The New Masters: How auction houses are chasing crypto millions
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[November 08, 2021] By
Elizabeth Howcroft
LONDON (Reuters) -Little could James
Christie have known some 240 years ago, as he sold masterpieces by
Rembrandt and Rubens to Catherine the Great, that his auction house
would one day offer virtual apes to a crypto company for over $1
million.
Nor would Sotheby's founder Samuel Baker, auctioning hundreds of rare
books for about $1,000 in 1744, have envisioned selling a copy of the
original source code for the web, as a non-fungible token (NFT), for
north of $5 million.
Times change.
"Everybody wants to sell an NFT," said Cassandra Hatton, Sotheby's
global head of science and popular culture. "My inbox is just absolutely
clogged."
Sotheby's has sold $65 million of NFTs in 2021, while arch-rival
Christie's has sold more than $100 million of the new type of crypto
asset, which uses blockchain to record who owns digital items such as
images and videos, even though they can be freely viewed, copied and
shared like any other online file.
Those sales figures for the world's leading auction houses account for
about 5.5% of their contemporary art sales, according to Art Market
Research data. It's a leap, given NFTs have only taken off in the last
year.
Many buyers are from a new category of wealthy clientele: people who
made their fortunes through cryptocurrencies, art specialists involved
in NFT sales at major auction houses told Reuters. In a Sotheby's online
NFT sale in June which brought in $17.1 million, nearly 70% of the
buyers were newcomers.
Indeed the three NFTs of crude cartoon apes which were snapped up for
982,500 pounds ($1.3 million) at Christie's in London last month were
bought by Kosta Kantchev, who runs a cryptocurrency lending platform
called Nexo.
The cartoons, from a set called Bored Ape Yacht Club, were Christie's
first NFT sale in Europe and were offered up at its biggest in-person
auction since the start of the pandemic.
In a sign of the changing times, Kantchev was rubbing shoulders with art
collectors bidding on works by David Hockney, Jean-Michel Basquiat and
Bridget Riley.
"On one hand, there were the people in suits in the front, and on the
sides, there were people on the phone getting semi-anonymous bids," said
Antoni Trenchev, who runs Nexo with Kantchev. "Then in the back, there
were entrepreneurs and people from the crypto industry bidding – they
don't come in suits."
Trenchev said their purchase of the apes was a bet that the market for
NFTs would continue to grow, fuelled by the rise of the "metaverse" of
online worlds where virtually anything can be bought or sold, from
avatars and clothes to land and buildings.
Indeed digital art is just one part of the explosive sales growth for
NFTs, which topped https://www.reuters.com/technology/nft-sales-surge-107-bln-q3-crypto-asset-frenzy-hits-new-highs-2021-10-04
$10 billion in the third quarter of this year alone, up eightfold from
the previous three months.
"We're working on exciting new financial tools for NFTs that will
stimulate adoption of the asset class," Trenchev said, referring to the
possibility of Nexo selling financial products based on NFTs as the
underlying asset.
They're not the only ones betting on the metaverse. Facebook - a company
worth almost $1 trillion that has rebranded as Meta on the calculation
that increasingly-immersive virtual environments and experiences are the
future.
TRADITION UPENDED
Whether Mark Zuckerberg is prescient or not remains to be seen. The NFTs
boom is nonetheless dragging auction houses hundreds of years older than
Silicon Valley into a new world.
To hunt their new breed of buyers, big auction houses are taking to
social media.
Noah Davis, head of digital art sales at Christie's, said his potential
NFT buyers were happy for him to ditch the formalities normally involved
in attracting art collectors, adding that he recently negotiated a
contract over the messaging platform Discord and registered buyers for
an auction via Twitter.
[to top of second column] |
A visitor takes a photo in front of digital work "Untitled
(Self-Portrait)" by Andy Warhol and digital artist Mike Winkelmann,
known as Beeple, at the Digital Art Fair, in Hong Kong, China
September 30, 2021. REUTERS/Tyrone Siu
"That's where it happens, that's where client services are done," he told
Reuters, adding that it was remarkable how much quicker this process compared
with traditional methods.
In another big digital shift, auction houses are often sourcing NFTs directly
from the crypto artists – in many cases, little-known, pseudonymous figures.
In the physical art market, by contrast, artists' primary sales are normally run
by galleries, while auction houses traditionally focus on secondary market
sales.
"For me the biggest surprise is that the artists want to work with the auction
houses directly. We've always been in the secondary market," said Rebekah
Bowling, senior specialist of 20th century and contemporary art at Phillips,
another global auction house.
"The traditional structure has been upended," said Bowling, who uses Twitter and
Clubhouse to reach artists.
WHY CRYPTO'S RISKY
Yet these newcomers to an untamed metaverse also confront a new sphere of risk,
particularly around cryptocurrencies, which crypto-rich buyers often prefer to
use to pay for NFTs.
Auction houses can face legal risks in terms of know your customer (KYC) and
anti-money-laundering (AML) requirements, said Max Dilendorf, a cryptocurrency
lawyer and partner at Dilendorf Law Firm in New York.
"These products could be securities and when a gallery is picking up an artist
or product they better do their own due diligence," he said, adding that money
laundering via cryptocurrencies was a "known fact."
Sotheby's did not comment on its KYC or AML procedures. Christie's said its KYC
and AML standards in NFT sales were the same as those for physical artworks,
though declined to go into detail. Phillips said it checked that buyers had
sufficient funds in their crypto wallet.
Another issue is that while NFTs are marketed as a way of indisputably recording
ownership of a digital asset, problems can still arise.
A Sotheby's NFT sale in June - in which a buyer spent $1.5 million on what was
marketed as the first-ever NFT, a simple geometric animation called "Quantum" by
Kevin McCoy - was complicated by a claimant emerging saying they owned an
earlier, original version of the same NFT, the buyer and claimant told Reuters.
They said the dispute over which could truly could be called the first NFT meant
the transaction was delayed, and blockchain records show the purchase was not
transferred until several weeks after the sale.
Separately, after a Sotheby's auction of an NFT representing the World Wide Web
source code, which fetched $5.4 million, observers noticed errors in the
included video version of the code.
Sotheby's did not respond to a request for comment on either sale.
Pablo Rodriguez-Fraile, a Miami-based collector who buys both NFT and physical
art, said the steps that auction houses had taken into the digital sphere had
been very positive.
"I think they're normalising the ecosystem, and I think that very soon they'll
find the right path," he said.
"But the curation challenge and the technology challenge are major ones," he
added, referring to auction houses acting as galleries by handling primary
sales.
On Tuesday, Christie's will sell a new NFT by Beeple, the artist whose NFT
fetched https://www.reuters.com/article/us-auction-christie-s-nft-idUSKBN2B3275
$69 million at Christie's in March. That was the first time a major auction
house had sold a piece of art that does not physically exist.
However this time round his work will be sold in physical, as well as NFT, form.
At Christie's at least, the real world still holds some appeal.
($1 = 0.7414 pounds)
(Reporting by Elizabeth Howcroft; Editing by Pravin Char)
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