Uncategorized
Crypto Daybook Americas: Biggest Tokens Show Restraint for Now, but ‘Damage Has Already Been Done’

By Francisco Rodrigues (All times ET unless indicated otherwise)
Cryptocurrencies fell slightly in the past 24 hours, with the broad market CoinDesk 20 (CD20) index dropping 1.4%. Bitcoin (BTC) is little changed around $95,000. These figures are well within recently volatility ranges and come on the back of a strong monthly performance — BTC is on track to rise 15% in April, the most since November.
The market has been grappling with growing pessimism surrounding the potential impact of President Donald Trump’s reciprocal tariffs on nearly every country and optimism that the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates earlier than expected.
Stock prices have rallied over the past week on expectations Trump would lower the tariffs and the continuation of interest-rate cuts, according to Spanish bank Bankinter.
“Yet the perspective could turn for the worse from today, applying the logic of the data, because — regardless of tariffs and rate cuts — part of the damage has already been done, chiefly to confidence, which is the market’s foundation,” the bank wrote in a note.
Indeed, various major companies, including P&G, UPS, PepsiCo, American Airlines and GM, have lowered or pulled their earnings forecasts. Bankinter pointed out that French first-quarter GDP data released today showed a quarter-on-quarter increase that was entirely inventory-driven, while consumption, investment, and exports are weakening.
That bodes poorly for the U.S. figure, set to be released at 8:30 a.m. Some market observers, including Bankinter, suggest it could contract sharply. Bitcoin’s rise so far this year, contrasting with the stock market’s worst 100 days of a presidential administration since 1974, could be further evidence the cryptocurrency is starting to be used as a hedge.
As mentioned earlier in the week, Greg Cipolaro, the global head of research at NYDIG, wrote in a note that BTC has been acting “more like the non-sovereign issued store of value that it is.”
Bitcoin has decoupled from U.S. equities after the trade war between the U.S. and China escalated and has been seeing bets on it rise. This month, spot bitcoin ETFs posted monthly total net inflows of little over $3 billion according to SoSoValue data, further pointing to a flight to the cryptocurrency space amid the uncertainty. Stay alert!
What to Watch
- Crypto:
- April 30, 9:30 a.m.: ProShares will debut three ETFs that will provide leveraged and inverse exposure to XRP: the ProShares Ultra XRP ETF, the ProShares Short XRP ETF and the ProShares UltraShort XRP ETF.
- April 30, 10:03 a.m.: Gnosis Chain (GNO), an Ethereum sister chain, will activate the Pectra hard fork on its mainnet at slot 21,405,696, epoch 1,337,856.
- May 1: Coinbase Asset Management will introduce the Coinbase Bitcoin Yield Fund (CBYF), which is aimed at non-U.S. investors.
- May 1: Hippo Protocol starts up its own layer-1 blockchain mainnet built on Cosmos SDK and completes a migration from Ethereum’s ERC-20 HPO token to its native HP token, enabling staking and governance.
- May 1, 9 a.m.: Constellation Network (DAG) activates the Tessellation v3 upgrade on its mainnet, introducing delegated staking, node collateral, token locking and new transaction types to enhance network security, scalability and functionality.
- May 1, 11 a.m.: THORChain activates its v3.5 mainnet upgrade, adding the TCY token to convert $200 million in debt into equity. TCY holders earn 10% of network revenue, while native RUNE remains the protocol’s security and governance token. TCY activates May 5.
- May 5, 3 a.m.: IOTA’s Rebased network upgrade starts. Rebased moves IOTA to a new network, boosting capacity to as many as 50,000 transactions per second, offering staking rewards of 10%-15% a year and adding support for MoveVM smart contracts.
- May 5, 10 a.m.: The Crescendo network upgrade goes live on the Kaspa (KAS) mainnet. This upgrade boosts the network’s performance by increasing the block production rate to 10 blocks per second from 1 block per second.
- Macro
- April 30, 8 a.m.: Brazil’s Institute of Geography and Statistics (IBGE) releases March unemployment rate data.
