NFT hype is on the rise again as market steadies after slump
NEW YORK (BLOOMBERG) – Sales of non-fungible tokens (NFTs) are steadying after a sharp slump earlier this year, as a handful of new products and initiatives revive enthusiasm for a market that lives and dies on hype.
Weekly NFT sales volume is still about half it was in January when there was a blitz of big-ticket sales and celebrity collaborations. But the market is recovering, with weekly volume now up about 32 per cent from a low in March, according to data from Nansen, a blockchain analytics firm.
The market for NFTs remains small, but it is regaining momentum as new products aim to entice users to trade items like digital art of cupids or penguins. This week, a new NFT index launched in addition to a trial version of a marketplace by Coinbase Global, which could lead to a jump in transactions.
There were about 200,000 daily unique wallets interacting with NFTs in the first quarter, according to DappRadar. Meanwhile, Coinbase had about 89 million verified users at the end of last year.
“The NFT market is undergoing a consolidation period with volumes again starting to increase,” said Mr Pedro Herrera, a senior data analyst at DappRadar, which tracks decentralised applications.
On April 20, Index Coop launched the JPEG NFT Index, which lets investors bet on blue-chip NFT collections like CryptoPunks by buying a single token on the Uniswap crypto exchange.
Already, “demand has been exceptional”, according a methodologist for the group who goes by the pseudonym Joseph Knecht, a character from Hermann Hesse’s The Glass Bead.
“Blue-chip NFT collections are showing remarkable strength,” Mr Knecht said. “There’s also a new wave of artistic and technological innovation that suggest the current cycle is only just beginning.”
New developments from Yuga Labs, the creator of Bored Ape Yacht Club, one of the most successful NFT collections, may also be fuelling enthusiasm. In March the group raised US$450 million (S$618 million) for an expansion. Its new ApeCoin now has a roughly US$4 billion market value, according to CoinMarketCap. Plus, Coinbase announced on April 11 a Bored Ape film series.
Whether the current upswing lasts remains to be seen. “Given the macroeconomic outlook, it may be too early to interpret if this recovery is a short one,” said Nansen analyst Louisa Choe.
The NFT market is given to wild swings. One in three NFT projects have little or no trading activity, according to Nansen, as users often move on quickly to the next, shinier piece of digital art.
“I expect to see lots of ups and downs over the next few months,” said Mr Aaron Brown, a crypto investor who writes for Bloomberg Opinion. “We’ve seen some successful launches with less hype than earlier NFTs … But I don’t get excited by week-to-week news.”