Crypto
Why Cryptocurrency Is Back in the Art Market
Art Market
Arun Kakar
Maurizio Cattelan, Comedian, 2019. Courtesy of Sotheby’s.
It may not have been the most expensive sale from last week’s marquee slate of auctions in New York, but there was no question that Maurizio Cattelan’s Comedian (2019) was the most talked-about lot of the week.
The work, a banana duct-taped to a wall, sold for $6.2 million at Sotheby’s, including fees, well above its $1 million–$1.5 million estimate. But the sale was also notable for another reason: Sotheby’s confirmed that the winning bidder, cryptocurrency entrepreneur Justin Sun, would pay in cryptocurrency.
The sale was part of a growing trend that’s been gathering steam once again in the art world: the growth in prominence of cryptocurrencies. Museum acquisitions, new collectors, and even a meme coin have all made their way into art world headlines in recent months, sparking discussion about the role of these tokens in the market.
Sun, in speaking about the sale, recognized its significance as a case study of how the crypto community could be involved in the conversation around artworks, particularly those with viral potential online. “This is not just an artwork; it represents a cultural phenomenon that bridges the worlds of art, memes, and the cryptocurrency community,” said Sun. “I believe this piece will inspire more thought and discussion in the future and will become a part of history.”
Cryptocurrencies in the art market
The sale of Comedian in crypto has shocked corners of the art world but comes as less of a surprise to others.
“Cryptocurrency wealth is now encroaching on spaces once dominated by traditional collectors and has become hard for the art world to ignore,” said Alejandro Cartagena, co-founder of Fellowship, a gallery specializing in human-machine collaboration. “Crypto entrepreneurs are bringing new energy to the art world, challenging its established hierarchies and expanding its horizons in an exciting new dynamic.”
While they have been around since the creation of Bitcoin in 2009, cryptocurrencies first entered the art market mainstream in 2021 when they gained a huge rise in public popularity. This came mainly in the growth of non-fungible tokens (NFTs), unique digital identifiers that use blockchain technology to certify ownership of artworks, along with other assets. While NFTs are distinct from cryptocurrencies, both rely on blockchain technology and are associated with each other.
While the fervor around the NFT market has cooled since they initially burst onto the market, demand for this type of work is, like other cryptocurrencies, rallying towards the end of 2024. According to MSN, the NFT market is on track to close November with “strong momentum,” following an October where there was $356 million in sales volume—an 18% increase from September.
“Interest in cryptocurrencies within the art market is growing, although not as fervently as during the crypto boom of 2020–21,” said Stefanie De Regel, head of development for digital art platform TAEX. “This steady growth reflects the evolving integration of blockchain technology and the art world, driven by opportunities…such as NFTs, and innovative platforms for creative expression.”
Why cryptocurrencies are surging
The frenzy around the Cattelan sale underscored the fact that crypto is back in a big way, more than ever following the reelection of Donald Trump in the U.S. Though most cryptocurrencies slumped in the “crypto winter” of 2022 (a sign of their essential volatility), they are now on the rise again.
Earlier this month, the global crypto market reached a $3.2 trillion high, spurred on by a belief that the incoming president will enact crypto-friendly regulatory policies. This was boosted further last week when Trump nominated the pro-crypto hedge fund manager Scott Bessent as his treasury secretary, which caused Bitcoin to surge to a new all-time high.
There are other cultural signals for crypto market watchers, showing that the incoming administration intends to acknowledge its importance. Another Trump appointment, Elon Musk, will co-lead a newly set-up “Department of Governmental Efficiency,” (abbreviated to DOGE, likely in a sly reference to the meme coin Dogecoin). Musk is a crypto enthusiast, and once vowed to send Dogecoin “to the moon,” a popular slang used in crypto circles to express conviction. The cryptocurrency with the new department’s name has surged to a three-year high this month.
What is a memecoin?
Bitcoin isn’t the only cryptocurrency on the market: There are thousands more blockchain-backed currencies and tokens that are traded online. And the Cattelan sale also led to a bull run of its own. The cryptocurrency $BAN or Comedian is unaffiliated with Sotheby’s but describes itself as “inspired by Maurizio Cattelan’s artwork, featuring a banana taped to a wall.” The coin was picked up in the chatter of speculators online, who began trading it at high volumes. The meme coin (a term given to cryptocurrencies that are typically inspired by internet and cultural trends) saw its market cap—the total value of all its coins—surge to $300 million. It is now listed on major crypto exchanges such as Binance and Bybit—a significant sign of legitimacy in the crypto world.