- Unemployment Rate Est. 7% vs. Prev. 6.8%
- April 30, 8 a.m.: Mexico’s National Institute of Statistics and Geography releases (preliminary) Q1 GDP growth data.
- GDP Growth Rate QoQ Prev. -0.6%
- GDP Growth Rate YoY Prev. 0.5%
- April 30, 8:30 a.m.: The U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) releases (advance) Q1 GDP growth data.
- GDP Growth Rate QoQ Est. 0.4% vs. Prev. 2.4%
- April 30, 10 a.m.: The U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) releases March consumer income and expenditure data.
- Core PCE Price Index MoM Est. 0.1% vs. Prev. 0.4%
- Core PCE Price Index YoY Est. 2.6% vs. Prev. 2.8%
- PCE Price Index MoM Est. 0% vs. Prev. 0.3%
- PCE Price Index YoY Est. 2.2% vs. Prev. 2.5%
- Personal Income MoM Est. 0.4% vs. Prev. 0.8%
- Personal Spending MoM Est. 0.6% vs. Prev. 0.4%
- May 1, 8:30 a.m.: The U.S. Department of Labor releases unemployment insurance data for the week ended April 26.
- Initial Jobless Claims Est. 224K vs. Prev. 222K
- May 1, 9:30 a.m.: S&P Global releases Canada April purchasing managers’ index (PMI) data.
- Manufacturing PMI Prev. 46.3
- May 1, 10:00 a.m.: Institute for Supply Management (ISM) releases U.S. April economic activity data.
- Manufacturing PMI Est. 48 vs. Prev. 49
- April 30, 8 a.m.: Brazil’s Institute of Geography and Statistics (IBGE) releases March unemployment rate data.
- Earnings (Estimates based on FactSet data)
- April 30: Robinhood Markets (HOOD), post-market, $0.33
- May 1: Block (XYZ), post-market, $0.97
- May 1: Reddit (RDDT), post-market, $0.02
- May 1: Riot Platforms (RIOT), post-market, $-0.23
- May 1: Strategy (MSTR), post-market, $-0.11
- May 8: Coinbase Global (COIN), post-market, $2.08
- May 8: Hut 8 (HUT), pre-market
- May 8: MARA Holdings (MARA), post-market
Token Events
- Governance votes & calls
- Compound DAO is voting on moving 35,200 COMP ($1.5 million) into a multisig safe to test selling covered calls on COMP for USDC, lend that USDC in Compound for extra yield, then use the returns to buy back COMP and repeat — targeting a roughly 15 % annual gain. Voting ends May 2.
- April 30, 12 p.m.: Helium to host a community call meeting.
- May 5, 4 p.m.: Livepeer (LPT) to host a Treasury Talk session on Discord.
- Unlocks
- May 1: Sui (SUI) to unlock 2.28% of its circulating supply worth $261.2 million.
- May 1: ZetaChain (ZETA) to unlock 5.67% of its circulating supply worth $12.31 million.
- May 2: Ethena (ENA) to unlock 0.73% of its circulating supply worth $12.99 million.
- May 7: Kaspa (KAS) to unlock 0.56% of its circulating supply worth $13.08 million.
- May 9: Movement (MOVA) to unlock 2.04% of its circulating supply worth $12.31 million.
- Token Launches
- May 2: Binance to delist Alpaca Finance (ALPACA), PlayDapp (PDA), Viberate (VIB), and Wing Finance (WING).
- May 5: Sonic (S) to be listed on Kraken.
Conferences
CoinDesk’s Consensus is taking place in Toronto on May 14-16. Use code DAYBOOK and save 15% on passes.
- Day 4 of 4: Web Summit Rio 2025
- Day 1 of 2: TOKEN2049 (Dubai)
- May 6-7: Financial Times Digital Assets Summit (London)
- May 11-17: Canada Crypto Week (Toronto)
- May 12-13: Dubai FinTech Summit
- May 12-13: Filecoin (FIL) Developer Summit (Toronto)
- May 12-13: Latest in DeFi Research (TLDR) Conference (New York)
- May 12-14: ACI’s 9th Annual Legal, Regulatory, and Compliance Forum on Fintech & Emerging Payment Systems (New York)
- May 13: Blockchain Futurist Conference (Toronto)
- May 13: ETHWomen (Toronto)
Token Talk
By Shaurya Malwa
- Solana-based Housecoin (HOUSE) zoomed to nearly $100 million market cap early Wednesday driven by a 24-hour price bump of 63% that brought its price to just under a cent.
