Unreal demand? Irregular sales worth billions fire up wild NFT market
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[February 07, 2022] By
Elizabeth Howcroft
LONDON (Reuters) - On Jan. 12, an image of
a computer-generated pixelated person was sold for about $50.6 million
worth of cryptocurrency on a new online marketplace that caters for
non-fungible tokens.
It gets stranger.
Five minutes later, the same "Meebit" NFT - a virtual character clad in
purple shorts and green sneakers - was sold back from the buyer to the
original seller for around $49.6 million.
Confused? Welcome to the weird and wild world of NFTs
https://www.reuters.com/technology/
what-are-nfts-2021-11-17, a new breed of crypto assets that represent
digital items, from images and videos to clothing for avatars. They have
exploded in popularity over the past year as part of a fledgling and
largely unregulated economy for the much-hyped metaverse
https://www.reuters.com/technology/
what-is-metaverse-2021-10-18.
The Meebit, which can be used as a profile picture, was exchanged
between two cryptocurrency wallets - which are anonymous. Although the
underlying blockchain technology creates a public record when an NFT is
sold, it doesn't record the names of those involved. A person can own
multiple wallets, acting as both buyer and seller in a trade.
The digital character was among dozens of NFTs on the LooksRare
marketplace that were sold back and forth between a small number of
wallets in quick succession for unusually high prices last month,
according to a Reuters review of publicly available blockchain records.
Since Jan. 11, for example, another Meebit NFT - this one with a sporty
outfit and ponytail - has been passed between three wallets in over 100
sales, mostly in the $3-15 million range. In the week of Jan. 12-19, a
"Loot" bag NFT, representing virtual equipment for online adventure
games, was exchanged across 75 sales between two other wallets, for
$30,000-$800,000 a time.
The activity has helped LooksRare generate at least $10.8 billion in
trading volume since it launched in early January, according to data
provided by market tracker DappRadar.
The top 27 most expensive recorded sales across the whole NFT industry
in January, totalling $1.3 billion, came from just two wallets
transacting on LooksRare, according to DappRadar data as of Jan. 31,
while the top 100 sales, worth $2.3 billion, came from 16 wallets
trading on the platform.
"There is a lot of activity happening between a couple of wallets –
let's say wallet one selling to wallet two, and then wallet two
reselling it," said Modesta Masoit, DappRadar's finance and research
director. "It's quite likely that this is not real demand, that these
trades are not organic."
DappRadar and CryptoSlam, another data provider that reported
artificially inflated volumes on LooksRare, said such trades could be
linked to the platform's reward structure - though Masoit added there
was also "real" activity on the site.
LooksRare describes itself as "the community-first NFT marketplace with
rewards for participating", referring to its reward system which
includes awarding tokens to the day's traders based on the proportion of
overall sales volumes they were responsible for.
These tokens, called LOOKS, can then be used in a process called
"staking" to claim a slice of the platform's revenue from the 2% fee
charged on all trades, according to a LooksRare spokesperson.
Asked about the transactions reviewed by Reuters and whether the trades
artificially boosted trading volumes, the spokesperson said that such
practices were highly risky, as traders would have to pay transaction
costs that they were not guaranteed to recoup.
Traders don't know until the day's close whether they have transacted
enough to win LOOKS tokens, or how many, because they don't know what
others have traded.
The spokesperson added that LooksRare had a structure that was designed
to reduce the profitability of LOOKS "yield farming" in the long-term.
"The LOOKS staking rewards system is the token's core reward structure,
whereby 100% of trading fees are earned by LOOKS stakers. This fosters a
community of users and token stakers who share the common goal of making
the platform the best it can be," the spokesperson said.
'BYE BYE WASH TRADERS'
Nonetheless, the trading activity provides a window into the nebulous
and speculative nature of the NFT industry, which attracted $25 billion
https://www.reuters.com/markets/
europe/nft-sales-hit-25-billion-2021-growth-shows-signs-slowing-2022-01-10
worth of sales volume in 2021.
