Non-fungible tokens (NFTs) are rallying, and to those fixated on rising prices, the market may seem to be booming. Overall activity, however, tells a different story.
Leading the rally are Bored Ape Yacht Club and Pudgy Penguins. Their floor prices, the lowest possible acquisition cost, have climbed double digits in recent weeks, and their tokens have posted double-digit gains. Still, the comeback is unfolding with far fewer buyers.
Pudgy Penguins’ floor has climbed above 5 ETH, up more than 20% on the week, with 201 sales and nearly 1,000 ETH in volume over the past seven days supporting the move. BAYC’s floor is up 81% over the past 30 days, rebounding sharply from depressed levels.
Floor prices are an important metric to follow. In an NFT collection, the floor price is the lowest-priced item currently for sale. If the lowest-priced Pudgy Penguin on the market is listed at 5.38 ether (ETH), that becomes the collection’s floor. A rising floor generally means buyers are willing to pay up to get in. A falling floor usually means holders are rushing for the exit.
But beneath the headline price gains, the market’s structure tells a different story, as broad participation is shrinking.
According to CryptoSlam, global NFT sales fell to roughly $175 million in April from $304 million in February, while total transactions and active users both dropped by nearly half.
Average sale prices, meanwhile, more than doubled month over month, climbing from $30.60 in March to $67.38 in April. Those two data points describe the same phenomenon from opposite ends. A smaller pool of capital is concentrating in high-value trades in blue-chip collections, rather than a broad-based demand returning to the market.
Even within blue chips, demand quality varies. Pudgy Penguins is seeing relatively high transaction counts alongside rising prices, a sign of sustained activity. By contrast, collections like CryptoPunks have recorded similar weekly volume with far fewer trades, implying that a small number of large transactions are having an outsized impact on price.
Broader market signals remain mixed. Wash trading still accounts for roughly 50% of total volume, according to CryptoSlam, and aggregate trading profits remain negative, indicating that many participants are still underwater despite the recent rebound.
Taken together, the data points to a market that is stabilizing but not yet expanding. Prices are rising, but participation is falling, and activity is concentrated in a handful of collections.
At the same time, ETH is up roughly 18% over the past month, and BTC is up nearly as much. Some portion of what looks like an NFT-specific rally is simply beta to a crypto-wide risk-on move, with blue-chip collections priced in ETH catching the updraft alongside everything else.