Later, it was revealed that Michael Bouhanna, head of digital art and NFTs at Sotheby’s, created the cryptocurrency $BAN as what he called a “spontaneous project and a personal hobby” inspired by the “conceptual questioning of value,” which Comedian as an artwork represents.
As the price began to climb and the coin gained traction in crypto circles, Bouhanna was accused on social media of “insider trading.” Bouhanna took to X to deny accusations that he’d made $1 million in profit, noting that he did not “promote $BAN or encourage anyone to buy it.”
Cryptocurrency and museums
Yatreda ያጥሬዳ, Abyssinian Queen, 2024. Courtesy of Yatreda ያጥሬዳ.
Institutional support for NFTs has also become more widespread. NFTs are in the collections of the Centre Pompidou and LACMA. Last week, the Toledo Museum of Art in Ohio became the first major museum to acquire artwork using cryptocurrency when it purchased the digital artwork Abyssinian Queen (2024) by the Ethiopian artist collective Yatreda ያጥሬዳ. The purchase was made using USDC, a stable coin (a cryptocurrency that is pegged to a traditional, or “fiat” currency like USD or euro).
The decision to purchase the work, explained Adam Levine, the museum’s president, director, and CEO, was to “respect and align with the practices of the artist collective we were working with.”
“Just as we would pay in euros when purchasing from a French gallery or in pounds when dealing with an English auction house, it felt appropriate to transact in the preferred currency of Yatreda ያጥሬዳ, a web3 artist collective,” he told Artsy.
Where next for cryptocurrencies in the art market?
Comedian is unlikely to be the last headline-grabbing sale to be paid for in a blockchain-backed currency.
Cryptocurrencies are bringing new collectors into the art market with their own set of motivations, Cartagena points out. “We’re seeing a convergence of tech entrepreneurs and traditional collectors that fosters new dialogues,” he said. “We’ve also noticed that crypto collectors are less interested in singular ownership and more fascinated by shared authorship, networked systems, and ideas of co-creation. This dovetails with how artists are thinking about AI, decentralized platforms, and collaborative processes.”
This is reflected in auction sales, too. For example, Sotheby’s announced that it would accept cryptocurrency for A.I. God. Portrait of Alan Turing (2024), the first artwork to be painted by a humanoid robot. It sold for $1.08 million, far outstripping its estimate. Sales such as this are unlikely to be the last of their kind as crypto’s role in the art market becomes increasingly hard to ignore.
“Since Bitcoin’s inception only 16 years ago, the combined market capitalization of cryptocurrency globally has grown from $0 to more than $3 trillion; that value surpasses the GDP of the U.K. or France and is more than the market capitalization of any company in the world except NVIDIA and Apple,” said Levine. “Seen this way, it is hard to imagine how such value accumulation will not impact the art world.”
Arun Kakar
Arun Kakar is Artsy’s Art Market Editor.
Crypto
Bitcoin Stalls Near $73K as US-Iran Talks Collapse, Markets Hold Their Breath
Key Takeaways:
- Bitcoin holds $71,587 on April 12, 2026, at 7:30 a.m. Eastern time; range-bound action signals weak trend strength.
- Tradingview data shows RSI 56, ADX 16; neutral momentum limits breakout conviction.
- Bitcoin faces resistance near $73.5K; a break above $74K or below $70K sets the next move.
Bitcoin Chart Outlook
On the daily timeframe, bitcoin continues to trade within a well-defined range between approximately $65,000 and $76,000, with current price action pressing uncomfortably close to the upper boundary. Sitting near $72,000 to $73,000, the price is flirting with resistance rather than building a convincing breakout structure.
Momentum has slowed notably following the rebound from $65,000, suggesting that upward energy is losing steam. This positioning leaves bitcoin in a less-than-ideal spot, where upside is capped nearby while meaningful support sits several thousand dollars lower.
