Bitpanda Launches Vision Chain to Connect EU Banks with Tokenized Assets
Bitpanda unveils Vision Chain, a blockchain network for European banks and fintechs to issue and settle tokenized assets under MiCA and MiFID II, using euro-denominated stablecoins.
By Laura Mitchell | Edited by Julia Sakovich
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3 mins readBitpanda launches Vision Chain to integrate tokenized assets into Europe’s regulated financial system. Photo: Unsplash
Vienna-based crypto broker Bitpanda is entering the growing European market for regulated tokenized securities with the launch of its new blockchain network, Vision Chain. The platform is designed to allow banks and fintech firms to issue, settle, and trade tokenized assets in compliance with EU regulations such as the Markets in Crypto Assets (MiCA) and Markets in Financial Instruments Directive II (MiFID II).
The initiative reflects a broader industry trend where financial firms seek to integrate blockchain infrastructure with traditional capital markets. By providing always-on trading capabilities, Vision Chain aims to streamline issuance, settlement, and recordkeeping for tokenized equities, funds, and other digital assets while reducing reliance on fragmented legacy systems.
Compliant Euro-Denominated Stablecoins and Optimism Infrastructure
To mitigate volatility often associated with cryptocurrency payments, Vision Chain uses regulated euro-denominated stablecoins for transaction fees. The network also leverages Optimism’s Ethereum-based layer-2 infrastructure to ensure fast, scalable settlement while maintaining compatibility with existing decentralized finance (DeFi) tools.
Bitpanda emphasized that this design enables institutions to adopt blockchain technology without compromising regulatory standards. “With Vision Chain, we are building a public blockchain designed around Europe’s regulatory standards, combining the openness of public networks with the reliability institutions require,” said Lukas Enzersdorfer-Konrad, CEO of Bitpanda.
Positioning in the Tokenization Race
Bitpanda’s launch places the firm in direct competition with other financial players exploring blockchain-based solutions. Robinhood has been testing its Robinhood Chain for tokenized stock trading, while Wall Street giants like Nasdaq and the New York Stock Exchange are developing their own blockchain infrastructures to merge crypto rails with traditional compliance frameworks.
The Vision Chain strategy demonstrates Bitpanda’s goal to bridge traditional finance and digital asset services. By offering EU banks and fintechs a compliant infrastructure, the network enables institutions to provide blockchain-native asset services to clients, including issuance, trading, and custody solutions.
Market Potential and Strategic Implications
Industry research suggests tokenized assets could grow at a compound annual rate of 53%, reaching $18.9 trillion globally by 2033 across various asset classes, according to a joint report by Boston Consulting Group and Ripple. For European financial institutions, Vision Chain could provide a competitive advantage in offering faster, more efficient trading services, and expand access to tokenized markets previously dominated by legacy infrastructures.
Enzersdorfer-Konrad highlighted that European financial institutions have long been poised for this technological shift, but lacked the necessary infrastructure. Vision Chain aims to fill this gap, offering a regulated, scalable, and interoperable blockchain solution that can coexist with the EU’s stringent financial frameworks while enabling the growth of tokenized asset markets.
Laura Mitchell covers emerging Web3 sectors including NFTs, blockchain gaming, and digital ownership platforms. Her reporting focuses on how decentralized technologies are reshaping creative industries, online communities, and digital economies. She frequently analyzes adoption trends across NFT marketplaces, gaming ecosystems, and metaverse platforms. Based in Barcelona, Laura follows the cultural and technological evolution of blockchain-based digital assets.
Amazon Web Services (AWS) has launched Bedrock AgentCore payments, a native infrastructure layer designed to enable AI agents to autonomously transact, pay for APIs, and manage procurement.
By David Walker | Edited by Julia Sakovich
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AWS, Coinbase, and Stripe introduce AgentCore payments. Photo: Pexels
The digital economy has officially entered its agentic phase. On May 7, Amazon Web Services (AWS) announced the preview of Amazon Bedrock AgentCore payments, a native set of features designed to transform AI agents from passive assistants into active economic participants. Built in collaboration with Coinbase and Stripe, the platform allows autonomous agents to discover, evaluate, and pay for resources, such as APIs, web content, and other agents, within a single execution loop.
Birth of the Transacting Agent
For years, the hurdle for agentic commerce was the sheer engineering overhead. Developers previously had to wire up bespoke billing relationships, manage secure credentials, and navigate complex compliance frameworks just to let an agent perform a single paid task. A misconfiguration didn’t just mean a broken chat bubble; it meant a financial leak.
