AI Agents and Corporates Fuel Next Stablecoins Wave - Blockonomi
by Maxwell Mutuma · BlockonomiTLDR
Table of Contents
- TLDR
- Corporates Accelerate Stablecoins for Cross-Border Operations
- AI Agents Expand Autonomous Payment Demand
- Executives said large corporations plan to use stablecoins for cross-border payments and treasury operations.
- Lindsey Einhaus stated that companies want to simplify global account management through blockchain systems.
- Bridge, acquired by Stripe for $1.1 billion, provides infrastructure for enterprise stablecoin transactions.
- Payment-focused blockchains now support features such as refunds and private transfers.
- Executives said AI agents may drive demand for autonomous digital payments.
Stablecoins will see faster adoption as large corporations and autonomous AI systems expand payment use cases, executives said at Consensus 2026 in Miami. Lindsey Einhaus of Bridge and Tim Grant of Deus X Capital outlined separate growth tracks during a panel discussion. They pointed to cross-border treasury management and machine-led transactions as primary drivers over the next two years.
Corporates Accelerate Stablecoins for Cross-Border Operations
Large enterprises plan to integrate stablecoins into treasury and cross-border payment systems, according to Bridge executives. Lindsey Einhaus said institutions want to simplify global account structures. She explained that companies aim to consolidate balances and settle flows using blockchain-based tokens.
She stated that firms seek faster settlement and lower operational costs. “Large institutions are looking to utilize stablecoins to manage cross-border flows,” Einhaus said. She added that businesses want to collapse multiple banking relationships into streamlined digital systems.
Bridge, which Stripe acquired for $1.1 billion, builds infrastructure for stablecoin transactions. Einhaus said payment-focused chains now support enterprise requirements. She cited features such as refunds, chargebacks, and private transfers as key upgrades.
She pointed to Tempo, backed by Stripe and Paradigm, as an example. She said legacy blockchains lacked tools common in traditional payment networks. However, newer networks aim to address those gaps directly.
Tim Grant confirmed that institutional engagement has shifted. “Before, you had to push institutions to pay attention,” Grant said. “Now they’re pulling,” he added.
Grant said regulatory clarity has improved corporate interest. He explained that firms now approach digital asset providers directly. He noted that coordination across institutions still requires structured integration.
AI Agents Expand Autonomous Payment Demand
Executives also identified AI-driven payment systems as a core expansion path. Einhaus said blockchain rails can enable micropayments at scale. She explained that earlier internet payment models failed due to high transaction fees.
“Historically, micropayments failed because transaction costs exceeded value,” Einhaus said. She stated that crypto volatility also discouraged routine spending. However, stable-value tokens may resolve that issue.
She argued that stablecoin-native networks cut intermediary costs.
“With stablecoin-native blockchains, you’re going to dramatically reduce transaction costs,” she said. She added that lower fees allow smaller transfers to become practical.
Grant focused on autonomous systems transacting directly with each other. He described agentic payments as a growing use case.
“We’re underestimating the agentic payment boom that’s about to happen,” Grant said.
He explained that machines require digital payment tools to operate online. He stated that consumers understand why automated systems must move funds. However, he said infrastructure remains fragmented across blockchains and wallets.
Grant said regulatory frameworks for autonomous finance continue to develop. He explained that onboarding processes still limit broader adoption. He reiterated that institutions now initiate discussions with digital asset providers.