The four-hour chart introduces a more cautious tone, highlighted by a sharp rejection near $73,720 that produced a strong bearish candle. Since then, price structure has shifted into a pattern of lower highs, indicating short-term weakness creeping into the market. Resistance is now clearly defined between $72,500 and $73,500, while support rests between $70,500 and $71,000. A move below $70,000 would likely intensify downside momentum. For now, bitcoin appears to be navigating a corrective phase rather than building sustained directional strength.
On the one-hour timeframe, bitcoin has settled into a narrow consolidation around $71,500 following a sharp drop. The subsequent bounce has been notably weak, reflecting a lack of aggressive participation from buyers. Intraday resistance is seen between $72,000 and $72,500, while support lies near $71,300 and extends down to $70,500. The range-bound behavior suggests equilibrium, but not the kind that inspires confidence—more of a stalemate than a setup for decisive movement.
Oscillators reinforce the broader theme of indecision, with the overall summary remaining neutral. The relative strength index ( RSI) at 56 reflects balanced conditions, while the Stochastic at 86 points toward overextended territory.
The commodity channel index (CCI) at 94 remains elevated yet neutral, and the average directional index (ADX) at 16 confirms weak trend strength. The Awesome oscillator at 2,351 stays neutral, while momentum (10) at 4,679 signals waning strength. The moving average convergence divergence ( MACD) (12, 26) level at 708 provides a rare constructive signal, though it stands somewhat alone in an otherwise mixed field.
The moving averages (MAs) summary also lands in neutral territory, but the details reveal a clear split. Short-term indicators are supportive, with the exponential moving average (EMA) (10) at $70,922 and simple moving average (SMA) (10) at $70,456 below the current price, alongside the EMA (20) at $70,102 and SMA (20) at $69,186. The EMA (30) at $69,953 and SMA (30) at $69,864, as well as the EMA (50) at $70,751 and SMA (50) at $69,170, reinforce this constructive tone. However, the longer-term picture is less forgiving, with the EMA (100) at $75,326 and SMA (100) at $75,466 above the price, followed by the EMA (200) at $83,405 and SMA (200) at $87,873. In plain terms, bitcoin has a short-term footing, but it is still staring up at a rather imposing ceiling.
Bull Verdict:
If bitcoin manages to reclaim and hold above the $73,500 to $74,000 region, it would invalidate the recent sequence of lower highs and reestablish upward momentum on the lower timeframes. Coupled with supportive short-term moving averages and a constructive moving average convergence divergence ( MACD), such a move could shift sentiment quickly and open the door toward retesting the upper boundary of the broader range near $76,000. In that scenario, this market stops hesitating and starts acting like it remembers its reputation.
Bear Verdict:
Failure to hold the $70,500 to $71,000 support zone, particularly a decisive break below $70,000, would confirm increasing downside pressure across multiple timeframes. With weak momentum, a high stochastic %K, and longer-term moving averages acting as overhead resistance, the path of least resistance could tilt lower toward the $69,000 to $70,000 region. At that point, bitcoin would no longer be indecisive—it would simply be giving up ground, one support level at a time.
Crypto
Is Cryptocurrency a Legitimate Part of a Long-Term Investment Portfolio?
Key Points
-
Most experts consider crypto to be a legitimate asset class.
-
That doesn’t mean every asset in the class is equally legitimate or worthwhile.
Just a few years ago, many financial advisors wouldn’t touch crypto. That era is now over; according to a 2026 survey conducted by Bitwise, an asset manager, 32% of the financial advisors they polled allocated crypto in client accounts in 2025, and 99% planned to maintain or increase their exposure.
But crypto isn’t a monolith, and not all crypto assets are equally legitimate as part of a long-term portfolio, so let’s take a look at what’s legitimate and sort it from what’s sketchy.
Will AI create the world’s first trillionaire? Our team just released a report on the one little-known company, called an “Indispensable Monopoly” providing the critical technology Nvidia and Intel both need. Continue »
An investor stands in an office while looking out a window and holding a clipboard with some documents.
Image source: Getty Images.
The professionals have spoken
Among professional investment advisors who allocate on behalf of their clients, 83% keep their exposure under 5%, with an allocation of 2% as a starting point. The takeaway is that the relatively new legitimacy of crypto as an asset class is not an excuse to let it become your entire portfolio.
But which assets are the most widely accepted?
