Blockchain intelligence platform Glassnode published a report on Wednesday analyzing how Blur – the new hotspot for NFT trading – is slowly reigniting the non-fungible economy on-chain.
The firm noted a 94% increase in gas consumption from NFT-related transactions on Ethereum over the past 2 months.
As the report explained, Ethereum gas fees have become more expensive this month, with the median transaction gas price rising to 38 gwei, compared to roughly 10 to 20 gwei over the previous nine months. That’s higher than the cost of gas during both FTX’s fallout in November (36 gwei) and Binance’s bank run event the following month (24 gwei) – both events create high block space demand that drives up the cost of transactions.
NFTs had a slow 2022, with both trading volumes and floor prices for top collections plummeting, and various analyses revealing that the NFT economy was rife with wash trading. OpenSea – the longtime king of NFT marketplaces – was forced to lay off 20% of its staff in June due to the bear market and macroeconomic pressures.
The carnage has left room for a new NFT marketplace and aggregator – Blur – to prosper. Launched in October, the Blur has already begun to dominate 78% of NFT transfer volume using a “zero-trading fee model with optional royalty payments.”
Despite transitioning to a zero-fee model of its own in wake of the competition, OpenSea has so far failed to compete with Blur’s meteoric rise. According to Glassnode, this is due to Blur having attracted a community of professional traders, unlike OpenSea’s historical target audience of “creators and collectors.”
Typical Blur users now execute 4 to 5 trades per day on the platform, compared to OpenSea’s average of just two trades per user.
“A higher sales frequency can create a flywheel effect, since more NFT sellers feel confident listening on Blur’s platform, creating a larger offering, which in turn attracts more buyers,” the report stated.
While gas metrics look promising, overall NFT adoption appears unaffected by Blur’s growth. Glassnode’s data indicated that the growth of new addresses on Ethereum remains 40% under what it was last February. This means that Blur’s users appear to primarily be existing Ethereum users, rather than all-new network participants.
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