Share this article

FTX Strikes Sponsorship Deal With NBA’s Golden State Warriors

The deal is a multiyear agreement worth about $10 million, according to a report citing people familiar with the matter.

Updated May 11, 2023, 4:04 p.m. Published Dec 14, 2021, 4:35 p.m.
(Shutterstock)

FTX.US, the American arm of the FTX cryptocurrency exchange, signed a global sponsorship deal with the National Basketball Association’s Golden State Warriors.

  • FTX.US will become the San Francisco-based team’s official cryptocurrency platform and marketplace for NFTs, or non-fungible tokens. The franchise will start using the platform to sell NFTs in early 2022.
  • FTX branding will also appear on the basketball pole pads and press table for the Santa Cruz Warriors, the team’s G League affiliate. The G League is the NBA’s official minor league basketball organization.
  • Terms of the deal were not made public. According to a CNBC report citing unidentified people familiar with the matter, it is worth about $10 million.
  • A spokesperson for FTX declined to comment on the deal’s value.
  • “In our conversations with FTX, we quickly realized our joint desire to innovate around cryptocurrency integration and adoption, including the role NFTs play in global fan engagement,” said Warriors President and Chief Operating Officer Brandon Schneider.
  • Crypto companies are piling into sports as a way of getting broader brand recognition. Last month, Crypto.com paid a reported $700 million to rename the Los Angeles Staples Center. In March, FTX secured naming rights to the Miami Heat Arena for $135 million, and in August it signed a $17.5 million, 10-year agreement with Cal Athletics for the naming rights to the field at California Memorial Stadium.
  • To mark the agreement, FTX.US and the Warriors will give three bitcoin to local organizations that address educational equity.
  • In April, the Golden State Warriors began auctioning a series of commemorative NFTs. The collection included various editions of the team’s six NBA Championship rings and 10 commemorative ticket stubs. The sale finished with its 1-of-1 6x World Championship Ring selling for 285.111 ETH at $871,591.27.
jwp-player-placeholder
STORY CONTINUES BELOW
Don't miss another story.Subscribe to the Crypto Daybook Americas Newsletter today. See all newsletters

Read more: FTX Looks to Expand Globally Through Local Partners, Bankman-Fried Says

UPDATE (Dec. 14, 19:53 UTC): Adds no comment from FTX spokesperson.

More For You

More For You

Real estate billionaire Barry Sternlicht is ready to tokenize assets, but says U.S. regulation blocks it

(Craig Barritt/Getty Images)

The $125 billion real estate firm wants to offer blockchain-based tokens to clients but is stalled by regulation.

What to know:

  • Barry Sternlicht, whose Starwood Capital manages more than $125 billion in assets, says the firm is ready to tokenize real-world assets but is stymied by U.S. regulatory barriers.
  • Sternlicht argues that tokenizing assets like real estate on blockchains could open new ways to raise capital and give investors access to illiquid markets.
  • Praising the technology as "the future," he likens tokenization’s development stage to an earlier stage than that of artificial intelligence and says the world needs to catch up.