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Leading NFT marketplace OpenSea generated more than $5 billion in total trading volume in January between Ethereum and Polygon sales, breaking the previous record from August 2021.
Public blockchain data collected by Dune Analytics shows that OpenSea had more than $4.95 billion of Ethereum trading volume in January, plus over $79 million on Polygon, a sidechain scaling solution for Ethereum. Both are single-month records for each respective platform.
OpenSea’s previous Ethereum peak came in August 2021 as the NFT market exploded following a subdued summer, topping $3.4 billion in trading volume for the month. Meanwhile, the marketplace’s previous Polygon record was set in December with $76 million, as NFT trading on the scaling solution has steadily increased in recent months.
On the Ethereum front, OpenSea had its best single day in months yesterday, January 31, with $233 million worth of NFT trading. It’s one of four single days above the $200 million mark for Ethereum trading in January for the marketplace.
Daily Ethereum trading volume is on the rise at OpenSea. Image: Dune Analytics
OpenSea initially appeared to be on track for an even more sizable finish. However, the Dune Analytics dashboard created by Richard Chen, general partner at venture fund 1confirmation, was double-counting transactions sent by newer aggregators like Genie and Gem. It was fixed on January 20, per a tweet from Chen, shaving down some previous trading volume figures.
Even with the data corrected, however, OpenSea still blew past its previous Ethereum record as the NFT market soars to even greater heights. Early in January, OpenSea also revealed a $300 million Series C round that valued the company at $13.3 billion.
It wasn’t all smooth sailing for OpenSea in January, however. Some OpenSea users saw their high-value NFT collectibles sold for a fraction of their estimated worth due to a UI exploit, and the firm has thus far paid out $1.8 million worth of ETH to affected customers.
Also last month, OpenSea announced plans to limit the number of NFTs that can be minted with its own smart contract (i.e., computer code), effectively stopping some active projects in their tracks. The news was met with near-universal backlash and OpenSea reversed course, announcing that it would instead pursue other ways to limit the creation of plagiarized and spam NFTs on the platform.
OpenSea is a prominent indicator of the NFT market’s momentum, which has continued surging despite a rough month for cryptocurrency prices. Some traders may see valuable, blue chip NFT projects like the Bored Ape Yacht Club and Doodles as a store of value as the crypto market falls. Others may be taking advantage of the dip to buy into NFTs in a big way.
“Investors are currently getting a discount for the most hyped digital asset class, at least on fiat terms,” Dragos Dunica, co-founder and chief data officer of analytics firm DappRadar, told Decrypt earlier in January. “As NFTs maintain their upward trend, this discount might turn into a neat return on investment as crypto prices pick up too.”
An NFT works like a blockchain-verified deed of ownership to a digital item, whether it’s an image, video file, video game item, or something else. The market rose to an estimated $23 billion in total trading volume over the course of 2021, per data from DappRadar.
That momentum has carried into 2022 thus far, and OpenSea is not the only platform that saw significant trading action in January. New Ethereum marketplace LooksRare is a prime example, but it’s one that comes with caveats.
Launched on January 10, the marketplace is built around its own LOOKS token that was airdropped free to select OpenSea users to draw them to the platform. LOOKS tokens are also paid out daily to NFT traders that use LooksRare.
However, some traders have manipulated the system by selling NFTs for highly exaggerated prices back and forth between their own controlled wallets—a form of wash trading. Collections like Meebits and Terraforms, which trade without royalties due to the creators, have generated billions of artificially inflated trading volume via LooksRare in recent weeks.
As of Friday, January 28, crypto analytics firm CryptoSlam said that it had identified more than $8.3 billion worth of wash trading on LooksRare. With Dune Analytics reporting $9.5 billion in total trading volume at the time, that would suggest that about 87% of trading on the site was attributed to manipulated sales as of that date.
Still, that leaves potentially more than $1 billion worth of legitimate trading volume—plus activity from the weekend and Monday—on a brand new NFT marketplace in January. And that comes on top of OpenSea’s own growing Ethereum activity.
Over on the Solana blockchain, top marketplace Magic Eden appears to have had a sizable month, as well. DappRadar’s figures suggest more than $531 million worth of trading volume over the past 30 days, as of this writing—a nearly 89% uptick over the previous 30-day span.
The Bored Ape Yacht Club profile picture project—which pulled in celebrities like Justin Bieber and Neymar Jr. in recent weeks—was arguably the biggest winner among NFT collections in January.
According to CryptoSlam, the main collection generated $311 million worth of secondary trading volume last month, a nearly 101% increase over December. Add in secondary sales of the Mutant Ape Yacht Club and Bored Ape Kennel Club collections, and the combined total tops $600 million. Collectively, the three projects have passed the $2 billion total to date.
Meanwhile, brand new profile picture project Azuki has topped $249 million in secondary trading volume to date since launching in January, and the World of Women project rose more than 1,100% to over $69.5 million last month. Earlier in January, World of Women signed veteran music mogul Guy Oseary to represent it with entertainment and licensing initiatives.
Dapper Labs had a big month in January, as well, with its NBA Top Shot project—which runs on the Flow blockchain—notching its best month of secondary trading volume since last April with over $59 million. That’s a 52% increase from December, plus Top Shot logged its most NFT transactions in a single month with more than 1.8 million in total.
Also in January, Dapper launched its UFC Strike platform for the Ultimate Fighting Championship, generating $5 million as it sold through 100,000 NFT packs at $50 apiece. UFC Strike will enable trading when its secondary marketplace opens on February 7.
Not every notable NFT project soared in January, however. CryptoPunks notched its lowest month of trading volume since last June, with $124.2 million—a nearly 28% drop from December. CryptoPunks has been seen as losing ground to the Bored Ape Yacht Club, which provides added perks to holders and has seen prominent holders join of late.
Additionally, Axie Infinity–the leading Ethereum-based game—continued its recent decline in NFT trading volume, dropping to about $126.5 million in January. That’s a 58% drop from December, and a steep fall from November’s tally of nearly $754 million, per CryptoSlam.
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