- HOUSE has surged more than 900% in the past three weeks, mainly on niche popularity in crypto circles and mentions from well-followed X accounts.
- The trending memecoin is a satire on the real estate market, where prime locations are priced out for most of the general populace.
- Holding HOUSE is, jokingly, considered by its cult to be holding actual property even though the token is intrinsically valueless and not backed by any real-world assets.
- While its momentum and accessibility offer trading opportunities, its volatility, lack of clear fundamentals, and memecoin risks demand caution.
Derivatives Positioning
- Among large-cap assets on Binance, PEPE and ADA hold negative funding APRs of -14.7% and -11.2%, respectively, according to Velo data. In contrast, TON, XLM, and XMR have seen funding APRs spike to 11%, highlighting a clear divergence in speculative positioning across major tokens.
- In terms of open interest, BSW, DRIFT and PROMPT are among the top gainers, with daily open interest rising by 61%, 58%, and 33%, respectively — signaling idiosyncratic, intraday interest in these assets.
- ALPACA, a BNB Chain asset, recorded over $55 million in short liquidations in the past 24 hours. That’s the largest of any asset, according to CoinGlass data. The surge followed heavy short positioning after Binance’s delisting announcement a week ago, before a 550% price rally triggered widespread liquidations.
Market Movements
- BTC is down 0.19% from 4 p.m. ET Tuesday at $94,915.28 (24hrs: unchanged)
- ETH is down 0.57% at $1,805.20 (24hrs: -1.48%)
- CoinDesk 20 is down 0.51% at 2,751.84 (24hrs: -1.27%)
- Ether CESR Composite Staking Rate is up 19 bps at 2.99%
- BTC funding rate is at 0.0008% (0.8377% annualized) on Binance
- DXY is up 0.19% at 99.43
- Gold is down 1.16% at $3,278.15/oz
- Silver is down 1.64% at $32.36/oz
- Nikkei 225 closed +0.57% at 36,045.38
- Hang Seng closed +0.51% at 22,119.41
- FTSE is up 0.13% at 8,474.22
- Euro Stoxx 50 is up 0.24% at 5,174.41
- DJIA closed on Tuesday +0.75% at 40,527.62
- S&P 500 closed +0.56% at 5,560.83
- Nasdaq closed +0.55% at 17,461.32
- S&P/TSX Composite Index closed +0.31% at 24,874.48
- S&P 40 Latin America closed unchanged at 2,548.27
- U.S. 10-year Treasury rate is down 5 bps at 4.17%
- E-mini S&P 500 futures are down 0.28% at 5,568.25
- E-mini Nasdaq-100 futures are down 0.44% at 19,556.00
- E-mini Dow Jones Industrial Average Index futures are down 0.22% at 40,596.00
Bitcoin Stats
- BTC Dominance: 64.54 (0.16%)
- Ethereum to bitcoin ratio: 0.01902 (-0.31%)
- Hashrate (seven-day moving average): 837 EH/s
- Hashprice (spot): $49.08
- Total Fees: 6.17 BTC / $585,773.63
- CME Futures Open Interest: 134,825 BTC
- BTC priced in gold: 28.9 oz
- BTC vs gold market cap: 8.19%
Technical Analysis
- With bitcoin and most digital assets breaching key high-timeframe liquidity levels, a market pullback now appears likely.
- Solana, along with many altcoins, has broken its weekly market structure with a strong upward move that swept liquidity at $153 before facing rejection at the 100-day exponential moving average (EMA) level.
- Bulls will want the price action to print a higher low with the 100-day EMA on the weekly time frame sitting at $137, aligning with the weekly orderblock of demand.