The buzz around this new market has been buoyed by art collectibles like
CryptoPunks and Bored Apes, algorithmically generated portraits that can
sell for millions of dollars. They have gained celebrity traction, with
socialite Paris Hilton and TV host Jimmy Fallon recently showing off
their Bored Apes.
[to top of second column] |
Visitors are pictured in front of an immersive art installation
titled "Machine Hallucinations - Space: Metaverse" by media artist
Refik Anadol, which will be converted into NFT and auctioned online
at Sotheby's, at the Digital Art Fair, in Hong Kong, China September
30, 2021. REUTERS/Tyrone Siu
Several big companies, from Coca-Cola to Gucci, are testing the temperature with
their own NFTs. In the art world, meanwhile, just over $1 in every $20
https://www.reuters.com/business/
finance/new-masters-how-auction-houses-are-chasing-crypto-millions-2021-11-08 of
revenue at top auction houses last year came from NFTs.
John Egan, CEO of L'Atelier, an independent subsidiary of BNP Paribas that
researches new technologies, characterised the transactions on LooksRare
reviewed by Reuters as "wash trades" that would be banned in traditional markets
like equities or debt because they give a false impression of demand for an
asset.
Yet such transactions are not illegal in this nascent industry because there are
no equivalent rules governing NFTs, two crypto legal experts told Reuters.
Egan added that LooksRare was "not in itself culpable" for the trades. "It is a
marketing incentive," he said. "LooksRare are effectively paying large investors
to use their site, drawing a lot of attention and new users in the process."
For the platform's supporters, this may be a sound strategy to thrive in a
virtual gold rush, as tech giants like Meta
https://www.reuters.com/technology/
facebook-owner-meta-lift-veil-off-its-metaverse-business-2022-01-31 and
Microsoft https://www.reuters.com/
article/
activision-ma-microsoft-idAFL4N2TY36A spend billions of dollars to further their
owns visions of the metaverse and pave the way for future profits.
Bumper activity in January meant LooksRare overtook four-year-old market leader
OpenSea to become the biggest NFT marketplace by monthly volume, despite having
fewer than 3,500 traders per day, compared with OpenSea's 57,000 to 90,000,
according to DappRadar data.
OpenSea did not respond to a Reuters request for comment for this article.
A Twitter user called "dingaling", who LooksRare told Reuters was an investor
and adviser to the platform, wrote a thread on Jan. 12 saying wash trading on
the platform looked bad but may be part of the "necessary steps" to gain market
share and provide a more transparent, decentralized marketplace for the NFT
community.
"People have been real mad about wash trading, but I'm struggling to understand
why. It's a free market," dingaling added. "Once real volume takes over, it's
bye bye to wash traders."
MET IN MEATSPACE?
From a regulatory point of view, authorities worldwide are worried that the rise
of crypto assets more broadly could undermine financial systems, promote crime
and harm investors.
Efforts so far have been mostly focused on cryptocurrencies rather than NFTs,
which throw up new issues such as how they should be classified, since they are
one-off - non-fungible - and highly diverse in nature.
"Generally speaking, the majority of jurisdictions recognise that NFTs should
not be regulated as financial products if each NFT represents a genuinely unique
item – for example, a unique collectible, piece of art or piece of media
content," said Hagen Rooke, a partner at global law firm Reed Smith.
Traditional authorities may also need to bridge a cultural gap.
LooksRare's founders are identified only by the pseudonyms Guts and Zodd. The
spokesperson described them as "NFT nerds" and said the platform's team was
spread across different timezones and have mostly "never even met each other in
meatspace".
Meatspace is a term used by internet enthusiasts to refer to the physical world.
One frequent NFT trader known as "Rizzle", who mainly uses OpenSea, is among the
big players in the market drawn to LooksRare by its reward model.
Rizzle first joined LooksRare after receiving some free LOOKS tokens, which he
staked for profit, and since then he has used the marketplace for trading
because he said he likes some of the features.
"I would not be surprised to see other platforms pop up with even greater
initial incentives to try and capture this same audience," he said.
(Reporting by Elizabeth Howcroft; Editing by Pravin Char)
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