NFTs are tokens that can be used to represent ownership of unique items. They help to tokenize things like art, collectibles, even real estate. They can only have one official owner at a time and they’re secured by the Ethereum blockchain – no one can modify the record of ownership or copy/paste a new NFT into existence.
Comparing Fungible and Non-Fungible assets
Non-fungible is a term used in economics to describe an item that is defined by its unique properties. The definition of the item means that is not interchangeable. For example we can take a Bike; the unique properties of one specific bike make it inherently different than any other physical bike. Most of the things in your house would also be examples of non-fungible assets. Think of things like your computer, watch, pants, or mattress. These are all things that are defined by their unique characteristics.
We can compare non-fungible asset with a fungible asset to understand the NFT better. Fungible assets, by contrast, are defined by their value. The $20 bill in your wallet is fungible. Whether you have this exact $20 bill or another physical bill makes no practical difference since the bill is defined by its value rather than its unique properties (which in the case of a $20 bill could be how crinkled it is). Other examples of fungible goods include commodities like grain or common shares of a company.
Brief History of NFTs
NFTs were first marketed as Coloured Coins in 2012. Five years later NFTs came to prominence in 2017 with a game called CryptoKitties, which enables players to buy and “breed” limited-edition virtual cats. Within a short time, CryptoKitties generated more than US$12 million in sales, with the rarest kitties selling for upwards of US$100,000 a piece. From there, game developers adopted NFTs in a big way to allow gamers to win in-game items such as digital shields, swords or similar prizes, and other game collectibles. Tokenization of game assets is a real game-changer, since it enables transferring tokens between different games or to another player via NFT specialized blockchain marketplaces.
Besides gaming, NFTs are frequently used to sell a wide range of virtual collectibles, including NBA virtual trading cards, music, digital images, video clips and even virtual real estate in Decentraland, a virtual world.
NonFungible.com is a website that tracks NFT projects and marketplaces, puts the value of the total NFT market at $250 million, a negligible fraction of the total crypto coin market but still highly attractive to content creators. The contract behind the token, based on the ERC-721 standard for creating NFTs, can be set to let content creators continue to earn a percentage from all subsequent sales.
In future, The NFT market is likely to grow further because any piece of digital information can easily be “minted” into an NFT, a highly efficient way of managing and securing digital assets.
Conclusion
Non-fungible tokens are created by the process of cryptography and recorded on the blockchain. They cannot be mass reproduced, counterfeited or divided into smaller parts. NFTs may be used for a wide variety of purposes, including validating ownership and as the basis for smart contracts. Valuations of NFTs vary wildly, but are related to each token’s inherent scarcity and uniqueness.
The rise of NFTs during 2020 and early 2021 created an abundance of media hype and controversy. However, given the high valuations of certain non-fungible tokens, traditional auction houses such as Christie’s and Sotheby’s chose to enter the market. Although NFTs are not yet part of the financial mainstream, they are a budding asset class with an uncertain future.