Here's the most unexpected chart from the Bitcoin 2026 conference week: the best-performing major crypto asset category wasn't BTC, ETH, SOL, or XRP. It was Ethereum NFTs from the 2021 bull run.
During the world's largest Bitcoin conference, Ethereum NFTs ironically provided one of the only few green shoots on red-filled crypto dashboards. Bored Ape Yacht Club climbed 17% over the past seven days, while its two derivatives, Mutant Ape Yacht Club and Bored Ape Kennel Club, rallied 25% and 53% respectively. Pudgy Penguins added 15%, Azuki NFTs rallied 34%, Doodles gained 27%, and Clone X was up 16%.
While every major cryptocurrency posted losses during the three-day conference period — BTC down 4.9%, ETH down 5.2%, SOL down 6.1% — Ethereum NFT collections from the 2021 era were green.
The irony writes itself. At the world's largest Bitcoin conference, the most bullish asset class was the one that Bitcoin maximalists have spent three years calling dead.
Now for the honest read on what's actually happening. The entire NFT market cap is now $1.9 billion, down from a peak exceeding $17 billion in April 2022. NFTs are a thinly-traded asset class with high mark-to-market capitalizations that require very little purchases to move collection valuations substantially. Worse, wash trading accounts for roughly $24 million of the $48 million total NFT trading volume over the past week. Laikalabs
Fifty percent wash trading. That means half the volume is fake — transactions where the same wallet sells to itself to create the appearance of activity. The +34% on Azuki and +53% on MAKC happened on thin real volume. Floor prices can be manipulated with relatively small amounts of capital in a thinly-traded market.
This doesn't mean the moves aren't real in price terms — the floor prices did go up, and holders made money if they sold at those prices. But it does mean you should be deeply skeptical of attributing fundamental significance to NFT rallies when wash trading makes up the majority of volume.
What's actually driving the NFT interest? Likely a combination of narrative rotation (BTC conference = attention on crypto broadly = some capital rotates into forgotten assets looking for a move), whale accumulation at depressed prices, and genuine sentiment that 2021-era blue-chip NFTs at $1.9B total market cap are deeply undervalued relative to their cultural significance.
The deeper question this week asks: has the NFT market bottomed? The 98% decline from peak, genuine cultural IP in collections like BAYC and Pudgy Penguins, and the emerging connection between NFTs and IP licensing (Doodles, Pudgy) are real fundamental arguments.
But thin volume and wash trading make it impossible to separate genuine demand from manufactured momentum. Approach carefully.
