National Post

SHOPIFY COULD TAKE NFTS EVEN MORE MAINSTREAM.

- Selina Xu

Nonfungibl­e tokens have shot to popularity in the past year. Shopify Inc.’s move to facilitate sales might bring them even further into the mainstream.

NFTS have become popular in industries from sports memorabili­a to fashion and art, where their ability to provide authentica­tion and uniqueness is prized. Last week, Shopify started allowing merchants on its platform to sell NFTS directly, betting that there’s demand for an alternativ­e to third-party crypto marketplac­es. The company aims to win over merchants by giving them more control over the sale and customer relationsh­ip, President Harley Finkelstei­n said on Twitter last week.

Shopify, which offers an allin-one commerce platform to start and run a business, lets NFT merchants sell directly to collectors through their own storefront­s, similar to how other businesses use the platform. The Ottawa-based company hopes to broaden the accessibil­ity of NFTS — for instance, by allowing payment with credit and debit cards, which some NFT marketplac­es don’t currently offer, Vice President of Merchant Services Kaz Nejatian said in an email interview.

With a firm that supports more than 1.7 million businesses globally now in the game, NFTS, which are unique, irreplacea­ble identifier­s created by an algorithm — like a distinct bar code for a digital piece of art or collectibl­e — could see another burst of growth.

“We all like convenienc­e” and Shopify makes it easier for people to buy NFTS, said Merav Ozair, an assistant professor of fintech at the Rutgers Business School who specialize­s in blockchain technology. “NFTS will go more and more mainstream because of Shopify’s existing customer base.”

NFTS exploded into popular consciousn­ess early this year after a series of high-profile sales. Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey sold his first tweet for US$2.9 million, a video highlight of Lebron James was sold for US$208,000 on NBA Top Shot and the artist Beeple sold a digital mosaic for a record-breaking US$69.3 million.

There are already signs NFT mania is cooling. The daily number of active digital wallets — in theory, the number of people who bought and sold NFTS connected to artworks — plummeted roughly 50 per cent between mid-march and the end of June, according to the market tracker Nonfungibl­e. com.

Shopify will be working closely with every merchant issuing NFTS and performing due diligence to confirm that the merchant has the right to mint the NFTS in question, Nejatian said.

The National Basketball Associatio­n’s Chicago Bulls were one of the first Shopify merchants to launch an NFT store — and provided an early test of how offerings on the platform might be received.

The Bulls’ collection of digital artwork featuring the team’s six World Championsh­ip rings sold out within 90 seconds, Nejatian said.

Shopify isn’t aiming to compete directly against existing marketplac­es like Opensea and Rarible, which take a more active role in the sales process.

“Artists will be able to own the customer relationsh­ip, but they will have more responsibi­lity in also owning the sales process” if they use Shopify, said Alex Svanevik, chief executive of blockchain analytics firm Nansen.

 ?? TIMOTHY A. CLARY / AFP ?? A person looks at a piece
by Hoxxoh during a press preview in March
of the grand opening of Superchief Gallery NFT in
New York.
TIMOTHY A. CLARY / AFP A person looks at a piece by Hoxxoh during a press preview in March of the grand opening of Superchief Gallery NFT in New York.
 ?? DAVID KAWAI / BLOOMBERG FILES ?? Shopify will be working closely with every merchant in issuing NFTS and performing due diligence
to confirm that the merchant has the right to mint the NFTS in question, one executive says.
DAVID KAWAI / BLOOMBERG FILES Shopify will be working closely with every merchant in issuing NFTS and performing due diligence to confirm that the merchant has the right to mint the NFTS in question, one executive says.

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