A shopper carries a bag outside a Walmart store in San Leandro, California, on Thursday, May 13, 2021.
David Paul Morris | Bloomberg | Getty Images
Walmartappears to be venturing into the metaverse with plans to create its own cryptocurrency and collection of non-fungible tokens, or NFTs.
The big-box retailer filed several new trademarks late last month that indicate its intent to make and sell virtual goods, including electronics, home decorations, toys, sporting goods and personal care products. In a separate filing, the company said it would offer users a virtual currency, as well as NFTs.
According to the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, Walmart filed the applications on Dec. 30.
Source: Gerben Intellectual Property
In total, seven separate applications have been submitted.
In a statement, Walmart said it is âcontinuously exploring how emerging technologies may shape future shopping experiences.â It declined to comment on the specific trademark filings.
âWe are testing new ideas all the time,â the company said. âSome ideas become products or services that make it to customers. And some we test, iterate, and learn from.â
Source: Gerben Intellectual Property
âTheyâre super intense,â saidJosh Gerben, a trademark attorney. âThereâs a lot of language in these, which shows that thereâs a lot of planning going on behind the scenes about how theyâre going to address cryptocurrency, how theyâre going to address the metaverse and the virtual world that appears to be coming or thatâs already here.â
Gerben said that ever sinceFacebookannounced it was changing its company name to Meta, signaling its ambitions beyond social media, businesses have been rushing to figure out how they will fit into a virtual world.
Source: Gerben Intellectual Property
Nikefiled a slew of trademark applicationsin early November that previewed its plans to sell virtual branded sneakers and apparel. Later that month, it said it was teaming up withRobloxtocreate an online world called Nikeland. In December, itbought the virtual sneaker company RTFKT(pronounced âartifactâ) for an undisclosed amount.
âAll of a sudden, everyone is like, âThis is becoming super real and we need to make sure our IP is protected in the space,ââ said Gerben.
Gaphas also started sellingNFTsof its iconic logo sweatshirts. The apparel maker said its NFTs will be priced in tiers ranging from roughly $8.30 to $415, and come with a physical hoodie.
Meantime, bothUnder Armourâs and Adidasâ NFT debuts sold out last month. Theyâre now fetching sky-high prices on the NFT marketplace OpenSea.
Gerben said that apparel retailersUrban Outfitters,Ralph LaurenandAbercrombie & Fitchhave also filed trademarks in recent weeks detailing their intent to open some sort of virtual store.
A report from CB Insightsoutlined some of the reasons why retailers and brands might want to make such ventures, which can potentially offer new revenue streams.
Launching NFTs allows for businesses to tokenize physical products and services to help reduce online transaction costs, it said. And for luxury brands like Gucci and Louis Vuitton, NFTs can serve as a form of authentication for tangible and more expensive goods, CB Insights noted.
Gerben said that as more consumers familiarize themselves with the metaverse and items stored on the blockchain, more retailers will want to create their own ecosystem around it.
According to Frank Chaparro, director at crypto information services firmThe Block, many retailers are still reeling from being late to e-commerce, so they donât want to miss out on any opportunities in the metaverse.
âI think itâs a win-win for any company in retail,â Chaparro said. âAnd even if it just turns out to be a fad thereâs not a lot of reputation damage in just trying something weird out like giving some customers an NFT in a sweepstake, for instance.â
https://www.cnbc.com/2022/01/16/walmart-is-quietly-preparing-to-enter-the-metaverse.html