In what is being hailed as a pivotal moment for the “machine economy” of 2026, crypto bank Anchorage Digital has officially launched its agentic banking service. The new product is designed to solve a fundamental friction point in the digital age: giving Artificial Intelligence agents the compliant infrastructure they need to hold, move, and manage capital without human intervention.
Bank for Non-Human Actors
For years, AI agents have been capable of complex reasoning, but they remained “bankless,” relying on human-owned credit cards or manual approvals to settle invoices. Anchorage CEO and co-founder Nathan McCauley argues that the current financial system was never designed for non-human actors. Speaking at the Consensus 2026 conference in Miami, McCauley highlighted that while institutions are rushing to automate treasury and procurement, they are doing so on legacy “human-centric” systems.
The new agentic banking infrastructure changes the paradigm by providing AI agents with verifiable onchain IDs, programmable spending limits, omni-rail access, and real-time auditability.
Trillion-Dollar Agentic Shift
The launch is backed by a heavyweight partnership with Google Cloud, which will provide the intelligence layer for the service. While Anchorage handles the vault and the ledger, Google’s infrastructure allows these agents to “discover, negotiate, and coordinate” with one another. McCauley believes this is the start of a massive structural shift, predicting that agentic commerce will become a trillion-dollar industry within the decade.
“We are going to have agents paying each other, agents paying merchants, and agents getting paid,” McCauley told the Miami crowd. This vision aligns with recent projections from Stripe, which noted that blockchains must scale to handle up to 1 billion transactions per second to support the sheer volume of high-frequency micro-payments generated by autonomous software.
Crowded Field in the Machine Economy
Anchorage isn’t the only firm racing to bank the bots. The announcement follows a flurry of activity in the “agentic finance” sector/
For example, Solana launched a gateway with Google Cloud, allowing agents to pay for API services directly in stablecoins.
In late April, Oobit released a Visa-supported virtual card that lets AI agents spend USDT directly from Tether’s treasury.
As Oliver Segovia, a researcher at Ripple, noted on X, this trend marks a “deeper alliance” between tech hyperscalers and regulated banks. As labs get deeper into infrastructure and banks build intelligence on top of core systems, the boundary between a bank account and a software license is officially beginning to blur.