AgentCore payments solves this by treating financial transactions as a native infrastructure layer. Developers from organizations like Warner Bros. Discovery and Thomson Reuters are already using the platform to move beyond simple reasoning into acting. By integrating directly with the identity systems and gateways developers already use, AWS ensures that spending is governed by the same strict controls as any other agent action.
Micropayments and the x402 Protocol
The first use case entering preview focuses on micropayments, transactions typically valued at fractions of a cent. This is powered largely by the x402 protocol, an open HTTP-native standard developed with Coinbase.
When an agent hits a paywalled resource, it receives an HTTP 402 “Payment Required” response. AgentCore then automatically authenticates with a configured wallet, executes a stablecoin payment, and delivers the content back to the agent without interrupting its reasoning process. To help agents find these services, AWS is making the Coinbase x402 Bazaar MCP server available, essentially a Yellow Pages for machine-to-machine commerce.
To ensure security, AWS has partnered with the heavyweights of digital finance. Developers can choose between a Coinbase CDP wallet or a Stripe Privy wallet. Users can fund these wallets via stablecoins or fiat, but the agent never has “open-ended” access to the treasury.
Beyond the API: The Future of Agent Commerce
While the preview focuses on data and API access, the roadmap points toward full-scale commercial transactions. AWS envisions a near future where agents book flights, reserve hotels, and manage enterprise procurement autonomously.
As Brian Foster, Head of Infrastructure at Coinbase, noted, “There will soon be more AI agents transacting than humans.” With AgentCore, AWS is ensuring that when those billions of agents wake up, they’ll have the credit cards, and the guardrails, to get the job done.
JPMorgan: Bitcoin Eclipses Gold as Primary Debasement Trade Following Iran Conflict
JPMorgan analysts report a structural shift in safe-haven demand, as investors increasingly favor Bitcoin over gold to hedge against currency devaluation and geopolitical risk.
By Julia Sakovich
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The divergence in ETF flows suggests that Bitcoin is successfully challenging gold’s multi-millennial status as the ultimate store of value. Photo: Pexels
In a significant update to the global safe haven narrative, JPMorgan analysts led by Managing Director Nikolaos Panigirtzoglou reported on Thursday that Bitcoin is increasingly outperforming gold as the preferred “debasement trade.” This shift comes in the wake of the March 2026 Iran conflict, which acted as a catalyst for a historic rotation of capital from precious metals into digital assets.
Great Rotation: ETF Flows Diverge
The most visible evidence of this transition is found in the divergence of exchange-traded fund (ETF) flows. According to JPMorgan, Bitcoin ETFs have recorded net inflows for three consecutive months as of May 2026. In contrast, gold ETFs have struggled to recover from the massive capital flight that began when the conflict erupted in March.
This trend suggests that both retail and institutional investors are viewing Bitcoin as a more effective shield against the weakening of fiat currencies, a practice known as the “debasement trade.” While gold has traditionally been the default hedge during periods of geopolitical tension or high inflation, the current cycle shows a marked preference for the portability and fixed supply of Bitcoin.
Institutional Exposure Hits New Highs
JPMorgan emphasized that the demand for Bitcoin is no longer driven solely by retail FOMO. The bank’s positioning proxies, which track CME Bitcoin futures and offshore perpetual futures, have recently reached new all-time highs. This indicates that institutional players are aggressively increasing their exposure to the asset, treating it as a legitimate macro-hedging tool.
Furthermore, momentum signals for Bitcoin have rebounded sharply since the start of the Iran conflict. While Bitcoin initially mirrored risk assets by dipping during the first days of the crisis, it stabilized far faster than gold. Data from the early conflict period shows Bitcoin gained roughly 11%, while gold fell approximately 5%, confounding traditional market expectations.
Strategy Factor and Indirect Buying
The report also highlighted the outsized role of Michael Saylor’s Strategy. Strategy remains the largest corporate holder of Bitcoin globally and has re-accelerated its accumulation pace in 2026. JPMorgan analysts estimate that if the company continues its current trajectory, its Bitcoin purchases could reach $30 billion this year alone.
