Key Highlights
- Anchorage Digital unveiled a banking platform designed for AI agents to manage and transfer funds autonomously.
- Each agent receives verifiable digital credentials with configurable spending controls and permission parameters.
- Nathan McCauley, CEO of Anchorage, projected the agent-driven finance market could reach $1 trillion in value.
- Google Cloud joined as a strategic partner to deliver the coordination intelligence layer for agent interactions.
- Solana Foundation released an API payment gateway enabling AI agents to transact using stablecoins.
Anchorage Digital has unveiled a banking platform designed specifically for AI agents to manage and transfer funds autonomously. The infrastructure bridges traditional financial systems with crypto rails through compliant banking architecture. CEO Nathan McCauley projected the agent finance sector could evolve into a $1 trillion market during his Tuesday presentation.
AI-Focused Banking Platform Debuts at Anchorage Digital
The new platform provides AI agents with direct connectivity to banking infrastructure and payment networks. Anchorage Digital issues each agent a verifiable digital credential to authenticate transactions securely. The system incorporates configurable spending thresholds, permission frameworks, and policy enforcement mechanisms.
Built-in audit capabilities support compliance monitoring and regulatory documentation requirements. McCauley noted that financial institutions currently explore automation for treasury operations, payment processing, and supply chain procurement. Traditional infrastructure lacks the architecture to accommodate non-human participants effectively.
“Institutions are experimenting with automation across treasury, payments, and procurement,” McCauley stated. “They’re doing it on top of systems that were never designed for non-human actors,” he explained. The new platform fills this architectural void by facilitating monitored and transparent agent transactions.
Google Cloud joined Anchorage Digital as a technology partner for the platform launch. The cloud infrastructure provider delivers the intelligence framework enabling agents to identify, communicate, and collaborate autonomously. This integration facilitates seamless operations spanning both traditional currency and cryptocurrency ecosystems.
During his address at the Consensus 2026 event in Miami, McCauley shared his vision for the industry. “This is, in my view, set to be a trillion-dollar industry,” he stated. He explained that agents will conduct peer-to-peer payments, merchant transactions, and revenue collection.
Ripple Labs researcher Oliver Segovia analyzed the collaboration in an X platform post. He observed the partnership signals strengthening connections between cloud technology providers and regulated financial institutions. “Hyperscalers typically viewed banks as tier 1 enterprise customers,” Segovia noted.
He predicted future partnerships will intensify as technology companies expand into regulated infrastructure services. Banks will simultaneously develop intelligence capabilities layered onto foundational systems. His analysis followed the official announcement of the Anchorage Digital and Google Cloud partnership.
Solana Foundation and Oobit Advance Autonomous Agent Payments
Concurrently, the Solana Foundation launched an API gateway service in collaboration with Google Cloud. The platform enables AI agents to purchase API access using Solana-based stablecoins. Digital service providers receive direct on-chain compensation through this infrastructure.
The Solana Foundation explained that the gateway facilitates connections between agents and API vendors through stablecoin settlement mechanisms. The architecture streamlines automated purchasing of data feeds and software services. The announcement coincided with multiple blockchain industry gatherings in Miami.
On April 30, Oobit, a wallet platform backed by Tether, launched a Visa-enabled virtual card tailored for AI agents. The solution permits autonomous online purchases using USDT tokens. Merchants receive standard payment processing while agents execute transactions independently.
Oobit explained that card balances draw directly from Tether’s USDT reserves. This approach allows continuous agent spending without requiring fiat currency conversion cycles. The virtual card functions within Visa’s established merchant acceptance infrastructure.





