ApeCoin (APE) prices slid as much as 11% on Monday in an otherwise flat crypto market after a much-awaited NFT project was sold for APE over the weekend.

Bitcoin and ether rose a nominal 1.8% in the past 24 hours, data show. The two assets continue to trade below pivotal levels of $40,000 and $3,000, respectively. A decline in broader markets over the past few months has contributed to a fall in cryptocurrencies.

Movement in other majors was mixed. XRP and Terra’s LUNA gained upward of 4%, while Solana’s SOL slid 1.2%. A dip in SOL followed a seven-hour network outrage on the Solana over the weekend as bots related to an NFT project spammed the network, causing temporary technical issues.

Investors in broader markets remained concerned about further rate hikes in the U.S., even as markets in Asia and Europe inched higher. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng finished 4% higher, while U.K.’s FTSE gained 0.47% so far. S&P500 and Nasdaq futures both lost as much as 0.38%, while crude oil prices fell 3.77%.

A single NFT project contributed to a spike in gas prices on the Ethereum network over the weekend.

Virtual land on the “Otherside” metaverse, a part of the Bored Ape Yacht Club ecosystem built by Yuga Labs on Ethereum, went on sale for a fixed price of 305 apecoin (APE), or over $7,000 at the time, late on Saturday to significant demand.

While the virtual land sold for a fixed price, the heavy demand pushed gas prices to several ether, running into thousands of dollars at one point. Some users claimed to pay upward of $9,000, to even $14,000, in fees. Gas prices returned to normal at the time of publication of this article on Monday, data show.

Users paid over 71,000 ether – nearly $200 million at the time of publication as per CoinGecko – in gas fees trying to purchase land on Otherside. This is by far a record high for the network, surpassing a January peak of over 19,200 ether. The fees were burned, or destroyed permanently, effectively taking some $200 million in liquidity out of the market.

A record amount of ether was burned on Sunday. (Etherscan)

Demand for ether to pay gas did little to move overall prices over the weekend. Price charts show ether hit lows of $2,743 on Saturday night before jumping $100 on Sunday and then falling to the $2,800 mark at publication time.

Prices of APE, however, fell 11% in the past 24 hours to just over $15. The tokens and their futures were some of the most traded in the past week, attracting higher-than-usual volumes and liquidations.

APE has fallen in the past 24 hours. (TradingView)

The weekend’s price action, however, meant some users lost money on both falling prices and failed mints.

“APE went down and people that wanted to purchase Otherdeed could not mint due to failed transactions on Ethereum, making them lose money on the two fronts,” shared Jolyon Horsfall, Co-CEO of NFT launchpad project SparkWorld, in an email to CoinDesk.

“[This] shows how inefficient it can be, which does not benefit the users that want to get access to NFTs and it might reduce the demand from NFT projects to utilize Ethereum as their network of choice,” he added.

Others seconded the sentiment. “High fees are a double sword for public blockchains,” said Nikos Kostopoulos, blockchain advisor at Netcompany-Intrasoft. “From one point, they validate the success of a project and indicate a growing user base willing to pay high fees to utilize the network, while on the other side [they] are becoming a reason for users to seek alternatives.”

An ApeCoin-branded blockchain might not be far-fetched, either. In a tweet yesterday, Yuga Labs urged community members to consider proposing the creation of a separate blockchain to properly scale the ApeCoin ecosystem.

DISCLOSURE

The leader in news and information on cryptocurrency, digital assets and the future of money, CoinDesk is a media outlet that strives for the highest journalistic standards and abides by a strict set of editorial policies. CoinDesk is an independent operating subsidiary of Digital Currency Group, which invests in cryptocurrencies and blockchain startups. As part of their compensation, certain CoinDesk employees, including editorial employees, may receive exposure to DCG equity in the form of stock appreciation rights, which vest over a multi-year period. CoinDesk journalists are not allowed to purchase stock outright in DCG.

Read More