NFT Theft: “Bored Ape Stolen: Valuing an Illiquid Asset for a Claim”

My Bored Ape Yacht Club (BAYC) NFT was stolen via a phishing link. I bought it for $200k. At the time of theft, the “Floor Price” was $50k. But mine had “Gold Fur” (a rare trait), making it worth $150k. The adjuster looked at the floor price and said, “We’ll give you $50k.”

Key Takeaways

  • Valuation is Chaos: Insurers default to the “Floor Price” (the cheapest item in the collection) because rare traits are subjective and illiquid.
  • Agreed Value is Essential: Just like fine art, you must “Schedule” the NFT with a specific “Agreed Value” before the theft. If you rely on market value after the loss, you will lose.
  • “Fungible” vs “Non-Fungible”: Claims adjusters struggle with the concept. They treat it like a share of stock (fungible). You must prove it is a unique work of art.
  • The “Right to Click” Exclusion: Some policies exclude “intangible rights.” Since an NFT is technically a receipt pointing to a JPEG, they argue you didn’t lose “property,” just a pointer.

The “Why” (The Trap)

The trap is “Market Volatility.”
If your Ape was worth $200k yesterday and $100k today, the insurer will pay the lesser of the two. With NFT liquidity being low, finding a “Comparable Sale” (Comps) for a Gold Fur Ape is difficult. The adjuster will cherry-pick the lowest sale.

The Investigation (I Called Art Insurers)

I asked how they insure NFTs in 2026.

Lloyd’s (Fine Art Specie)

  • Approach: They are starting to treat blue-chip NFTs (Punks, Apes, Squiggles) like Fine Art.
  • Requirement: You need a specialized appraisal from a recognized NFT appraiser (e.g., DeepNFTValue). You pay a premium of 2-5% of the value annually.

Standard Homeowners

  • Approach: “We do not cover electronic data or digital items.”

Comparison Table

Valuation MethodPayout for Rare ApeAvailability
Floor Price (Standard)Low ($50k)Default
Trait-AdjustedMedium ($80k)Hard to Argue
Agreed Value (Scheduled)High ($150k)Must Pre-Agree
Purchase PriceN/A (Depreciation applies)N/A

Step-by-Step Action Plan

  1. Get a “Trait Appraisal”: Use tools like DeepNFTValue or hire a digital art appraiser to document why your specific NFT is worth more than the floor.
    • [IMAGE: Screenshot of DeepNFTValue estimating price based on specific traits]
  2. Schedule the Item: Call a specialist broker (like Coincover or specialized Art brokers). Ask to schedule the NFT as “Digital Fine Art.” Do not leave it under generic coverage.
  3. Freeze the Asset: Report the theft to OpenSea and Blur immediately. They will flag the item with a “Suspicious Activity” mark, making it harder for the thief to sell, potentially aiding recovery.

FAQ

Can I buy the NFT back from the thief?
Insurers usually won’t pay the ransom/buyback price directly, but if you have “Kidnap & Ransom” coverage (rare), it might be negotiable.

Is it tax deductible?
Theft losses were largely removed from the US tax code in 2017, unless it was a business asset or a federally declared disaster. Check with a CPA.

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