Half-Billion Dollar ‘Fake’ NFT Sale Becomes Real PR Stunt

The sale of a non-fungible token (NFT) from the famous CryptoPunk collection raised eyebrows in the community on Thursday for its massive USD 530m price tag – a price that would have made it the most expensive piece of art ever to be sold – if it was real.
The transaction first became known to the public around midnight UTC time, when a Twitter bot that tracks sales of CryptoPunks published this tweet, showing that an NFT from the collection was sold for over half a billion US dollars:
Punk 9998 bought for 124,457.07 ETH ($532,414,877.01 USD) by 0x9b5a5c from 0x8e3983. https://t.co/dmT6jDRC1W #cryptopunks #ethereum pic.twitter.com/UQlmm1oqkj
— CryptoPunks Bot (@cryptopunksbot) October 28, 2021
The tweet briefly got the rumor mill going, with community members taking to Reddit’s r/CryptoCurrency subreddit to discuss what just happened.
“First the dog coins pump, now kids are selling jpegs for millions. We really are living in the future. What a weird place it is,” one Reddit user wrote, while another user suggested it was “That person who just made $5 billion off Shib” who decided to spend some on a CryptoPunk.
For comparison, the most expensive piece of art ever to be sold was Leonardo da Vinci’s Salvator Mundi, which in 2017 was auctioned off for USD 450m.
As it all turned out, however, the sale of the NFT was not entirely natural. Suspicions about the massive amount paid first started to emerge on the same Reddit forums, where some users pointed out that the buyer and seller might be the same person or entity, while even suggesting that it could be part of an elaborate money-laundering scheme.
Explaining what actually happened in more detail, however, the Twitter user mariano.eth went through the process step by step:
you can see it here:
— mariano.eth | 🦇🔊 (@nanexcool) October 29, 2021
0x9b5a flash loans 124,457 ETH from many sources
0x9b5a pays 124,457 ETH to the punk contract
punk contract sends it to 0x8e39
0x8e39 sends back to 0x9b5a
0x9b5a repays loan
genius 😄https://t.co/nlo24twyEx pic.twitter.com/suPOMHRV7O
Later on, the whole incident was also commented on by Larva Labs, the creators of the CryptoPunks NFTs, explaining on Twitter that the transaction was neither a bug nor an exploit. Instead, it was someone who simply bought the NFT from themselves with the help of a “flash loan.”
PSA: This transaction (and a number of others) are not a bug or an exploit, they are being done with “Flash Loans” (https://t.co/Q5bDL1QkWP). In a nutshell, someone bought this punk from themself with borrowed money and repaid the loan in the same transaction. 1/2 https://t.co/EgS7aiga3j
— CryptoPunks (@cryptopunksnfts) October 29, 2021
And although the reasons for why someone would go through the trouble of creating a flash loan only to buy an NFT from themselves are not entirely clear, the whole incident turned into a PR stunt.
Asked what the purpose of the flash loan-backed sale might be, mariano.eth, the same Twitter user that explained the process, said:
“Because it’s fun I suppose, and now we’re all talking about it.”
He added:
“And it shows as the largest punk sale ever.”
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Learn more:
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