If 2025 for crypto was the year when autonomy became permissible, 2026 could be the year when it would become invisible.If 2025 for crypto was the year when autonomy became permissible, 2026 could be the year when it would become invisible.

The future of crypto finance is autonomous | Opinion

Disclosure: The views and opinions expressed here belong solely to the author and do not represent the views and opinions of crypto.news’ editorial.

In 2025, crypto finance made a quiet, decisive pivot toward autonomy. What used to be fragmented “tools” and bolt-on bots started to look like a new operating layer. These systems monitor, decide, and execute continuously, with humans moving upstream into supervision and intent.

Summary
  • 2025 marked crypto’s shift from tools to autonomous infrastructure: AI-driven systems now monitor, decide, and execute continuously, with humans moving upstream into supervision and intent.
  • Repeatability, not intuition, is the real edge: Automated execution reduces emotional error, enforces risk discipline, and fits 24/7 markets where humans are structurally disadvantaged.
  • By 2026, autonomy becomes the default interface: AI agents will quietly manage portfolios across TradFi and DeFi, reallocating human attention from reactive trading to setting goals, constraints, and oversight.

It’s crypto finance growing up: away from manual speculation as the default interface, and toward machine-led execution as the baseline for how digital assets are managed, traded, and deployed — especially in markets that never close.

What converged in 2025

Two parallel developments made this shift possible. First, technology matured. AI and machine-learning execution models became significantly more stable, auditable, and explainable. Tools once reserved for quant funds are now available to everyday users. Second, policy caught up.

In the EU, the second part of the Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation — covering crypto-asset service providers and broader digital-asset offers — has been in application since December 30, 2024. It turned a patchwork of interpretations into a clearer perimeter for services, responsibilities, and supervision.

More importantly, regulators signaled they’re less interested in whether an algorithm exists and more interested in whether it can be explained, controlled, and audited. That gave industry players confidence to adopt automation rather than avoid it.

Why repeatability beats intuition

But regulatory clarity alone doesn’t explain the shift. The deeper argument is behavioral.

If you’ve worked around trading for long enough, you learn that most edge isn’t insight — it’s repeatability. The ability to do the same sensible thing at the same sensible time, without fatigue, without FOMO, without revenge-trading, is rarer than any market thesis.

In fast markets, humans are slow, emotional, and bandwidth-limited. Automated systems can ingest more signals, react faster, and apply risk rules consistently — even when volatility arrives at 2 a.m. on a Sunday. The argument isn’t that humans don’t matter. It’s that humans shouldn’t be doing millisecond work with minute-level attention spans, especially in 24/7 crypto and FX.

The retail trading myth has always been romantic: intuition, timing, the one perfect entry. The institutional reality is far less cinematic: process, limits, and relentless adherence to rules when your nervous system is begging you to do the opposite. If your system pre-commits to position sizing, stop logic, and diversification before the market turns chaotic, you’ve separated decision quality from adrenaline.

Autonomy is less a superpower than a seatbelt: it doesn’t cancel volatility, but it reduces the self-inflicted damage.

There’s a lazy version of this trend that deserves to die: the idea that autonomy means outsourcing responsibility. Good systems aren’t magic. They’re monitored, paused when market conditions shift dramatically, and adjusted when assets that usually move together suddenly don’t. Any honest operator will tell you that past performance is never a guarantee. That’s not a disclaimer — it’s the single most important design constraint for autonomous finance.

From 2025 to 2026: agents becoming the interface between TradFi, DeFi, and daily life

If 2025 was the year autonomy became permissible, 2026 could be the year it becomes invisible.

Not because everyone becomes a quant, but because AI-driven workflows are spreading everywhere. Virtual agents are already being embedded into end-to-end processes across asset management, with massive operational efficiency at stake. Meanwhile, 80% of asset and wealth management organizations expect AI to fuel revenue growth, which is another way of saying the incentives to automate are now structural, not trendy.

Crypto inherits that gravity, then accelerates it. Once you can route between venues, manage risk continuously, and plug execution into DeFi liquidity, payments, and everyday apps, “portfolio management” stops being a periodic activity. It becomes an always-on operating system.

I expect a hockey stick effect as these agents mature. The most persuasive case for autonomy isn’t that it makes everyone rich. It’s that it reallocates human attention: away from screen-staring and reactive clicking, toward higher-value work like designing constraints, setting goals, and deciding when not to be in the market.

Two places autonomy hits home

For institutions, this shift means operational efficiency. For individuals, the impact is more personal — and it shows up in two distinct places. First, productivity and income. AI tools are already helping people launch products faster, create new income streams, and reclaim hours in their workdays. This isn’t about replacing human work. It’s about amplifying it.

Second, investing. AI-driven strategies can cut emotional errors and open access to execution quality that used to require a trading desk. Wealth creation starts to look less like timing the perfect trade and more like letting disciplined systems do small, consistent work every day — while you stay engaged enough to remain the final decision-maker.

None of this is a promise of returns, and it shouldn’t be read that way. It’s an opinion about direction: crypto finance is moving from manual speculation toward autonomous infrastructure.

Because in a 24/7 market, autonomy isn’t a luxury feature. It’s the only interface that scales.

Bryan Benson

Bryan Benson is the CEO of Aurum Foundation with over 27 years of experience in fintech, digital assets, and web3. He previously served as Managing Director at Binance, focusing on regional growth and financial inclusion. 

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