
Crypto will be necessary for artificial intelligence-powered agents to operate effectively in the financial market, as the infrastructure for the traditional finance system is outdated, says John DâAgostino, the head of institutional strategy at Coinbase.
If AI agents are going to operate on behalf of people, then they need to operate on âtrue sources of information,â because it would be âdisastrous if they didnât,â DâAgostino told CNBCâs Squawk Box on Tuesday.
âArtificial intelligence is infinitely scalable intelligence, and if you think of blockchain, which is the underlying technology for crypto, as an infinitely scalable source of truth, then those two things work very well together,â he said.
AI agents are already widespread across crypto and are used to build Web3 applications, launch tokens, and interact with services and protocols autonomously, with some platforms exploring the use of AI agents for trading.
AI agents need faster money
DâAgostino told CNBC that traditional financial systems werenât designed for real-time, machine-to-machine transactions at scale, and asking AI agents to operate on â100-year-old financial railsâ while scaling it for use wonât work.
âIf weâre going to move to this world and have this wonderful advantage of these agents acting at infinitely fast speeds, they have to act on infinitely fast and scalable money rails. And thatâs what blockchain and crypto is,â he said.
âYou wouldnât try to stream a movie on a dial-up modem. You wouldnât ask these AI agents to transact with a financial system thatâs older than those modems.â
No point in Bitcoin versus gold debate
DâAgostino added that Bitcoinâs (BTC) performance relative to gold has become a frequently discussed topic as well, but in his view, the two shouldnât be compared as Bitcoin has characteristics gold doesnât.
Bitcoin is âprogrammable. Itâs digital. Itâs infinitely scalable in terms of movement. Easy to move. You donât have to lug it across borders, and it produces a yield,â he said.
âIf youâre one of the people who are genuinely concerned that global money supply grows like 7%, 8% a year, and thatâs excessive, if you believe thatâs excessive and thatâs causing inflation, then you need assets that will beat that.â
DâAgostino added that he is also bullish on Bitcoin because of the few trillion dollars in money markets, which were parked when interest rates in the US were 5% to try and beat inflation rates.
âAs rates tick down, that unlocks those assets. Now, all of itâs not flowing into assets like Bitcoin, but a portion will,â he said.
Related: Crypto users cool with AI dabbling with their portfolios: Survey
The Federal Reserve slashed rates for the first time this year on Sept. 17, with more possibly on the way, although JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon cast doubt on more rate cuts, and said last week he thinks the Fed will have a hard time cutting the interest rate unless inflation drops.Â
Institutions are not âlemmings running over a cliffâ
DâAgostino also expressed doubts about an incoming institutional wave of crypto adoption, which has been predicted to be a key driver of the market.
Institutions are operating in the space, and more are likely on the way, but itâs unlikely to be a giant overnight shift, according to DâAgostino.
âEveryone talks about this institutional wave, in my experience of dealing with pensions and endowments and sovereign wealth funds. They donât invest in waves,â he said.
âTheyâre not lemmings running over a cliff in some giant wave. Theyâre very, very cautious. Theyâre very thoughtful.âÂ
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