The answer to that question is Bitcoin, (CRYPTO: BTC) as it has the deepest liquidity in crypto and the biggest regulated vehicles for investment, like spot Bitcoin exchange-traded funds (ETFs). Ethereum and Solana are also generally endorsed as legitimate investments, with each backed by spot ETFs and growing institutional interest.
But below those three, professional interest drops off fast, and for most investors, yours should too.
Where to draw the line
Bitcoin, Ethereum, and Solana share traits that earn them a place in long-term investment portfolios. Smaller altcoins, ecosystem tokens, and meme coins generally do not have those traits, and you probably shouldn’t be investing in them heavily, if at all.
Volatility alone doesn’t disqualify an asset or make it illegitimate. The disqualifier for those smaller tokens is most typically their lack of a strong investment thesis.
So if you’re considering an investment in crypto, keep it fairly small, anchor it in Bitcoin, and avoid speculative tokens.
Should you buy stock in Bitcoin right now?
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Alex Carchidi has positions in Bitcoin, Ethereum, and Solana. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Bitcoin, Ethereum, and Solana. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.
Crypto
OKX Invests in Vietnam Exchange CAEX Ahead of Crypto Pilot
Key Takeaways
- OKX invested in CAEX to meet Vietnam’s $380 million pilot requirement, advancing regulation.
- CAEX, backed by OKX and Hashkey, signals a shift to compliant platforms across Southeast Asia.
- OKX expands 2026 regulatory push after Malta license, as it aims to lead efforts in shaping Vietnam’s crypto market.
Vietnam’s CAEX Gains OKX Support for Regulated Crypto Push
OKX has taken a strategic stake in Vietnam’s CAEX exchange, positioning itself to support the country’s push toward regulated cryptocurrency trading.
The investment, made alongside local partners including VPBank Securities and LynkiD, as well as Hashkey Capital, will help CAEX meet the financial threshold required to participate in a government-backed pilot program. Vietnam has set a minimum capital requirement of $380 million (VND 10 trillion) for firms seeking to operate within the trial framework.
The partnership signals a growing alignment between global crypto firms and local operators as Southeast Asia moves toward clearer regulatory oversight.
Star Xu, Founder and CEO of OKX, wrote in a blog post, saying,
We expect most Southeast Asian markets to establish clear regulatory frameworks and licensing pathways for digital asset companies. This region is already one of the most important sources of global crypto liquidity. We believe the future of crypto will be built on regulated, local platforms that users can trust, and CAEX represents that future in Vietnam.”
CAEX, formally known as Vietnam Prosperity Crypto Asset Exchange Joint Stock Company, is expected to combine domestic market expertise with international infrastructure and compliance standards. OKX said it will contribute not only capital but also technical support across areas such as risk management, security systems, and liquidity provision.
The initiative comes as Vietnam explores a controlled rollout of digital asset trading under government supervision. While details of the pilot program remain limited, authorities have indicated a preference for well-capitalized and compliant platforms.
OKX’s involvement reflects its broader strategy of working within regulatory frameworks rather than operating outside them. The company has spent recent years securing licenses and approvals in multiple jurisdictions, including registration in the United States and regulated operations across Europe.
Earlier this year, OKX obtained a Payment Institution license in Malta, allowing it to expand crypto payment services across the European Union under established regulatory regimes. The exchange has also pursued approvals in markets such as Singapore and Dubai, where it has built localized platforms tailored to regulatory requirements.
Executives at OKX have framed compliance as central to long-term growth. The firm has increased investment in anti-money laundering controls, customer verification processes, and internal risk systems, aiming to meet institutional standards as the industry matures.
That experience is now being applied to emerging markets. In Vietnam, the focus is on building a platform that can operate within a formal regulatory structure while scaling user adoption.
The investment also reflects a broader shift in the crypto industry. As governments introduce clearer rules, trading activity is increasingly moving toward licensed venues. Market participants are placing greater emphasis on transparency, asset protection, and regulatory oversight.
Southeast Asia remains a key region in that transition, accounting for a significant share of global crypto liquidity. For Vietnam, the CAEX initiative represents an early step in that process. For OKX and its partners, it offers an opportunity to shape the development of a regulated market from the ground up.
If successful, the model could serve as a blueprint for other countries in the region, where demand for digital assets continues to grow alongside calls for stronger investor protections.
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