NFTs (non-fungible tokens) exploded in popularity during 2021 and their growth shows no sign of slowing down – driven by the sale of everything from digital artworks to football memorabilia. What’s more, the sale of these digital collectibles is growing into a vast global market. Overall, the global market for NFTs was worth over £30bn in 2021, while Christie’s auction house saw its NFT sales reach £80m in less than a year.1
In simple terms, NFTs are based on the same technology as Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies – blockchain. This is essentially a shared database containing records that, once added, are very difficult to change. It’s a digital ledger that can be used to record any kind of information, but is commonly used to record contracts, trades, ownership and digital signatures.2
This ledger is the basis for cryptocurrencies and NFTs - the difference being that cryptocurrencies are fungible, so swap one Bitcoin for another and you end up with essentially the same thing. NFTs meanwhile are non-fungible - each is a unique digital token that links to a one-of-a-kind digital or physical asset – so they cannot be traded or swapped without ending up with something entirely different.3
For example, if you traded an NFT linked to a Banksy artwork for one linked to a work by the digital artist, Beeple, you’d end up with a different asset to the one you originally owned.
This is where it all gets a little complicated, but to understand this we need to go back to the invention of Bitcoin, which meant that, for the first time, financial value could be digitised. Bitcoin creates and preserves that digital value because ownership can be publicly verified via a shared digital ledger (blockchain) and because supply of Bitcoin is limited to a maximum of 21,000,000 units.
As is the case with gold, it is this scarcity and limited availability that creates and stores financial value.4
All this means that the owner of an NFT has the right to sell it to anyone else down the line in the same way that physical artworks can be bought and sold. It is important to remember, however, that the NFT is not the art itself. Rather the NFT is essentially a receipt, or digital deed of ownership – what’s more, their use it not limited to digital art, and can be associated with almost anything, including physical art or even property.5
Unfortunately, the risk associated with buying and owning NFTs appear to be on the rise as hackers, scammers and other cybercriminals seek ways to exploit them for their own gain – at least in part because they can change hands for such large sums of money (Beeple's Everydays: The First 5000 Days sold for £55m.6 ).
In essence, this has led to the emergence of two main forms of NFT crime – theft and scams.7 For instance, there is a popular NFT called Bored Ape Yacht Club, so when another NFT with a similar name (The Big Daddy Ape Club) came along, it sold well. However, the promised NFTs were never delivered and investors were scammed to the tune of around £900,000.8
Meanwhile, quite recently, cybercriminals hacked into the Instagram account belonging to Bored Ape Yacht Club and stole around £2.4m worth of NFTs – worryingly that was achieved with a relatively simple phishing attack.7
In terms of off-the-shelf NFT insurance policies designed to protect NFTs in the way property policies protect physical assets, the simple answer is ‘no’. However, this is a complex area, so it is important to understand why those policies are not yet widely available and, in their absence, how you can protect your NFTs.
Broadly speaking, there are three main reasons why NFT insurance is not yet fully developed:6 7
All that said, the sheer scale of the NFT market – which is already comparable to the physical art market in size and predicted to grow by an astonishing £120bn by 20267 – means that insurance solutions will begin to emerge over time.
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