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The End of the Beginning for NFTs

SEC charges shake NFT market as pricey assets record losses and global sales hit new lows, marking the onset of a transformative era for digital collectibles.

Image: AI-generated via Midjourney

Participants in the non-fungible tokens (NFTs) market were not prepared for the Securities and Exchange Commission’s declaration of war against NFTs last week when charges were filed against Impact Theory. I predicted that traders would start exiting the market. This week brings some confirmation that my own theory was right, and strong evidence that the era of NFTs’ beginning is at an end.

By nearly every metric the NFT market is down, though admittedly, not all are as extreme as I was expecting. The Forkast 500 NFT Index shows that the global NFT market lost 2.11% of its value since the SEC’s charges were made public. That rate of decline was significantly less than the prior two weeks, which showed a 3.67% decline the week of Aug. 21, and 5.81% the week of Aug 14. It doesn’t mean there weren’t major losses on NFTs though.

Across individual pricey NFTs, sellers took huge losses last week, like CryptoPunk #9842 which sold for a US$160,000 loss, Bored Ape #996 at a US$212,000 loss, Bored Ape #8262 at a US$300,000 loss and Bored Ape #2530 sold at a US$319,000 loss. Just a few sellers got hit hard, taking US$11.9 million in losses on their trades for the week. 

Other metrics seem to show a muted reaction, but still combined tell a more complete story; NFT traders are on their way out. In last week’s NFTs On Deck, data showed double-digit changes in major categories, but this week, which captures the period after the SEC’s announcement, only two of the seven reflect that type of significant change. 

Wash trading fell to US$29.8 million and unique sellers dropped to 216,723, both representing the lowest we’ve seen in 2023. Weekly transactions also fell 16.13% from last week. and dropping to the fourth lowest this year. Traders’ lack of participation tanked global sales to a 117-week low, with just US$72.5 million in sales.

August’s final numbers reflect two parts of a fundamental change to the NFT market, one that represents the next chapter of NFTs with high transactions and lower sales. Global transactions hit an all-time high for the NFT market, with over 11 million total transactions. Sales, however, are down tremendously. The month finished with US$395 million in sales, a new 30-month low, and the second lowest we’ve seen since January 2021’s US$100 million in sales. 

Sales is the metric that resonates with the public, and August’s shocking new low in the modern NFT market gives us the signal we’ve been waiting for. The first chapter of NFTs has ended, and we’re now writing chapter two. It’s a less exciting part of the story, but this is where the world-building happens, setting up a payoff down the road that you’ll be glad you stuck around for. 

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