The NFT (non-fungible token) auction market has cooled down significantly from its 2021 frenzy, characterized by fewer auctions and lower price ranges, but experts are likening the phase to a healthy consolidation that will usher in more sustainable growth over the years.
According to Artprice’s 2024 Contemporary Art Market report, over the past year, NFT auction sales fetched only $9.3 million.
This was a far cry from the peak of speculation in 2021, when digital artist Beeple sold an NFT for an astounding $69 million at Christie’s, propelling him into the global spotlight.
As the event sent shockwaves through both the tech and art worlds, marking NFTs as a revolutionary new asset class, that year, the NFT market raised an impressive $110.5 million through regulated auctions, with pieces by emerging artists like Fewocious and collections like CryptoPunks commanding millions.
2023 saw the market shifting away from dizzying price tags, with fewer auctions and more moderate price ranges becoming the new norm.
The report says,
What was once a chaotic and speculative bubble has now calmed into a more stable market, allowing space for collectors and investors to assess the true impact of this digital art revolution.
Fewer headline-grabbing sales, but NFT collections see sustained interest
Since the height of the NFT boom, the market’s leading artists have seen their prices fall to more reasonable levels.
Fewocious, a teenage sensation in 2021 who sold a piece for $2.8 million at Sotheby’s, hasn’t had any work offered at auction this year.
Similarly, Larva Labs’ CryptoPunks, once a darling of the NFT space, no longer attract the wild bids they once did.
Even Beeple, whose work ignited the NFT explosion, saw a far more modest sale of $177,800 in 2023.
Despite this market correction, buyer interest remains steady, particularly for established NFT collections, the report says.
Yuga Labs, the creator of the Bored Ape Yacht Club (BAYC), has continued to see strong demand. At a recent Sotheby’s online sale, 100% of Yuga Labs’ NFTs were sold, with the most valuable lot fetching $264,000.
This suggests that while the broader NFT market has cooled, there is still significant enthusiasm for high-quality collections.
Cooling in NFT auctions in line with the broader cooling of the art market
The fall in NFT auction values must not be looked at in isolation.
According to Artnet’s mid-year review of 2024, the first half of 2024 saw a total of $5.05 billion being spent on art at auctions, a decline of 29.5% since the same period last year.
Artprice’s report adds that the global market for contemporary art has also not produced any major auction records last year, even though the volume of transactions on affordable works increased.
Contemporary art auction results by price range 2023-24, Source: Artprice
According to the report, the 2023-24 financial year saw a notable contraction in contemporary art auctions with almost a billion dollars less compared to the historic peak two years ago.
However, with a total of $1.888 billion, it says the market has returned to pre-pandemic levels while surpassing the average of the five years preceding the health crisis by 200 million.
The global context, with its persistent geo-political and economic tensions, has slowed down the market for prestige works. Convincing sellers
to put their most valuable possessions up for auction is understandably a daunting task in uncertain times. Meanwhile, large buyers are clearly in a cautious mood, scrutinizing the long-term outlook.
What next for NFT auction marketplace?
Experts see a silver lining in the slump.
Artprice says collectors can now purchase works from leading digital artists for far less than the sky-high prices of 2021.
Renowned artists such as Refik Anadol, who recently exhibited at the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA), and Dmitri Cherniak, a pioneer in generative art, have seen their NFTs available at auctions for between $15,000 and $20,000.
Additionally, for less than $10,000, buyers can find nearly 200 NFTs by artists like Moxarra Gonzalez, Matt Deslauriers, and Hideo, all selected by major auction houses over the last year.
As NFTs enter their second decade of existence, but only their third year on the regulated auction market, the speculative wave and the FOMO phenomenon have both subsided and the hype has subsided. We are now looking at a golden opportunity to build a solid and sustainable market, far from the thrill of the buzz.
This shift signals that the NFT market is maturing, moving away from a speculative frenzy to a more sustainable model.
The market is now focused on building a solid foundation rather than chasing viral moments.
While the spectacular price surges of the past may no longer dominate headlines, the digital art world is carving out a measured, more resilient future.
With this newfound stability, there is a golden opportunity for collectors and artists alike to foster a sustainable market for years to come.
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