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Supply chain thwacking: VeChain’s $100M sponsorship deal with UFC

The multi-year deal will see VeChain’s brand incorporated across multiple UFC marketing assets and reach an estimated 900 million households who watch the events worldwide.

Blockchain logistics firm the VeChain Foundation has signed a multi-year marketing partnership with the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) worth nearly $100 million, becoming the UFC’s first-ever Layer 1 blockchain partner.

The UFC is the largest promoter and event organizer for Mixed Martial Arts (MMA) and VeChain’s marketing assets and brand will be integrated across the UFC in live events, in-arena promotion, social media and other areas.

The deal is reportedly worth almost $100 million over a minimum five-year partnership according to an anonymous source quoted by Sports Business Journal. The UFC’s Senior Vice President of Global Partnerships Paul Asencio said the UFC’s sponsorship revenues are up 30% from an already record-breaking 2021 as a result of the deal.

The partnership kicks off immediately and VeChain’s assets will start appearing this Saturday June 11 during a UFC event held in Singapore.

VeChain is a business focused layer 1 ecosystem with an emphasis on supply chain tracking. The partnership sees a big shift from Vechain’s frugal first quarter. A financial report released in May shows the VeChain Foundation only spent around $4 million in Q1 with less than $660,000 spent on marketing but it did amass a huge $1.2 billion “war chest.”

VeChain said the partnership is “one of the deepest integrations within premier UFC assets of any sponsor in UFC history,” with the UFC estimating VeChain’s brand will reach 900 million television households in 175 countries.

As part of the deal, VeChain will own UFC's official fighter rankings titleship now called the “UFC Rankings Powered by VeChain” along with a branded presence inside the fighting ring at all events.

VeChain will further be promoted in-venue on prominent digital displays and both companies will create content for the UFC’s social media and other digital platforms which the UFC estimates will reach 200 million people.

An annual “Brand Ambassador fund” will also offer paid opportunities to UFC athletes participating in marketing activities for VeChain.

Related: Blockchain, crypto set to take sports industry beyond NFT collectibles

The UFC has long partnered blockchain and crypto companies, one of the UFC’s largest partnerships is its $175 million deal with Crypto.com which saw the crypto exchange become the UFC’s “Cryptocurrency Platform Partner” with fighters receiving fan bonuses in Bitcoin (BTC) through the partnership.

Crypto.com also released the first authorized UFC non-fungible token (NFT) collection in November 2021 and the UFC has continued to release more licensed NFTs with NFT developer Dapper Labs.

In March 2021 the crypto-only casino and sports betting platform Stake become UFC’s “First Official Betting Partner” for its Asia and Latin America markets.

1inch Launches Fusion+, A Cross-Chain Swapping Solution for Decentralized Transactions

VeChain Foundation reports $1.2B crypto treasury… but spent just $4M in Q1

The supply chain tracking project has a comfortable cushion in its Foundation treasury, but expenditures were very low through the first quarter of 2022.

The VeChain Foundation has released its financial report for Q1 2022 showing that the project amassed an impressive $1.2 billion war chest but only spent about $4.1 million in the quarter.

VeChain (VET) is a blockchain project designed to enhance supply chain management..

The Foundation’s May 10 financial report for Q1 2022 outlines its balance sheet as of March 31 and how it spent funds through the quarter. Although the treasury opened the year with $1.37 billion in assets between stablecoins, Bitcoin (BTC), Ether (ETH), and VET, it ended with $1.2 billion. The report states that most of the losses were incurred “due to crypto market fluctuations and other VeChain Foundation outgoings.”

The BTC price has fallen 34% since, ETH has fallen 36%, and VET has fallen 54% since Dec. 31, 2021 when the project marked the beginning of its Q1 tracking through March 31.

Of the $4.1 million outlaid in the first quarter the Foundation spent $1.8 million on ecosystem business development, which was the highest expense. That includes partnerships, custodians, wallet providers, brokers, community events, and ecosystem project cooperation.

VeChain Foundation treasury from Q1 2022

Next was $1.1 million on ecosystem operations such as team costs, office space, utilities, consulting fees, and external services.

While the report states that the treasury will be used to “ensure the long term development of the VeChainThor blockchain,” it is unclear whether the foundation will open the faucet on its treasury for more expenditures on investments.

VeChain Foundation Expenditures through Q1 2022

Also absent from the report is how much money the Foundation earned through the first quarter. The VeChainThor blockchain collects fees for transactions that are distributed between validators and other stakeholders in the ecosystem. However, data on the total amount of fees accrued is not clear from the financial report.

VeChain’s carbon emissions data management system and VeCarbon’s partnership with cement industry players were announced in the financial report.

Related: VeChain can be used as payment in 2M stores — and VET bridged to BNB chain

During Q1, VeChain launched its own stablecoin through the Stably stablecoin issuer known as VeUSD. It also formed a partnership with Amazon Web Service (AWS) to build the VeCarbon emission management software as a service (SaaS) system for China.

VET has a market cap of $2.6 billion and is down about 0.6% over the past 24 hours, trading at $0.04 according to Coingecko data.

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