The Guardian (USA)

NFTs market hits $22bn as craze turns digital images into assets

- Dan Milmo Technology editor

The global market for non-fungible tokens hit $22bn (£16.5bn) this year as the craze for collection­s such as Bored Ape Yacht Club and Matrix avatars turned digital images into major investment assets.

NFTs have drawn from veteran investors similar warnings to those issued about cryptocurr­encies: that they are symptomati­c of an unsustaina­ble, digital gold rush. NFTs confer ownership of a unique digital item – whether a piece of virtual art by Damien Hirst or a jacket to be worn in the metaverse – upon someone, even if that item can be easily copied. Ownership is recorded on a digital, decentrali­sed ledger known as a blockchain.

Data from DappRadar, a firm that tracks sales, showed that trading in NFTs reached $22bn in 2021, compared with just $100m in 2020, and that the floor market cap of the top 100 NFTs ever issued – a measure of their collective value – was $16.7bn.

The most valuable NFT sale this year was The First 5000 Days, a digital collage by Beeple, the name used by the American digital artist Mike

Winkelmann, that was auctioned for $69.3m in March, making it one of the most valuable pieces of art ever sold by a living artist. Another Beeple NFT, Human One, sold for $29m.

Other multimilli­on-dollar NFTs included the Bored Ape Yacht Club, a collection of 10,000 NFTs represente­d as cartoon primates that are used as profile photos on the social media accounts of their owners and which raised $26.2m. Celebrity BAYC owners include the talkshow host Jimmy Fallon and the rapper Post Malone.

DappRadar said a key factor in the surge in NFT trading was mainstream businesses entering the fray.

Coca-Cola raised more than $575,000 from selling items such as a customised jacket to be worn in the metaverse world of Decentrala­nd while the Matrix star Keanu Reeves failed to keep a straight face when told by an interviewe­r that his Matrix film series now had NFTs attached to it.

“Hollywood, sports celebritie­s and big brands like Coca-Cola, Gucci, Nike, and Adidas, made their dent in the

space, providing NFTs with a new level of exclusivit­y. The power of attraction of these famous names profoundly impacted NFTs and the blockchain industry overall,” said DappRadar.

Football fans have been targeted with NFT marketing – including with NFTs backed by the former England players John Terry and Wayne Rooney – and have been warned by experts that they are risky assets, unregulate­d in the UK. It will take years before NFTs behave like a convention­al market, said George Monaghan, analyst at research firm GlobalData.

“2021 NFT activity was frenzied.

That’ll subside in coming years and NFTs will settle into something more akin to today’s modern art market, where consensus on value is more solid. That said, it’ll be years before any crypto market, let alone NFTs, comes to resemble anything convention­al markets would call stable. I wouldn’t throw your rainy day fund into any meme NFTs quite yet,” he said.

 ?? Photograph: Facundo Arrizabala­ga/EPA ?? Artworks titled Bored Ape Yacht Club, left, and The Last Warrior by Sepand Danesh, right, at the Portrait of an Era NTF exhibition in London.
Photograph: Facundo Arrizabala­ga/EPA Artworks titled Bored Ape Yacht Club, left, and The Last Warrior by Sepand Danesh, right, at the Portrait of an Era NTF exhibition in London.

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