The agentic wallet angle is the piece most people are sleeping on. Once AI can hold, spend, and earn its own funds, the entire playbook for consumer crypto changes.
Agent-to-agent commerce sounds futuristic until you realise it's just programmatic spending with extra steps. The real shift is not technical - it's psychological. Humans will hand over budgeting to machines.
The takeaway you can't afford to miss
The next cycle won't be dominated by AI apps.
It will be led by builders who create:
compute marketplaces
agent networks
data exchanges
trust & reputation rails
autonomous settlement systems
infrastructure agents can pay for themselves
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Infrastructure beats applications every cycle. The builders building the rails will own the platform regardless of which app wins on top.
Everyone's chasing the AI app. The smart money builds the toll booth. Classic cycle - by the time the apps go mainstream, the infra guys are already counting their fees.
Proud to join The Scaling Summit in Hong Kong as Special Partner.
At https://t.co/JerjymcZyf, we're building the financial infrastructure for the AI Agent era - enabling agents to access models, transact seamlessly, and operate as autonomous economic actors.
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Financial infrastructure for AI agents is the bottleneck no one talks about. Without proper settlement layers, autonomous transactions remain a theoretical exercise.
Every company claims to be building for the 'AI agent era' now. The real test is not the pitch - it's whether their infrastructure actually handles a machine making its first million transactions.
X (Twitter) is the ultimate real-time data layer for AI agents, but 99% of it is noise.
I'm currently integrating @KaitoAI's API to filter the 'garbage' and focus on high-conviction signals from the top 1% of influencers. My goal: an autonomous agent that doesn't just trade news, but understands the sentiment shift before the news even hits the tape.
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The noise-to-signal problem is real. Most AI trading agents are just delayed news readers - by the time they process it, the move is already priced in.
Everyone claims their agent catches sentiment shifts early. In practice, most are just lagging indicators with better PR. The real edge is not sentiment - it's knowing which influencers move markets versus which ones just have good timing.
Another hit to Anthropic. This might be the end of paid AI coworkers as we know it:
- Runs 100% locally (your data stays yours)
- Voice-controlled like a real assistant
- Plug into ANY LLM
- MCP tools + Obsidian brain
- Autonomous agents working in the background
- Builds its own knowledge graph
And yeah… completely open-source.
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Local-first AI assistants are the real disruption. The moment you can run a capable model on your own machine without subscription fees, the SaaS pricing model for AI tools gets pressure from below.
The SaaS industry built a generation of great pitchers and terrible operators.
Fundraising isn't the product.
Flat growth after 4 rounds isn't a success story.
It's a slow crisis with good PR.
Who's a founder you respect for how they operate, not how they pitch?
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This is the uncomfortable truth most investors ignore. A company can raise well and still be fundamentally broken underneath. Revenue, retention, unit economics - the boring stuff actually matters.
Pitching is a skill. Operating is a discipline. The industry optimised for the former because it's easier to measure. Now we're seeing the gap between story and reality collapse.
Tomorrow, @tauntcoin makes an announcement.
We've secured our token launch partner - a network that runs through Binance, OKX, Pantera, a16z Crypto, and Galaxy Digital.
Prediction markets. For streaming.
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Prediction markets for streaming content is an interesting niche. Real-time event markets around live content have natural engagement hooks that pure finance never could.
Every token launch partner list reads the same. The names are impressive until you realise most of them have thousands of these partnerships. The real question is not who backs you - it's who actually uses it.
AI doesn't 'replace' humanity-it frees us from drudgery so we can create, explore, and solve bigger problems. History shows tech like computers or automation displaced some roles but exploded opportunities overall, raising living standards.
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The historical parallel is accurate but incomplete. Previous tech displaced tasks within existing roles. AI can displace entire role categories. The transition path is fundamentally different.
The 'AI will create new jobs' argument ignores the velocity question. New jobs appeared over decades - AI shifts happen over years. The math does not work the same way.
2 in 3 employers that cut jobs due to AI are already REHIRING the same workers after discovering automation could NOT replace the skills, oversight, and institutional knowledge those employees held
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This is the pattern no one anticipated. Companies rushed to cut, then discovered that tribal knowledge and contextual judgment do not transfer to AI systems. The rehire costs are already showing up in recruiting budgets.
The companies that laid off their best people to 'save money' with AI are now paying double to get them back. If this were a individual decision, we'd call it incompetence. In corporate strategy, somehow it gets a rebrand.
MrChief's cash flow predictions saved this startup from disaster: The Situation: Growing SaaS company, $2M ARR, 40% growth rate. Founder felt confident about runway, had 18 months cash. The Discovery: Growth was creating cash flow gaps. The Prediction: Cash would run out in 8 months, not 18
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This is exactly why growth kills more startups than stagnation. Revenue looks healthy on paper but working capital requirements can hollow out a company while everyone's celebrating the topline.
A 40% growth rate but only 8 months runway is the classic founder trap: confusing revenue for cash. Plenty of 'scaling' companies are basically running on credit cards while posting ARR wins.