The NFT market is flatlining as the global crypto market continues to crash. Bitcoin, the world’s largest cryptocurrency plunged to $20,946, witnessing an 18-month low. All cryptos are currently in the red as they continue to fall. A similar trend is being observed in the NFT spaces as sales continue to drop and NFT buyers vanish from the NFT marketplaces.
According to the CryptoSlam NFT tracker, the NFT sales since April have dropped by 150 per cent. The average price of an NFT has dropped from $589 in April to $192 in June, a drop of 67 per cent in the value. The number of transactions happening in the NFT space is also witnessing a significant drop from 62 lakh transactions to 27 lakh transactions.
The Bored Ape Yacht Club (BAYC) NFT collection is now trading below $100,000 for the first time since August 2021. The floor price has been down by 100 per cent since May when BAYC NFTs were selling at $200,000 each.
On June 15, the floor price fell to $106,000 and since then, the NFT market has only witnessed a huge downfall. The reason for the decline in NFTs is the fading crypto market, especially Ethereum. This is because NFTs are usually minted on Ethereum Network. Currently, Ethereum is close to hitting the $1000 mark. Several other top-rated NFT collections have seen their NFT floor prices decrease along with BAYC. For instance, Otherdeed has lost 12 per cent of its value in the last 24 hours, while Moonbirds have lost 42 per cent.
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Meanwhile, in January the sales in NFT plunged to $4.6 billion. By the end of March, the NFT sales stood at $2.44 billion, a decline of 53 per cent in NFT sales. The data revealed that the number of unique buyers dropped from 9.98 lakhs in January to 6.4 lakhs in March and stood at 3.81 lakhs for April, a decrease of 66.5 per cent unique buyers.
In other news, Bill Gates slammed the concept of NFTs calling it “100 per cent based on greater fool theory”. The theory denotes that even overpriced assets can make money as long as there are investors who are willing to buy and sell.
Gates was speaking at an event on climate change hosted by TechCrunch. He said he preferred investing in tangible assets or “a company where they make products.” The Microsoft co-founder said that he does not hold any crypto assets. “I’m not involved in that. I’m not long or short in any of those things,” said Gates, suggesting that he was also suspicious of assets designed to “avoid taxation or any sort of government rules.”
Read More: NFT market suffers in crypto crash, sales drop by 150 per cent
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