• Humanoid robot Sophia, developed by Hanson Robotics, is seen through a plastic plate with paint on it during a demonstration before auctioning her own non-fungible token (NFT) artwork,

Humanoid robot Sophia, developed by Hanson Robotics, is seen through a plastic plate with paint on it during a demonstration before auctioning her own non-fungible token (NFT) artwork, (Photo : REUTERS/Tyrone Siu/File Photo)

This week's cryptocurrency price plunge eroded the dollar-based value of NFTs and raised the cost of buying and selling them, in what could be a setback for the burgeoning digital asset market. But NFT collectors are not bailing out.

Non-fungible tokens - a way of trading digital assets by recording their ownership status on blockchain - exploded in popularity in February and March this year, notching up hundreds of millions of dollars in sales.

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The sudden boom is partly attributed to 2020's crypto price surge; NFTs are usually bought with the cryptocurrency ether or dollars.

But the crypto market hit a roadblock on Wednesday when as much as $1 trillion was wiped off the global crypto complex and prices for ether and its larger cousin bitcoin fell 30%-40%.

NFT prices are normally listed on marketplaces in ether, meaning sellers may adjust prices higher to keep them constant in dollars. But with ether still trading a third off recent record highs, NFT values in dollars will have fallen sharply.

A collector who goes by the pseudonym "Pranksy" said his cryptocurrency portfolio's worth dropped by more than $10 million at one point on Wednesday.

But he said he did not see his collection of more than 100,000 NFTs as less valuable because he had not sold them.

"The people who spent many thousands on NFTs aren't going to sell them for 50% off tomorrow, at least not many are. Much like traditional art markets bucking Wall Street trends I believe many see certain NFTs as a store of value," Pranksy told Reuters.

Enthusiasts say the artwork, virtual land, in-game items or other digital assets the NFTs represent hold value that is distinct from the cryptocurrencies used to buy them.

Andrew Steinwold, a Chicago-based crypto investor who runs an NFT fund, said, "Because everything is priced in ether, definitely ... the valuation will be much less."

"But we're a five-year fund so we're thinking in terms of years, not in terms of weeks."

The NFT frenzy was cooling even before this week. Data from OpenSea, which says it is the largest marketplace for NFT trading, shows April sales at $93.6 million, down from almost $150 million in March.

GAS PRICES

As cryptocurrencies fell, the NFT market was hit from so-called "gas" fees - the payment made to the crypto miners who carry out the transaction on the blockchain.

On Wednesday, gas prices spiked as demand to buy and sell ether increased. That caused NFT liquidity to dry up as buyers may have delayed transactions to save on gas fees, Pranksy said.

On OpenSea, daily volumes fell to $1.1 million on Wednesday compared with $2 million on Tuesday, as "gas prices made lower-priced items tricky to purchase," said Hamish Barnes, OpenSea's growth and community lead.

NFT sales volume on the ethereum blockchain was $19,687,241 on Wednesday, up from $15,637,693 the day before, according to NonFungible.com, a site which tracks NFT market activity.

The number of sales was lower, at 2,462 on Wednesday compared to 4,113 on Tuesday.

NonFungible.com co-founder Gauthier Zuppinger said the NFT market was increasingly de-correlated with the crypto market.

"I don't think we'll see a direct impact on the NFT space right now or in the next few days," Zuppinger said, adding that crypto-rich investors could even see NFTs as less risky than cryptocurrencies "because they are backed by the use-case".

Nifty Gateway, an NFT marketplace owned by Gemini, said there was no visible change in behaviour on the platform during the cryptocurrency volatility.

"Our collectors typically have an affinity for digital art, so they buy and hold their NFTs," a spokeswoman said.