- Aoki sold $30K in SHIB and ETH in a quiet move
- Still holds 7 Bored Apes now worth far below purchase price
- NFT losses highlight collapse from 2021 peak valuations
Steve Aoki didn’t make a big announcement, didn’t warn anyone, didn’t even hint at it really. He just moved about $30,000 worth of SHIB and ETH to Gemini, which in crypto terms usually means one thing, you’re cashing out, or at least stepping back. For someone who was once deeply involved in the NFT and Web3 wave, the silence around it feels almost louder than any statement.

It’s not a massive amount compared to what he’s been involved in before, but that’s kind of the point. This wasn’t a headline move, it was a quiet shift. And those are often more telling, especially when they come from someone who used to be very public about their crypto stance.
The Bored Ape Position Tells a Bigger Story
The more revealing part isn’t the $30K sale, it’s what Aoki didn’t sell. He still holds seven Bored Ape NFTs, assets that once symbolized status, access, and, at one point, serious money. Back in 2021, those apes cost him over $800,000 combined.
Today, they’re worth roughly $13,800 each, putting the total closer to $96,000. That’s not just a pullback, it’s a near-total reset in value. And it reflects what happened across much of the NFT market, hype came fast, and when it left, it didn’t leave much behind.
From Hype to Silence in NFTs
Aoki was one of many high-profile names pushing NFTs during the peak cycle. He launched projects, spoke at events, and leaned fully into the Web3 narrative. At the time, it made sense, momentum was strong, prices were climbing, and the space felt unstoppable.

Now, the tone is very different. There’s no major exit announcement, no public reflection, just a gradual step back. And that shift, from loud promotion to quiet disengagement, mirrors what’s happened across the broader NFT space.
Aoki Isn’t an Outlier
What makes this story interesting isn’t that it happened, it’s how common it is. Many retail investors followed celebrity figures into NFTs at peak prices, expecting long-term value that never materialized. The difference is, most of those investors don’t have a fallback outside of crypto.
Aoki does. Which makes the losses easier to absorb, at least financially. But the numbers still tell the same story, even high-profile buyers didn’t escape the cycle.
Crypto Moves Quietly, Even at the Top
The $30,000 sale might not mean Aoki is completely out of crypto. It could just be a reallocation, or a pause. But combined with the NFT losses, it paints a picture of someone who’s no longer as actively involved as before.
And in crypto, those quiet exits tend to say more than loud ones. No announcement, no drama, just a slow shift away from the spotlight.
NFT Market Reality Has Fully Set In
What Aoki’s portfolio shows is something the market has already felt for a while. NFT valuations from 2021 didn’t hold, and in many cases, they collapsed. The difference now is that fewer people are talking about it.
The hype phase is over. What’s left is a smaller, quieter market trying to figure out what comes next. And stories like this, even when subtle, are part of that transition.











