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This week, everyone is helping AI open bank accounts.
Author: David, Deep Tide TechFlow
On March 18, another blockchain went live.
Its name is Tempo, backed by Stripe and Paradigm. Stripe is one of the world’s largest online payment companies, handling $1.9 trillion in transactions last year; Paradigm is one of the biggest venture capital firms in crypto. Last year, the two jointly invested $500 million in Tempo, valuing the project at:
$5 billion.
A $5 billion blockchain that doesn’t trade tokens, doesn’t do DeFi, and doesn’t send memes. On launch day, Tempo’s most prominent product was:
Machines paying machines.
This sounds a bit abstract—you can think of AI now spending money at every step. Calling an API costs money, buying computing power costs money, pulling data from a database costs money…
But existing payment systems are all designed for humans. Bank accounts require ID, credit cards need facial recognition, Alipay needs a mobile verification code.
AI can’t pass any of these.
It can help you complete an entire workflow, but when it comes to paying, it has to stop and wait for a human to click “Confirm.”
So, alongside the mainnet launch, an open protocol called MPP (Machine Payments Protocol) was also introduced, co-developed by Stripe.
In simple terms, it sets rules for transactions between machines, including how to request payments, authorize, and settle.
The envisioned scenario is that AI can autonomously spend within preset limits, without needing human signatures for each transaction. On launch day, over 100 service providers integrated, including OpenAI, Anthropic, and Shopify.
But Tempo isn’t the only one doing this this week.
Within five days, Visa established a new department and released AI payment tools, Coinbase upgraded its payment protocol significantly, Mastercard spent $1.8 billion acquiring a stablecoin company, and Sam Altman’s World launched a toolkit for AI identity verification.
Five giants rushing to open bank accounts for AI within a week.
Two paths, one door
Tempo is about settling payments for AI. But settlement is just one part of the payment system. For an AI agent to truly spend independently, it also needs payment tools, funding channels, and identity verification.
Here, traditional payment companies and crypto firms are competing in their own ways.
On the same day Tempo went live, Visa also moved. Its newly formed Crypto Labs released its first product: Visa CLI, a tool that allows AI agents to initiate credit card payments directly from the terminal.
No API keys needed, no pre-registration required. When an AI running a task needs to buy a service, it can just type a command to pay. Visa calls this “command-line commerce.”
Visa’s global card network connects hundreds of millions of cards and tens of millions of merchants. If AI payments can run on this existing network, it doesn’t need to wait for new infrastructure to mature.
Visa is extending an old path. Its competitor Mastercard chose a different approach: buying the road.
On March 17, Mastercard announced it would acquire London-based stablecoin infrastructure company BVNK for $1.8 billion. This is the largest stablecoin acquisition in crypto history.
The goal is straightforward: if AI payments are made with stablecoins, then stablecoins can flow through my pipeline.
On the crypto side, actions are equally intense.
Coinbase’s x402 protocol received a major upgrade, expanding payment scope from a few stablecoins to all ERC-20 tokens, and released the MCP toolkit, enabling developers to connect AI tools to paid networks with a single click.
Though their starting points differ, both are heading in the same direction: traditional payment companies embracing crypto, and crypto firms embracing AI. Ultimately, crypto infrastructure is becoming the underlying pipeline for AI payments.
One more step remains. AI can spend money, but how do merchants know there’s a responsible human behind that AI?
On March 17, Sam Altman’s World launched AgentKit, integrated with Coinbase’s x402. Its only function: to let AI prove that a verified human stands behind each payment. Merchants can confirm someone is responsible for the transaction, but they can’t see who that person is.
In five days, five companies have secured key positions in settlement, channels, tools, protocols, and identity verification.
The AI cake is divided, and only the checkout counter remains
Over the past three years, most of the AI industry chain has been claimed.
At the model layer, giants like OpenAI, Anthropic, Google, and numerous Chinese companies compete; compute power is tightly controlled by Nvidia; application layers—from programming assistants to search engines—are in a red ocean…
Every layer is crowded, and barriers to entry are rising.
But the payment layer remains relatively vacant.
It’s not that no one thought of it; the timing just wasn’t right. AI agent payments require a prerequisite: AI must be capable of independently completing an entire task chain. If it only chats, doesn’t need to call APIs, buy compute, or hire other agents, then payments aren’t a necessity.
In the past year, this prerequisite has begun to materialize.
OpenClaw enables AI to directly operate computers; MCP protocol allows AI to connect to external services; major models’ agent capabilities are expected to see a breakthrough in late 2025. AI is shifting from a “dialogue tool” to a “work tool,” and working means spending money…
The demand to spend is here, but the infrastructure to do so isn’t yet.
That’s why Stripe, Visa, Mastercard, and Coinbase are all stepping in simultaneously. For traditional payment companies, this is their first chance to take the lead in the AI wave. They can’t build models or chips, but they’ve been doing payments for decades.
Visa’s global card network connects hundreds of millions of cards and tens of millions of merchants; Mastercard covers over 200 countries; Stripe processed $1.9 trillion last year. If every AI expenditure flows through these channels, the more capable AI becomes, the more they profit.
For crypto companies, the logic is different.
Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong once said plainly: “AI can have crypto wallets, but can’t open bank accounts.”
Every step of the traditional financial system verifies “who you are”: bank accounts require ID, credit cards need facial recognition, each transaction needs SMS verification. AI is software, not a person—these hurdles it can’t pass.
But crypto wallets don’t need these. A private key is an account. For an AI agent, on-chain payments are the easiest path.
Regardless of whether crypto is involved, AI payments will become a new infrastructure-level market. The only difference is which pipeline is more machine-friendly.
The road is built, but the car isn’t here yet
At this point, it seems like everything is ready, with five giants in position.
But one number is worth noting.
Coinbase’s x402 protocol is currently the earliest and most widely adopted AI payment protocol. According to x402scan data, in the past 24 hours, total transaction volume was $65,400. There were 150,000 transactions, averaging less than 50 cents each.
What infrastructure supports this? Tempo’s $5 billion valuation, Mastercard’s $1.8 billion acquisition of BVNK, Visa’s new department, Stripe’s protocol development—all are built on infrastructure serving a market with a daily transaction volume comparable to a street-side bubble tea shop.
Most infrastructure businesses seem to follow this norm.
Before the internet bubble in 2000, telecom companies laid millions of kilometers of fiber optic cables. Afterward, they found only about 5% of global internet traffic used their networks. Most went bankrupt, but the fiber remained.
Ten years later, streaming media and mobile internet filled those pipelines. The builders didn’t profit, but the roads are real.
AI payments are now at this stage. The demand logic is sound: AI agents are becoming more capable, they need to spend independently, and a new financial infrastructure is necessary.
Everyone is at the starting line, but once the gun fires, it turns out only they are on the track.
When the first truly autonomous AI transaction happens in your life, it might come sooner than expected—or later.
The only certainty is that this battle has begun, and your and my wallets might be the last to know.