Spain’s World Cup opener against Cabo Verde puts fan token SNFT back in the spotlight

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Spain is hours away from its 2026 FIFA World Cup debut against Cabo Verde, and there’s a parallel game being played on crypto exchanges. The team’s official fan token, SNFT, is drawing speculative interest as the tournament begins, trading at roughly $0.01 with a market cap hovering around $180K to $190K.

The Kraken-FIFA partnership changes the game

On June 9, 2026, FIFA announced Kraken as its Official Crypto Exchange Supporter for the World Cup. It’s the first time a World Cup has entered into a formal partnership with a crypto exchange. The partnership is aimed at boosting fan engagement and accelerating crypto adoption across North America and Europe, the two regions hosting the tournament.

SNFT and the sell-the-news problem

Spain’s fan token SNFT trades on platforms linked to Bitcichain and the Chiliz ecosystem. For holders, it offers governance rights, allowing them to vote on certain team experiences and engagement opportunities.

After Spain won Euro 2024, SNFT dropped approximately 20% within 24 hours. Spain enters Group H alongside Uruguay, Saudi Arabia, and Cabo Verde. The token’s micro-cap status makes it especially susceptible to these swings. With a market cap under $200K, even modest buying or selling pressure can move the price dramatically.

Cabo Verde’s crypto blind spot

Cabo Verde is making its first-ever World Cup appearance as an island nation of roughly 600,000 people. Cabo Verde arrives without any official fan token or blockchain affiliation, meaning its supporters have no official on-chain way to participate in the growing intersection of sports and crypto.

Chiliz, the blockchain company behind much of the fan token ecosystem, has announced plans to expand to chains like Solana and Base in 2026. That expansion could lower the barrier for smaller football federations to launch their own tokens.

What this means for crypto investors

Fan tokens tend to rally in the lead-up to major matches and during tournament runs, then correct sharply after peak moments. The 20% SNFT drop following Spain’s Euro 2024 win suggests that buying during group-stage matches and selling before knockout rounds could be one approach, though past performance is never a guarantee.

SNFT’s tiny market cap means exit opportunities can dry up fast during a selloff. Anyone trading these instruments should treat them as high-risk, event-driven plays, not investments, and size their positions accordingly.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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