TOKYO — The highly anticipated deployment of artificial intelligence agents within decentralized financial systems accelerated significantly this week, as a major Japanese venture consortium announced a $100 million fund dedicated entirely to “Agent-to-Agent” (A2A) economic infrastructure. The investment thesis predicts a rapid paradigm shift where the vast majority of blockchain transactions will no longer be initiated by human users, but by autonomous AI programs negotiating and settling complex financial agreements natively on-chain.
The technical architecture driving this shift is heavily reliant on high-throughput altcoin networks, specifically Solana and customized Layer-2 app-chains. These networks provide the necessary combination of sub-cent transaction fees and instantaneous finality required for AI models to operate efficiently. The funded startups are building specialized protocols that allow AI agents to hold their own digital wallets, custody assets, and independently execute complex yield farming, arbitrage, and risk-management strategies without human oversight.
This evolution presents a radical departure from the current DeFi landscape. Traditional liquidity pools and lending markets are currently designed for human interfaces and manual approval processes. The new A2A infrastructure utilizes pure machine-readable smart contracts, allowing AI models to instantly analyze global liquidity fragmentation and execute thousands of micro-trades across dozens of separate blockchains in milliseconds.
“We are funding the transition from Decentralized Finance to Autonomous Finance,” explained a managing partner of the venture fund. “An AI agent does not need a banking app; it needs a cryptographic wallet and a fast settlement layer.” As these autonomous systems come online, analysts predict a massive surge in underlying network activity, permanently divorcing altcoin transaction volume from human retail sentiment and linking it directly to the computational demands of artificial intelligence.