Crypto Equities
- Strategy (MSTR): closed at on Tuesday $381.45 (+3.3%), down 0.41% at $379.88 in pre-market
- Coinbase Global (COIN): closed at $206.13 (+0.42%)
- Galaxy Digital Holdings (GLXY): closed at $21.09 (-0.57%)
- MARA Holdings (MARA): closed at $14.22 (+1.5%), down 0.28% at $14.18
- Riot Platforms (RIOT): closed at $7.42 (-2.75%), down 0.40% at $7.39
- Core Scientific (CORZ): closed at $8.29 (+0.61%), down 0.48% at $8.25
- CleanSpark (CLSK): closed at $8.44 (-1.52%), down 0.24% at $8.42
- CoinShares Valkyrie Bitcoin Miners ETF (WGMI): closed at $14.19 (-0.98%)
- Semler Scientific (SMLR): closed at $33.97 (-3.96%), up 4.95% at $35.65
- Exodus Movement (EXOD): closed at $40.97 (-2.87%), up 2.49% at $41.99
ETF Flows
Spot BTC ETFs:
- Daily net flow: $172.8 million
- Cumulative net flows: $39.16 billion
- Total BTC holdings ~ 1.15 million
Spot ETH ETFs
- Daily net flow: $18.4 million
- Cumulative net flows: $2.50 billion
- Total ETH holdings ~ 3.44 million
Source: Farside Investors
Overnight Flows
Chart of the Day
- Alpaca Finance (ALPACA) emerged as the top gainer on centralized exchanges with a price that’s surged nearly 2,500% over the past seven days.
- The rally is driven by a significant short squeeze, following heavy short positioning in the wake of Binance’s April 24 delisting announcement.
- As a result, the token surged to a multiyear high of $1.375.
While You Were Sleeping
- Telegram’s TON Takes On Real World Assets With Libre’s $500M Tokenized Bond Fund (CoinDesk): Libre plans to tokenize $500 million in Telegram debt as the Telegram Bond Fund (TBF) on the TON blockchain.
- BlackRock Looking to Tokenize Shares of Its $150B Treasury Trust Fund, SEC Filing Shows (CoinDesk): The new «DLT» shares are expected to be bought and held through BNY, which plans to use blockchain technology to keep a mirror record of ownership for its clients.
- SEC Delays Dogecoin and XRP ETF Decisions (CoinDesk): The SEC delayed decisions on the Bitwise DOGE ETF and the Franklin XRP Fund until June 15 and June 17, respectively.
- Investors Turn to Emerging Market Debt After Trump Tariffs Hit U.S. Treasuries (CNBC): As confidence in Treasuries as a safe haven weakens, Mexico, Brazil and South Africa could see more bond demand, said Carol Lye, citing yield premiums and potential currency appreciation.
- Chinese Investors Pile Into Gold Funds at Record Pace (Financial Times): China’s gold ETF holdings have doubled to 6% of the global total, with $7.4 billion in inflows this month accounting for more than half of global demand.
- Asia Hedge Funds Add Japan, India After Tariff Shock, Says Morgan Stanley (Reuters): Funds increased exposure to Japanese tech, industrials and materials while retreating from Chinese consumer shares, as global investors expect Washington to strike trade deals with Tokyo and New Delhi.
In the Ether
Uncategorized
AI-Powered Court System Is Coming to Crypto With GenLayer

What if there were a crypto protocol that specialized in arbitrating on-chain disputes?
Imagine if, whenever prediction markets like Polymarket settled in a controversial manner, users had a formal way to appeal through a sort of neutral on-chain court system. Or if decentralized autonomous organizations (DAOs) could rely on an efficient, knowledgeable third party to help them make decisions. Or if insurance contracts could automatically execute payouts when specific real-world events occurred.
That’s essentially what Albert Castellana Lluís and his team are building with GenLayer, a crypto project that markets itself as a decision-making system, or trust infrastructure.
