Artificial intelligence and blockchain technologies are converging across payments, identity, open systems, and computing resources, but capital is increasingly favoring AI over digital assets, market data through late May shows.
Record valuation gap between AI and digital assets
As of May 2026, a leading AI-focused equity index traded 49% above its long-term average, while Bitcoin sat 42% below its historical trendline. This marks the largest divergence between the two sectors in years.
U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs have logged nine consecutive days of net outflows totaling about 2.8 billion USD, the longest redemption streak of 2026. At the same time, AI-related stocks have pushed the S&P 500 to record highs, supported by heavy corporate spending on data centers and advanced chips.
Analysts say the split reflects a market that is rewarding visible AI revenue growth while remaining cautious on blockchain-linked assets, despite their role in enabling machine-to-machine transactions and AI-native financial rails.
Autonomous agents drive demand for machine-native finance
The rise of autonomous AI agents is exposing limits in traditional banking systems, which were designed for human-led, manual processes and centralized control.
New blockchain-based frameworks are being built to support:
- real-time machine-level payments
- programmable settlement
- automated authentication for non-human agents
These systems aim to become core infrastructure for what some describe as a “machine economy,” in which AI agents transact, contract, and coordinate without human sign-off.
Stablecoin payment rails scale up
Stablecoin-based payment infrastructure is already operating at scale. OpenFX reports more than 60 billion USD in annualized settlement volume and expects AI agents to drive the majority of foreign exchange flows within the next decade.
These agents would initiate and complete cross-border transfers without human authorization or dependence on traditional clearing systems, using programmable stablecoins and on-chain settlement.
OpenFX today announced the acquisition of a licensed European payments firm, securing passported access to all 30 European Economic Area member states. The company plans to integrate stablecoin settlement directly into existing regional rails, including SEPA and the UK’s Faster Payments Service.
Identity networks race to separate humans from bots
Identity verification is emerging as a critical layer in an online environment increasingly populated by automated agents.
World, a cryptographic identity project co-founded by Altman, has verified more than 18 million unique human users. Its encrypted identification system is being used to authenticate users across dating, social, and video platforms, forming a basis for distinguishing people from bots and AI agents.
On-chain activity for the Altman-backed network has accelerated. In late May, it recorded a 2026 high for new wallet creation, while active addresses surged to 1,309 in a single 24-hour window. Whether speculative or usage-driven, the spike underscores rising attention to systems that prove personhood.
TransCrypts is targeting a related problem: storing verified personal and professional credentials on-chain. By keeping authenticated data under user control and tied to cryptographic proofs, the project aims to cut down on fraudulent records and AI-generated impersonations across institutions.
Decentralized identity market set for rapid growth
The global decentralized identity market is forecast to grow from 7.4 billion USD in 2026 to more than 58 billion USD by 2031, a compound annual growth rate of 51.34%.
Regulation is a key driver. The European Union is requiring member states to issue digital identity wallets by 2026, which is expected to increase demand for verifiable credential services that can interoperate across borders and platforms.
Cloud-style infrastructure moves on-chain
Infrastructure providers are building the equivalent of cloud services for decentralized and AI-integrated applications.
Alchemy and similar platforms are enabling:
- streamlined creation of crypto wallets
- execution environments tailored for autonomous agents
- tooling to connect AI systems directly to blockchain settlement layers
A leading developer platform reports that smart contract creation across major chains grew 303% year over year in 2023. API calls on its infrastructure have already surpassed the peak set during the 2021 bull market.
The continued surge in developer activity, despite weaker asset prices, suggests that core infrastructure build-out is proceeding independently of short-term capital flows.
Decentralized GPU networks show concrete revenue
One area where blockchain-linked activity is translating into measurable revenue is decentralized GPU computing.
By early 2026, decentralized GPU networks had generated more than 200 million USD in annualized protocol revenue from non-native customers seeking cheaper compute. These platforms are offering processing power at reported discounts of 45–60% versus legacy cloud providers.
The model is aimed at smaller AI firms and research groups facing GPU supply shortages and high cloud costs, using token-based incentives to route underused hardware into a global compute marketplace.
Capital hesitates while infrastructure matures
Despite the pace of development across payments, identity, and compute, institutional capital allocation continues to favor established AI equities over digital assets.
Pantera’s portfolio highlights this divergence: it spans payments, identity, and verification projects using distributed ledgers to support AI-heavy industries, yet the broader digital asset market remains under pressure.
Analysts say the dynamic suggests large pools of capital are waiting for clearer evidence of sustainable revenue, user adoption, and regulatory clarity from on-chain protocols before re-rating the sector, even as those same protocols quietly assemble the infrastructure for a machine-driven economy.
Explore how AI and crypto converge in finance with our guide on AI–blockchain integration for the machine economy.
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