This indirect buying provides a constant floor for the market, as the firm’s ownership is split nearly equally between retail and institutional investors. As Bitcoin trades near the $80,120 mark, the digital gold thesis appears to be gaining institutional permanence. While gold remains a significant part of the global financial stack at roughly $4,727 per ounce, its failure to capture the recent debasement trade suggests a fundamental shift in how the world defines a safe asset in the 21st century.
Block Inc Shares Jump 8% on Q1 Earnings Surprise Despite $309M Bitcoin-Driven Loss
Block Inc (SQ) shares surged in after-hours trading following a massive earnings beat, as investors favored Jack Dorsey’s AI-driven efficiency gains over a Bitcoin-led net loss.
By Andrew Collins | Edited by Julia Sakovich
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Jack Dorsey’s pivot toward an "AI-first" operational structure appears to be winning over Wall Street, despite volatile Bitcoin accounting. Photo: Pexels
Block Inc (SQ) proved on Thursday that sometimes a “beat and raise” is enough to silence the bears, even when the bottom line is written in red ink. Shares of Jack Dorsey’s fintech powerhouse climbed 7.9% to $75.70 in after-hours trading following a Q1 2026 report that delivered a significant earnings surprise, overshadowing the company’s first quarterly net loss in three years.
AI Efficiency Restructuring Pays Off
The primary driver behind the investor optimism was a stellar performance in adjusted profitability. Block reported quarterly earnings of 85 cents per share, comfortably clearing the Zacks consensus estimate of 68 cents.
This outperformance comes on the heels of a brutal restructuring initiated in late February. Dorsey cut roughly 4,000 jobs, about 40% of the company’s workforce, as part of a strategic pivot to replace manual operations with AI-driven efficiency. While operational expenses rose 57.2% year-on-year to $3.08 billion due to restructuring costs, the underlying gross profit surged 27% to reach $2.9 billion.
Navigating the Bitcoin Remeasurement Loss
Despite the operational strength, Block was forced to report a net loss of $309 million for the quarter. The culprit wasn’t a failure in the business model, but rather the volatility of its corporate treasury. Block held 8,883 Bitcoin as of March 31, and a 23.8% drop in the asset’s price during the quarter triggered a $172.8 million remeasurement loss.
Bitcoin revenue via Cash App also faced headwinds, falling to $1.8 billion from $2.33 billion a year prior. Block attributed this to shifting “trading dynamics” and a deliberate strategic decision to reduce fees on certain Cash App transactions. This fee reduction is part of Dorsey’s long-term play to transition Bitcoin from a speculative asset into a functional peer-to-peer electronic cash system.
Scaling Bitcoin for 800,000 Merchants
While the accounting losses made headlines, Block’s integration of Bitcoin into the real-world economy continued to scale. The company revealed that over 800,000 US merchants have now enabled Bitcoin transactions.
To bolster this ecosystem, Block recently launched Bitkey, a touchscreen hardware wallet, and introduced a 5% Bitcoin cashback reward for Square merchants. By raising customer withdrawal limits fivefold to $25,000 per week and introducing automated payment-to-BTC conversions, Block is aggressively lowering the friction for everyday Bitcoin usage. As Avory & Co. CIO Sean Emory noted, the company “beat and raised” its guidance, suggesting that the “AI-first” Block is just starting to find its stride.
Aptos Commits $50M to AI Agent Infrastructure as Agentic Economy Booms
The Aptos Foundation and Aptos Labs have pledged $50 million to bridge the gap between blockchain and AI, focusing on sub-second finality for autonomous agents.
By Matthew Clarke | Edited by Julia Sakovich
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Aptos is positioning its Move-based architecture as the high-speed rail for a world where billions of AI agents transact autonomously. Photo: Pexels
The Aptos Foundation and Aptos Labs announced a massive $50 million commitment on May 8, 2026, aimed at cementing the network as the primary ledger for the burgeoning AI agent economy. The funding is earmarked for infrastructure, research, and the scaling of specialized products designed to handle the high-frequency, autonomous transactions of non-human entities.
Building for the Speed of Machines
Aptos is doubling down on its sub-second finality, a technical requirement that the Foundation believes is non-negotiable for AI agents. Unlike humans, who might tolerate a few seconds of lag, autonomous agents operate at frequencies that demand near-instant execution. “Autonomous agents are already transacting onchain at frequencies no human can match,” the Foundation stated, noting that these systems require 24/7 reliability without the need for human intervention.
