Matt Damon's pitch to
The drop in national TV marketing by the industry in the U.S. has coincided with the selloff in bitcoin and other crypto assets, according to the TV-ad measurement company

Damon's commercial for
"Ad sellers shouldn't expect growth in this vertical the remainder of the year due to the crash in crypto valuations and emerging allegations of fraud among companies in the crypto market," said Eric Haggstrom, director of business intelligence at
Spending by major crypto firms, including the trading platforms Crypto.com,
Coinbase, the only U.S. publicly traded crypto exchange, said in a shareholder
A spokesperson for Crypto.com declined to comment. FTX and Coinbase didn't respond to requests for comment.
Crypto companies have charted a similar path to other upstart industries, such as online travel sites, by pouring money into marketing to build brand awareness, according to Dave Morgan, founder and chief executive of
"That's not the cheap way to get in," Morgan said. "But it's a way to make a splash and let everybody know that you're there."
But a lot has changed in the past six months. Bitcoin, the largest and oldest token, has lost about half its value since March. A raft of high-profile bankruptcies has weighed on confidence and trading volumes. Regulators around the world have also
The decline in TV ad spending by crypto companies has also coincided with a lighter sports schedule since the end of the NFL season, America's most-watched sport, in February. The overall investment-services category cut national TV outlays to $17.4 million in July, down 87% from February, according to ISpot. Over the same stretch, crypto firms slashed spending almost to nothing.
The biggest beneficiaries of crypto's TV ad spending have been ESPN, ABC, Fox and NBC, according to ISpot. But even if the industry's marketing doesn't bounce back, the networks should be fine, according to Morgan. Demand for advertising during live sports will fill the hole, he said.
If crypto does return to TV in the fall, the messaging might change, according to
"It'll be interesting to see how brands adjust," Daddi said.