customizable, including earlier changes that let users drag and drop modules and activate a floating order form for chart‑centric workflows. On its support pages, Gemini notes that ActiveTrader already supports a full suite of market, limit, and advanced limit orders, including Immediate‑or‑Cancel (IOC), Fill‑or‑Kill (FOK), Maker‑or‑Cancel, and auction‑only instructions, in addition to stop‑limit functionality. By letting traders modify those orders directly from chart objects rather than static tickets, Gemini is closing the usability gap with established trading terminals that have long offered drag‑to‑adjust orders on price ladders and depth charts.
Early reactions on X highlight both enthusiasm and lingering pain points. “Fast moves fr,” wrote user @ZackD0x, while another former team member, @ignacio_ape, said the upgrade “brings me so much joy” and praised seeing ActiveTrader “continuing to grow even tho I’m no longer there.” Not all feedback was glowing: “Drag and drop is cool and all but I really just need the app to stop lagging during high volatility,” complained user @Steffan0xd, underscoring that execution reliability still matters more than interface polish when spreads blow out.
The product update lands as Gemini navigates a tougher market environment as a listed company. After a high‑profile Nasdaq debut in September 2025 that initially valued the exchange at about $4.4 billion, the firm’s GEMI stock has since fallen well below its IPO price, with Bloomberg reporting in February that Gemini “risks a hard landing” after a more than 40% plunge in Bitcoin and mounting operating losses. More recently, crypto.news reported that GEMI is trading below $6—down roughly 76% since the IPO—even as Bitcoin and Ethereum have rebounded, suggesting a growing decoupling between the exchange’s equity and the broader crypto rally.
That disconnect has forced the Winklevoss‑led platform to lean harder on product differentiation, rolling out features such as a self‑custody wallet, prediction markets and a more modular ActiveTrader interface in a bid to convert volatility into higher fee revenue. Whether the new drag‑to‑modify tools meaningfully move the needle will depend less on X engagement metrics and more on whether active traders actually route orders through Gemini instead of rival venues when the next leg of crypto volatility hits.


