Crypto platform Gemini today introduced a new AI-powered feature called “Command Center,” integrating SpaceXAI models into its prediction markets platform as competition grows around AI-assisted trading and market analysis tools.
According to the official blog post, the company said the feature is now live inside the Gemini app and is designed to provide users with real-time market summaries, sentiment analysis, and event-driven signals across multiple sectors, including crypto, sports, commodities, politics, and macroeconomic events.
AI layer added to prediction markets
According to Gemini, Command Center functions as a personalized intelligence feed tied to a user’s prediction market activity. The platform uses SpaceXAI models to analyze fast-moving market data and surface insights based on open positions, watchlists, and prior trading behavior.
The rollout marks one of Gemini’s broader attempts to combine AI-generated analysis with prediction markets, an area that has expanded rapidly alongside interest in event contracts and speculative trading products.
At launch, the feature includes coverage for digital assets such as Bitcoin, Ethereum, Solana, and Zcash, alongside sports tournaments, commodity prices, weather-linked markets, and political or economic events.
Personalized market signals
Gemini said the system is designed to reduce the need for users to manually track multiple information sources. Instead, the platform generates customized feeds intended to highlight developments considered relevant to individual portfolios.
The company described the feature as a “mission control” interface for prediction market participants, combining live market tracking with AI-generated summaries and contextual analysis.
SpaceXAI’s models are being used to generate sentiment signals and condensed market intelligence in real time. Gemini stated that the integration allows users to monitor and act on changing conditions without leaving the application.
Trump weighs in on prediction market oversight
The launch also comes amid an intensifying debate in the United States over who should regulate prediction markets. Days before Gemini’s announcement, President Donald Trump publicly backed the Commodity Futures Trading Commission’s authority over the sector.
In a Truth Social post published Tuesday, Trump said it was “critically important” for the CFTC to retain exclusive jurisdiction over prediction markets as several states pursue legal action against event-contract platforms. “Under my leadership, we are setting ‘rules of the road’ that are the Gold Standard for the States,” Trump wrote, while criticizing state officials involved in challenges against prediction market operators.
Trump also linked prediction markets to his broader support for the crypto industry, saying the United States must maintain its position as the “Crypto Capital of the World.” He praised CFTC Chairman Michael Selig and said the administration would continue supporting the sector. The statement marked Trump’s first direct public intervention in the ongoing jurisdictional dispute between federal regulators and multiple US states over prediction market platforms.
Expansion of AI in trading platforms
The launch reflects a wider trend across crypto and financial technology platforms toward embedding AI tools directly into trading environments. Exchanges and prediction platforms have increasingly experimented with AI-generated research, automated alerts, and portfolio monitoring tools as trading volumes around event-based contracts continue to grow.
Gemini said Command Center represents the first integration of SpaceXAI-powered intelligence into a crypto prediction markets platform. The company did not disclose additional details regarding how the recommendation or intelligence models are trained, nor whether the feature will eventually support automated trading functionality.
Prediction markets face growing regulatory attention
The launch also comes as prediction markets attract increased scrutiny from regulators in the United States. Platforms offering event-based contracts tied to elections, sports, and economic outcomes have faced legal and jurisdictional disputes over whether such products fall under derivatives regulation or state gambling laws.
Despite that backdrop, firms across the crypto sector continue expanding tools aimed at increasing user participation and engagement in prediction-based trading ecosystems.
Also Read: CFTC Admits It Should Never Have Sued Gemini, Moves to Vacate $5M Consent Order