“We’re using a blockchain that has multiple AIs coordinate and reach agreement on subjective decisions, as if they were a judge,» Castellana, co-founder and CEO of YeagerAI told CoinDesk in an interview. «We’re basically building a global synthetic jurisdiction that has an embedded court system that doesn’t sleep, that’s super cheap, and that’s super fast.”
The demand for such an arbitration project may spike in the coming years with the development of AI agents — sophisticated programs powered by artificial intelligence that are capable of carrying out complex tasks in an autonomous manner.
When it comes to crypto markets, AI agents can be used in all kinds of ways: for trading memecoins, arbitraging bitcoin on exchanges, monitoring the security of DeFi protocols, or providing market insights through in-depth analysis, to cite only a few use-cases. AI agents will also be able to hire other AI agents in order to complete even more complex assignments.
Such agents may proliferate at an unexpected rate, Castellana said. In his view, most crypto market participants could be managing a handful of them by the end of 2025.
“These agents, they work super fast, they don’t sleep, they don’t go to jail. You don’t know where they are. Are they going to pass anti-money laundering rules? Are they going to have a bank account? Can they even use a Visa card?” Castellana said. “How can we enable fast transactions between them? And how can trust happen in a world like this?”
Thanks to its unique architecture, GenLayer could provide a solution by allowing entities — human or AI — to get a reliable, neutral opinion to weigh in on any decision in record time. “Anywhere where you normally would have a third party made of a bunch of humans… We replace them with a global network that provides a consensus between different AIs, a network that can make decisions in a way that is as correct and as unbiased as possible,” Castellana said.
Synthetic court system
GenLayer doesn’t seek to compete with other blockchains like Bitcoin, Ethereum or Solana — or even DeFi protocols such as Uniswap or Compound. Rather, the idea is for any existing crypto protocol to be able to connect to GenLayer and make use of its infrastructure.
GenLayer’s chain is powered by ZKsync, an Ethereum layer 2 solution. Its network counts 1,000 validators, each one connected to a large language model (LLM) such as OpenAI’s ChatGPT, Google’s Bert or Meta’s Llama.
Let’s say a market on Polymarket settles in a controversial manner. If Polymarket is connected to GenLayer, users of the prediction market have the ability to raise the issue (or, as Castellana put it, to create a “transaction”) with its synthetic court system.
As soon as the transaction comes in, GenLayer picks five validators at random to rule on it. These five validators query an LLM of their choice in order to find information on the topic at hand, and then vote on a solution. That produces a ruling.
But the Polymarket users, in our example, don’t necessarily need to be satisfied with the ruling: they can decide to appeal the decision. In which case, GenLayer picks another set of validators — except this time, their number jumps to 11. Just like before, the validators issue a ruling based on the information they gather from LLMs. That decision can also be appealed, which makes GenLayer pick 23 validators for another ruling, then 47 validators, then 95, and so on and so forth.
The idea is to rely on Condorcetʼs Jury Theorem, which according to GenLayer’s pitch deck states that “when each participant is more likely than not to make a correct decision, the probability of a correct majority outcome increases significantly as the group grows larger.” In other words, GenLayer finds wisdom in the crowd. The more validators are involved, the more likely they are to zero in on an accurate answer.
“What this means is that we can start small and very efficiently, but also we can escalate to a point where something very, very tricky, they can still get right,” Castellana said.
The average transaction takes roughly 100 seconds to process, Castellana said, and the court’s decision becomes final after 30 minutes — a timeframe that can be elongated if multiple appeals occur. But that means the protocol can reach a decision on major issues in a very short period of time, day or night, instead of going through arduous real-world litigation processes which may take months or even years.
Looking at incentives
GenLayer’s mission naturally raises a question: is it possible to game the system? For example, what if all of the validators select the same AI (say, ChatGPT) to solve a given proposal? Wouldn’t that mean that ChatGPT will have essentially issued the ruling?
Every time you query an LLM, you generate a new seed, Castellana said, so you obtain a different answer. On top of that, validators have the freedom of choosing which LLM to use based on the topic at hand. If it’s a relatively easy question, perhaps there’s no need to use an expensive LLM; on the other hand, if the question is particularly complex, the validator may opt for a higher-quality AI model.
