NFT company Candy Digital valued at $1.5B following $100M Series A

The digital collectibles company was co-founded by entrepreneurs Michael Rubin, Mike Novogratz and Gary Vaynerchuk. Nonfungible token (NFT) company Candy Digital has secured $100 million in funding to expand its product footprint and creative capabilities, marking another major milestone for the rapidly growing NFT market.  The funding will be used to expand Candy Digital’s NFT […]

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The digital collectibles company was co-founded by entrepreneurs Michael Rubin, Mike Novogratz and Gary Vaynerchuk.

Nonfungible token (NFT) company Candy Digital has secured $100 million in funding to expand its product footprint and creative capabilities, marking another major milestone for the rapidly growing NFT market. 

The funding will be used to expand Candy Digital’s NFT product offerings across the global sports marketplace, including creating new fan experiences, the company announced Thursday. Candy’s existing partnerships include Major League Baseball, Major League Baseball Players Association, Race Team Alliance and several college athletes.

The Series A round was co-led by private equity firms Insight Partners and Softbank Vision Fund 2, with additional participation from Connect Ventures, Will Ventures, Gaingels, Com2Us and Athletes Syndicate.

Professional sports are increasingly turning to NFTs as a way to boost fan engagement, especially in the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic, which resulted in an estimated revenue loss of $18 billion across major leagues worldwide. According to credit card giant Visa, the loss of revenue as a result of lockdowns has placed more pressure on professional sports to “diversify revenue and focus on technology” as a way to re-capture the attention of fans.

The NFT buying frenzy intensified in the third quarter, with the sale of digital collectibles hitting a record $10.7 billion, according to market tracker DappRadar. That represents an eightfold increase from the previous quarter. OpenSea remains the single largest market for NFT sales, but that could soon change as more established brands enter the space.

As Cointelegraph recently reported, cryptocurrency exchange Coinbase is planning to launch its own NFT marketplace. The waitlist for “Coinbase NFT” attracted 1.1 million signups in 48 hours. Meanwhile, Binance, the world’s largest crypto exchange by volume, launched its own NFT platform in June.

Related: NFT gaming proposition in question as regulators and traditional gaming pullback

Social media platform TikTok has also announced its first foray into the NFT market with a new collection inspired by its most famous trend-setters. With roughly 1 billion users around the world, TikTok could provide more mainstream exposure to digital collectibles should the first NFT drops prove successful.

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