Key to this push are two products shipped over the last year: Decibel and Shelby. Decibel, an AI-powered onchain order book and perpetuals exchange, launched in February 2026 to facilitate high-speed agentic trading. Meanwhile, Shelby serves as a decentralized storage protocol optimized for the massive data workloads inherent in AI model processing.
Trillion-Dollar Agentic Market
The investment comes as major industry voices predict a shift from human-centric to agent-centric commerce. Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong recently forecasted that AI agents will soon outnumber human transactors, while the World Economic Forum estimates the AI agent market could balloon to $236 billion by 2034.
This shift is already being reflected in corporate integrations. Just this week, Amazon Web Services (AWS) integrated the x402 payments protocol into its Bedrock AgentCore, allowing AI agents to handle USDC payments autonomously. Similarly, crypto startup Oobit launched a Visa-backed virtual card specifically for agents to make online purchases in USDT. Aptos aims to be the backend layer for these activities, using the APT token as a utility for staking, feature access, and a deflationary burn mechanism.
Privacy and the Institutional “Full Stack”
Aptos isn’t just focusing on speed; it’s tackling the privacy hurdles that often scare away enterprise users. Following the April launch of Confidential APT, the network is working on encrypted mempools and confidential perpetuals trading. According to Aptos Labs engineer Sherry Xiao, these features allow businesses to hide sensitive data, like employee salaries or proprietary trading strategies, while maintaining onchain transparency for compliance.
Zcash Surges 70% in One Week as Privacy Becomes Surveillance Hedge
Zcash (ZEC) is leading a privacy coin resurgence, gaining 70% in seven days as investors flee financial surveillance and AI-driven data tracking.
By David Walker | Edited by Julia Sakovich
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Zcash uses zk-SNARKs to provide transaction privacy, a feature increasingly sought after in the 2026 digital economy. Photo: Pexels
Privacy-focused cryptocurrency Zcash (ZEC) has staged a dramatic comeback, spiking more than 70% over the past week as the market pivots toward assets that offer a surveillance hedge. In a year where financial transparency has reached unprecedented levels, ZEC is emerging as a preferred tool for those looking to decouple their digital footprint from AI-driven tracking and quantum-computing threats.
The rally began on May 1, with ZEC trading at roughly $346. By Wednesday, it touched a seven-day peak of $593.86 before settling near $570 on Friday, May 8, 2026.
Privacy as a Hedge Against AI and Surveillance
According to Pav Hundal, lead market analyst at Swyftx, the surge is not merely a technical bounce but a response to deep-seated structural shifts. “Traders are paying closer attention to privacy projects amid broader concerns about the impact of AI, quantum computing, and financial surveillance on crypto,” Hundal noted. As AI models become more adept at deanonymizing public blockchain transactions, the cryptographic shielding of Zcash is being revalued by both retail and institutional players.
Market intelligence platform Santiment supports this view, highlighting a spike in social media mentions and retail FOMO (Fear Of Missing Out). The crowd is increasingly viewing privacy coins as a necessary defense against tighter exchange regulations and expanding AI data-scraping across global financial platforms. The lack of government trust is acting as a potent catalyst for this “flight to anonymity.”
The Institutional Seal of Approval
The rally received a significant boost on Wednesday after Tushar Jain, co-founder of Multicoin Capital, revealed the firm had been building a major position in ZEC since February. Jain argued that Zcash is an attractive investment because institutions are increasingly seeking private assets to protect themselves from “political trends to seize private wealth.”
This institutional interest coincides with a broader push for privacy features across the ecosystem. In April, Aptos Labs launched Confidential APT to conceal balances, and Polygon recently introduced private stablecoin payments. Even legacy privacy projects are evolving; the Dash Evolution chain recently integrated the Zcash Orchard privacy pool, signaling a cross-chain consolidation of privacy standards.
Sustainable Trend or Narrative Rotation?
Despite the euphoria, some analysts urge caution. While Zcash nearly crossed $700 in late 2025, it failed to maintain those levels during previous pullbacks. Hundal warns that this move has the hallmarks of a narrative rotation rather than a permanent fundamental repricing. “We need more time to see how durable investor interest is,” he cautioned, noting that the low market caps of many privacy coins make them susceptible to high-upside, but volatile, momentum plays.
As the “mild altcoin rally” of May 2026 continues, Zcash stands as the standard-bearer for a sector that many had written off as a relic of the past. In an age of total visibility, the right to remain invisible is becoming one of the most expensive assets in the world.