Validators may even end up in a situation where they feel like they’ve seen a certain type of question so many times that they can pre-train a small model for a specific purpose. “We think that, over time, there’s just going to be endless new models,” Castellana said.
There’s a strong incentive for validators to be on the winning side of the decision-making process, because they’re financially rewarded for it — while the losing side ends up incurring costs associated with using computation, without collecting any rewards.
In other words, the question is not whether one’s validator is providing a correct answer, but whether it manages to side with the majority.
Since validators have no idea what other validators are voting, the goal is for them to use the necessary resources to provide accurate information with the expectation that other validators will converge on that information as well — because arriving at the same incorrect answer would probably require rigorous coordination.
And if that gambit doesn’t work out, the appeal system is ready to kick in.
“If I know that I’m reusing a good LLM, and I think that other people are using a bad LLMs and that’s why I lost, then I have quite a big incentive to appeal, because I know that with more people, there’s going to be an incentive for them to be using better LLMs as well” since other validators will want to earn the rewards from a successful appeal, Castellana said.
The system makes it hard for validators to collude, because they only have 100 seconds to reach a decision, and they don’t know whether they will be picked to settle specific questions. An entity would need to control between 33% and 50% of the network to be able to attack it, Castellana said.
Like Ethereum, GenLayer will be using a native token for its financial incentives. With a testnet already launched, the project should go live by the end of the year, according to Castellana. “There’s going to be a very big incentive for people to come and build things on top,” he said.
Uncategorized
How Alpha-Generating Digital Asset Strategies Will Reshape Alternative Investing

Mainstream conversations around digital assets largely focus on the dramatic price performance of bitcoin and ether. For years, retail and institutional investors have targeted beta exposure, or returns that mirror the broader crypto market. However, the introduction of products like bitcoin exchange-traded funds (ETFs) and exchange-traded products (ETPs) have made achieving beta more accessible, with these products drawing over $100 billion in institutional capital.
But as the asset class matures, the conversation is shifting. More institutions are now pursuing alpha, or returns that exceed the market, through actively managed strategies.
The role of uncorrelated returns in diversification
Low correlation to traditional assets enhances the role of digital assets in diversified portfolios. Since 2015, bitcoin’s daily correlation to the Russell 1000 Index has been just 0.231, meaning that bitcoin’s daily returns move only weakly in the same direction as the Russell 1000 Index, with gold and emerging markets remaining similarly low. A modest 5% allocation to bitcoin in a 60/40 portfolio, a portfolio containing 60% equities and 40% fixed income, has been shown to boost the Sharpe ratio (the measure of risk-adjusted return on a portfolio) from 1.03 to 1.43. Even within crypto itself, varying correlations allow for intra-asset diversification. This makes digital assets a powerful tool for risk-adjusted return enhancement [see exhibit 1].
Digital assets enter the active era
Just as hedge funds and private equity redefined traditional markets, digital assets are now evolving beyond index-style investing. In traditional finance, active management represents over 60% of global assets. With informational asymmetries, fragmented infrastructure and inconsistent pricing, digital assets present a compelling landscape for alpha generation.
This transition mirrors the early stages of the alternatives industry, when hedge funds and private equity capitalized on inefficiencies long before these strategies were adopted by the mainstream.
Market inefficiencies
Crypto markets remain volatile and structurally inefficient. Though bitcoin’s annualized volatility fell below 40% in 2024, it remains more than twice that of the S&P 500. Pricing inconsistencies across exchanges, regulatory fragmentation and the dominance of retail behavior create significant opportunities for active managers.
These inefficiencies — combined with limited competition in institutional-grade alpha strategies — present a compelling case for specialized investment approaches.
- Arbitrage strategies: Utilization of trading strategies such as cash and carry, which captures spreads between spot and futures prices, or basis trading, which involves entering long positions in discounted assets and shorts in premium ones, enables alpha generation by utilizing market inefficiencies within the digital assets market.
- Market making strategies: Market makers earn returns by placing bid/ask quotes to capture spread. Success relies on managing risks like inventory exposure and slippage, especially in fragmented or volatile markets.
