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NFT price floors surge, but trading volume still in the dumps

The price floor (the lowest possible acquisition cost) of many NFTs has pushed higher recently, but sales volume has not picked up.

In the last seven days, ethereum-based collection CryptoPunks has increased more than 19% to a floor price of nearly 31 ethereum, worth over $70,000, while Bored Ape Yacht Club NFTs have jumped 26% to 9.5 ethereum, or $21,692, according to analytics platform NFTPriceFloor.

Pudgy Penguins has increased 20%, Chromie Squiggle has rallied 29%, and anime-inspired Azuki has gained over 44% in the period.

Zooming out, however, the ongoing rally has not coincided with growing trading volume. Weekly sales volume since last April has been on a gradual decline, per data aggregator CryptoSlam, suggesting narrow enthusiasm underpinning the price upswing.

While these once popular NFTs have seen their price floors rise recently, they are far from the heights they reached when they starred in the 2021 crypto cycle. For example, DJ and producer Steve Aoki purchased seven Bored Ape Yacht Club NFTs for more than $800,000 five years ago, but those NFTs at the collection’s price floor are worth $152,000 today.

Elsewhere, NFTs representing graded “Pokémon” cards are gaining traction. Collector Crypt, a solana-based venue that enables users to trade tokenized “Pokémon” cards, has earned between $2 million and $3 million each month in 2026. Its native token, CARDS, has jumped 94% in the last seven days, data from CoinGecko shows.

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Justin Sun sues Trump-backed World Liberty over frozen tokens

Crypto billionaire Justin Sun, owner of the world’s most expensive banana, was named an adviser to World Liberty Financial the day after investing $30 million in the project. (He’d later boost that with $45 million more.) Sun has long been a supporter of President Trump, and has not once, but twice topped a competition to amass the most $TRUMP coins. But it seems even for Sun, the gold has turned brass.

Sun announced on social media that he’s filed a lawsuit in a California federal court against the crypto project backed by Trump. 

The lawsuit alleges World Liberty engaged in an “illegal scheme to seize property” and “positioned itself as the new boogeyman” by stripping Sun of his governance rights, threatening to burn his WLFI tokens, and freezing his stash, which at times were worth $1 billion, according to the complaint dated on Tuesday. 

“I have tried in good faith to resolve this situation with the World Liberty project team without resorting to litigation,” Sun wrote in a lengthy X post on Tuesday night. “But the project team has refused my requests to unfreeze my tokens and restore my rights as a token holder. They have left me with no choice but to turn to the courts.”

The complaint also alleged that World Liberty appears to be in financial trouble, citing concerns over whether the project can repay an on-chain loan that was collateralized by using, at the time, $5 billion worth of WLFI. The token reached an all-time low less than two weeks ago.

Despite the escalation with World Liberty, Sun said the lawsuit does not change his feelings about Trump or his administration. “I have always been — and remain — an ardent supporter of President Trump and his Administration’s efforts to make America crypto friendly,” he said. 

The lawsuit alleges World Liberty engaged in an “illegal scheme to seize property” and “positioned itself as the new boogeyman” by stripping Sun of his governance rights, threatening to burn his WLFI tokens, and freezing his stash, which at times were worth $1 billion, according to the complaint dated on Tuesday. 

“I have tried in good faith to resolve this situation with the World Liberty project team without resorting to litigation,” Sun wrote in a lengthy X post on Tuesday night. “But the project team has refused my requests to unfreeze my tokens and restore my rights as a token holder. They have left me with no choice but to turn to the courts.”

The complaint also alleged that World Liberty appears to be in financial trouble, citing concerns over whether the project can repay an on-chain loan that was collateralized by using, at the time, $5 billion worth of WLFI. The token reached an all-time low less than two weeks ago.

Despite the escalation with World Liberty, Sun said the lawsuit does not change his feelings about Trump or his administration. “I have always been — and remain — an ardent supporter of President Trump and his Administration’s efforts to make America crypto friendly,” he said. 

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