Currency

Digital Art and Crypto merge for a $69 million sale at Christie’s

 

Until October, the most Mike Winkelmann — the digital artist known as Beeple — had ever sold a print for was $100.

Today, an NFT of his work sold for $69 million at Christie’s. The sale positions him “among the top three most valuable living artists,” according to the auction house.

The record-smashing NFT sale comes after months of increasingly valuable auctions. In October, Winkelmann sold his first series of NFTs, with a pair going for $66,666.66 each. In December, he sold a series of works for $3.5 million total. And last month, one of the NFTs that originally sold for $66,666.66 was resold for $6.6 million.

NFTs, or non-fungible tokens, are unique files that live on a blockchain and are able to verify ownership of a work of digital art. Buyers typically get limited rights to display the digital artwork they represent, but in many ways, they’re just buying bragging rights and an asset they may be able to resell later. The technology has absolutely exploded over the past few weeks — and Winkelmann, more than anyone else, has been at the forefront of its rapid rise.

“He showed us this collage, and that was my eureka moment when I knew this was going to be extremely important,” Noah Davis, a specialist in post-war and contemporary art at Christie’s, told The Verge. “It was just so monumental and so indicative of what NFTs can do.”

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Warren Buffett Just Joined the $100 Billion Club, Right Behind Mark Zuckerberg

 

There are billionaires, and there are “centibillionaires,” or individuals who are worth $100 billion or more. For a long time, the “centibillionaire” club was exclusively comprised of just three men: Jeff BezosBill Gates and French fashion mogul Bernard Arnault. The elite of the elite, men with incomprehensible wealth.

Last year, amid a global pandemic that seemed to only enrichen billionaires,  Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk became the fourth member of the club thanks to Tesla’s wild stock gain. And now, two other titans of being rich have also recently achieved the centibillionaire status: Berkshire Hathaway chairman Warren Buffett and Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg.

According to Bloomberg’s Billionaires Index, Buffett’s net worth officially surpassed $100 billion on Thursday for the first time. In 2021 so far, the 90-year-old investor has added $13 billion to his fortune as shares of his investment conglomerate Berkshire Hathaway soared, making him sixth richest person on Earth.

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There is no return to the “old normal.”

 

Signs Are Everywhere: Businesses Have Changed Permanently as a Result of the Pandemic

There is no return to the “old normal.” Employment adjusts too. But it will take years to sort out the issues these sudden massive shifts leave behind.

One of the biggest permanent changes coming out of the Pandemic is that businesses have invested in technologies that have long been available, but that hadn’t been deployed because there was no visible need to deploy them, and because businesses were stuck in a rut, and change is hard and costly – and the rules of inertia had taken over.

But now the Pandemic has forced businesses to change. There is no going back to the old normal. And these technologies impact employment in both directions.

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Reserve bank governor Philip Lowe says there is no prospect of a rapid bounce-back in wages growth.

The governor of Australia’s central bank is continuing to emphasise that the record low interest rates fuelling a surge in property prices will be part of the landscape for several years, because there is no prospect of a rapid bounce-back in wages growth.

Philip Lowe used a speech to a summit convened by the Australian Financial Review on Wednesday to signal that the official cash rate will remain at historic lows until “at least 2024” because there is no prospect of wages growth hitting more than 3% before that time.

“The point I want to emphasise is that for inflation to be sustainably within the 2-3% target range, wages growth needs to be materially higher than it is currently,” the reserve bank governor said.

“The evidence strongly suggests that this will not occur quickly and that it will require a tight labour market to be sustained for some time. Predicting how long it will take is inherently difficult, so there is room for different views.

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What You Need To Know About Bitcoin NOW

 

Bloomberg Wealth: There comes a point in nearly every financial conversation these days when someone drops the “B” word.

Bitcoin, that is.

Maybe it’s pandemic boredom. Maybe it’s the fact that every billionaire out there wants us to know whether they hate it or love it. In any case, the cryptocurrency has been on — hmm, let’s say an… interesting… ride — over the past few weeks. So I thought I’d write you a primer on the latest. That way you’ll be ready with some (new) talking points the next time one of your friends brings up Bitcoin.

What to say about its price: Bitcoin is up, generally. It was flirting with roughly $55,000 when this email hit your inbox. And it has risen about 600% in the past year. But there’s been some turbulence of late. The price blasted past $58,000 in February, then plummeted late in the month after Elon Musk hinted that prices might be excessive. Here’s a nice quote to recite to your friends if you want to say something forward-looking:

“It wouldn’t shock to see the price make an assault on the February high of $58,350.” That’s what Chris Weston, head of research at Pepperstone Group Ltd., recently wrote in a note.

And if you want to tell people how to buy it, I wrote about that here.

How to explain its recent rise: Remember these two points:

  1. The U.S. stimulus may partly be to blame. Now that $1,400 checks are slated to start hitting millions of Americans’ bank accounts, there is growing talk that there will be more flows into financial markets, which could boost Bitcoin.
  2. But so is growing mainstream acceptance in the corporate world. China’s Meitu Inc., which makes an app that will make you look prettier on the internet, said Sunday that it had bought 379.1 Bitcoins for $17.9 million. Meanwhile Goldman Sachs Group Inc. has said it’s seeing serious demand from institutions as it tries restarting its cryptocurrency trading desk.

A guide to name dropping: Billionaires are just like us! They love weighing in on Bitcoin. You can bring up one (or more!) of the below:

Michael Novogratz: Thinks Bitcoin will probably hit $100,000 before the end of the year

Mark Cuban: His Mavericks team will begin accepting Dogecoin, a “meme” cryptocurrency that started out as a joke

Elon Musk: Recently Tweeted that Bitcoin prices “seem high.”

Bill Gates: Says that unless you’re the world’s richest person, you shouldn’t be buying Bitcoin

Dan Loeb: Has some deep thoughts on the sorts of people who are open to crypto.

How to sound intellectual and maybe even artsy/avant-garde: One of the kookier cryptocurrency trends of late has been the explosion of NFTs (non fungible tokens). People are spending millions. Lindsay Lohan (yes, of “Mean Girls” fame) is involved. NFTs are complicated and I’m not going to try to explain them here, but if you want to start a debate asking “what is art, even?” click here