- Yield farming: Yield farming taps into Layer 2 scaling solutions, decentralized finance (DeFi) platforms and cross-chain bridges. Investors can earn yields through lending protocols or by providing liquidity on decentralized exchanges (DEXs), often earning both trading fees and token incentives.
- Volatility arbitrage strategy: This strategy targets the gap between implied and realized volatility in crypto options markets, offering market-neutral alpha through advanced forecasting and risk management.
High upside and an expanding universe
Meanwhile, new opportunities continue to emerge. Tokenized real-world assets (RWAs) are projected to exceed $10.9 trillion by 2030, while DeFi protocols, which have amassed 17,000 unique tokens and business models while accumulating $108 billion+ in assets, are expected to surpass $500 billion in value by 2027. All of this points towards an ever expanding, ever developing digital asset ecosystem that is ideal for investors to utilize as a legitimate alpha generating medium.
Bitcoin’s price has surged over the years, while its long-term realized volatility has steadily declined, signaling a maturing market.
Uncategorized
AI Crypto Agents Are Ushering in a New Era of ‘DeFAI’

Imagine your investments working around the clock, scanning global markets for the best opportunities — all without you having to lift a finger. Sound futuristic? It’s already a reality.
In traditional finance (TradFi), algorithms handle nearly 70% of U.S. stock trades. Now, artificial intelligence (AI) agents are stepping up. These aren’t just basic bots but innovative systems that learn, adapt and make real-time decisions. VanEck predicts the number of AI agents will skyrocket from 10,000 to over a million by the end of 2025.
What this means for you
AI agents are already at work behind the scenes analyzing market trends, balancing portfolios and even managing liquidity across decentralized exchange platforms like SaucerSwap and Uniswap. They’re blurring the lines between TradFi and decentralized finance (DeFi), with cross-chain transactions expected to jump 20% in 2025.
Can we really trust AI with our money?
Autonomous finance isn’t new, but today’s AI agents operate with increased autonomy and sophistication. So, can we trust these agents to manage billions in digital assets? What safeguards exist when decisions come from algorithms, not humans? Who would be held responsible for market manipulation performed by an agent?
These concerns are valid. As AI agents take on more responsibility, and especially as the convergence between crypto and TradFi accelerates, worries around transparency and market manipulation will grow. For example, some blockchains enable front running trades and sandwich attacks that can exploit blockchain consensus in a process known as Maximal Extractable Value (MEV). These transaction strategies harm fairness and market trust. Operating at machine speed, AI agents could supercharge these risks.
Enter DLT: the trust layer we need
Trust is key, and distributed ledger technology (DLT) offers a solution. DLT provides real-time transparency, immutability and decentralized consensus, ensuring decisions are trackable and auditable. The Identity Management Institute reported companies that integrated blockchain identity systems have already cut fraud by 40% and identity theft by 50%. Applying these guardrails to AI-driven finance can counter manipulation and promote fairness. Moreover, the use of DLTs with fair ordering is growing rapidly, ensuring transactions are sequenced fairly and unpredictably, addressing MEV concerns and promoting trust in decentralized systems.
DeFAI: where finance is headed
A blockchain-powered, trust-centric model could unlock a new paradigm, “DeFAI”, in which autonomous agents can operate freely without sacrificing oversight. Open-source protocols like ElizaOS, which have blockchain plugins, are already enabling secure and compliant AI interactions between agents across DeFi ecosystems.
Bottom line: trust will define the future of AI
As AI agents take on more complex roles, verifiable trust becomes non-negotiable. Verifiable compute solutions are already being built by firms like EQTY Lab, Intel and Nvidia to anchor trust on-chain. DLT ensures transparency, accountability and traceability. This is already in motion; on-chain agents are now operating that offer services ranging from trade execution to predictive analytics. We can trust AI when we have trust in the model input and output.
The question now isn’t if institutions will adopt autonomous finance, but whether frameworks can evolve fast enough. For this revolution to thrive, trust must be embedded into the foundation of the system.
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