It’s been just a few months since the record-setting non-fungible token sale at nearly $100 million. But here are five signs the NFT hype is already crashing in this week’s Five For Friday.
#5: NFT searches are down
According to Google Trends, searches have more than halved since the peak in January. And to think, there was a time when the “NFT” search term was more popular than “cryptocurrency.”
#4: Average price declining
The average sale price of an NFT in April is around $1,500, compared with around $4,000 in January, according to NFT data source NonFungible. Overall daily sales have also plunged from $160 million as of Jan. 31 to under $30 million this week. Case in point: A Bored Ape Yacht Club NFT recently sold for $224,000, which is $68,000 less than what the seller bought it for in January.
#3: Market guru prediction
The man who accurately predicted the 2008 market crash is at it again. Renowned author and statistician Nassim Nicholas Taleb tweeted, “The NFT thingy is starting to burst,” prophesying higher interest rates will reveal the cracks. Twitter wasn’t having this take, though, calling Taleb out of touch and obsessive.
The NFT thingy is starting to burst. All you need is higher interest rates for things that make no sense to start making no sense.
"Jack Dorsey Tweet NFT Once Sold for $2.9 Mil, Now Might Fetch Under $14K".
— Nassim Nicholas Taleb (@nntaleb) April 16, 2022
#2: Pseudo-celebs showing off collections
Considered by some to be the worst 1.5 minutes of television in 2022, Paris Hilton and fellow-Bored Ape owner and host Jimmy Fallon were hamming it up over their six-figure NFT collections. Twitter revolted and Quinton Reviews might have said it best: “If anyone can kill NFT culture, it’s Jimmy Fallon and Paris Hilton.”
god SPEED. If anyone can kill NFT culture, it's Jimmy Fallon and Paris Hilton https://t.co/VV3ei9zLTn
— Quinton Reviews🎬 (@Q_Review) January 25, 2022
#1: Dorsey’s ‘first tweet’ fail
The NFT of Twitter founder Jack Dorsey’s first tweet tanked in value. When the tweet was converted into an NFT last year, people were shocked the bidding went up to $2.9 million. That buyer just put it back on the market thinking it’d fetch nearly $50 million this go round, but the offers stumbled in the low thousands, and now the optimistic seller is reconsidering selling his “Mona Lisa of the digital world.”
I decided to sell this NFT ( the world's first ever tweet ) and donate 50% of the proceeds ( $25 million or more ) to the charity @GiveDirectly
🖇 https://t.co/cnv5rtAEBQ pic.twitter.com/yiaZjJt1p0— Sina Estavi (@sinaEstavi) April 6, 2022