Circle Internet Group and Stripe are locked in a race to build payment systems for a world that does not yet exist. Both companies are developing infrastructure designed for autonomous AI agents that settle transactions in stablecoins.
The goal is to replace the traditional credit card swipe with programmable, machine-driven payments. Investors are watching closely, with Stripe reaching a $159 billion valuation and Circle shares climbing nearly 30% since the start of 2026. The competition is already reshaping how the payments industry thinks about the future.
Circle is moving fast on the infrastructure side. The company launched Arc, a new blockchain built specifically for stablecoin payments.
It also began testing “nanopayments,” a capability that lets autonomous agents hold balances and transact across networks.
Costs run at fractions of a penny per transaction, making high-frequency machine-to-machine commerce economically practical for the first time.
Stripe is taking a different but equally aggressive path. Together with crypto venture firm Paradigm, it is building Tempo, a blockchain designed from the ground up for stablecoin settlement.
The project raised $500 million at a $5 billion valuation, with Visa, Mastercard, UBS, and Shopify signing on as partners.
Stripe has also spent more than $1.1 billion acquiring stablecoin infrastructure, including the 2025 purchase of Bridge.
The two companies are effectively building parallel highways toward the same destination. Circle is focused on the settlement layer and the nanopayment capability.
Stripe is focused on merchant integration and blockchain rails. Together, their investments represent the most serious institutional bet yet that stablecoins will power the next generation of commerce.
The structural argument against credit cards is straightforward. Traditional card networks charge fixed fees and percentage-based pricing on every transaction.
That model works for a consumer buying a $50 item but breaks down entirely when a software agent pays cents for a data request or an API call.
Circle CEO Jeremy Allaire framed the opportunity clearly on the company’s February 25 earnings call. He described a future where AI agents consume services from one another at scale.
A legal skills agent, for instance, might field thousands of micro-requests from external agents daily. Each transaction might be worth only a fraction of a dollar, making card fees prohibitive.
Analyst Mark Palmer of Benchmark-StoneX reinforced that point. “Microtransactions are a poor fit for traditional rails in terms of cost, latency and programmability,” he said.
Stablecoins embedded directly into software workflows, he added, remove the settlement delays and cost structures that make cards unworkable at that scale.
Despite the infrastructure race, real-world volume tells a more cautious story. Coinbase’s x402, an open standard built for agentic payments, reported just $24 million in total volume over the past 30 days.
That figure sits against a global e-commerce market projected to reach $6.88 trillion this year. The gap between the two numbers is difficult to overlook.
Merchant adoption presents another hurdle. Chris Donat of BWG Global noted that merchants follow consumer demand.
“They aren’t going to bother accepting something unless they are asked by a meaningful number of consumers to do it,” he said. Right now, consumers are not asking for stablecoin payments in significant numbers.
Stablecoin transactions also lack the fraud protection, dispute resolution, and credit extension built into every card payment.
A practical near-term path may involve AI agents using virtual cards that settle on the back end through stablecoin rails.
That model would allow card networks and stablecoin infrastructure to coexist, rather than forcing an immediate winner-takes-all outcome.
Allaire himself acknowledged that the timeline for meaningful agentic transaction volume remains uncertain, even as the race to build the pipes intensifies.
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