
For most of the past decade, the conversation around artificial intelligence and crypto stayed largely theoretical. Two industries, both moving fast, both attracting enormous capital, but mostly running on parallel tracks. That started to change in late 2024, and by early 2026 the overlap had become hard to ignore. MoonPay, the crypto payments firm that built its name on fiat-to-crypto on-ramps, is now positioning itself as the financial infrastructure layer for a future where AI agents don't just analyze markets but actively participate in them.
On February 24, the company officially launched MoonPay Agents, a non-custodial software layer built on top of MoonPay CLI, its developer-focused command-line interface. The product gives autonomous AI systems the ability to generate wallets, fund them through fiat on-ramps or crypto transfers, execute on-chain trades, and convert holdings back to fiat, all without requiring a human to approve each individual step. Less than three weeks later, on March 13, MoonPay followed up with a second announcement: a deep integration with Ledger, the hardware wallet maker, designed to let users sign off on AI-initiated transactions directly from a physical device.
MoonPay CEO Ivan Soto-Wright put it bluntly in the launch statement: "AI agents can reason, but they cannot act economically without capital infrastructure." The line is a bit pithy, but it captures the actual gap. Building a bot that can identify an arbitrage opportunity across three chains is a solved problem in 2026. Building one that can act on that opportunity, fund itself, execute the trade, and off-ramp the proceeds into a bank account without exposing private keys or requiring a human babysitter is not.
MoonPay Agents is designed to close that gap. The setup is relatively straightforward: a developer installs MoonPay CLI, a user completes a one-time KYC verification, funds a wallet, and grants the agent permission to transact within defined parameters. After that initial handshake, the agent can operate independently. Wallets are non-custodial and stored locally on the user's device using OS keychain encryption. Private keys never leave the machine. Spending limits and pre-execution transaction simulations serve as guardrails against runaway agents doing something unintended.
The product ships with 54 tools across 17 categories, covering most of what a developer building a financially active agent would actually need. That includes real-time cross-chain swaps, recurring buy schedules, portfolio tracking, token discovery and analysis, multi-chain deposit links with automatic stablecoin conversion, fiat funding via virtual accounts that accept bank transfers, Apple Pay, Venmo, and PayPal, and the ability to off-ramp back to traditional currencies from the terminal.
Multi-chain coverage at launch spans Ethereum, Solana, Base, Polygon, Arbitrum, Optimism, BNB Chain, Avalanche, TRON, and Bitcoin. Over 100 tokens are supported. Developers can also extend the platform with custom skills. The system is compatible with Claude, ChatGPT, Gemini, and Grok, and can be accessed via the CLI, a local Model Context Protocol server, or a web chat interface.
One detail that has caught the attention of developers in the agentic AI space is native x402 support. The x402 protocol, introduced by Coinbase in May 2025, revives the long-dormant HTTP 402 status code to enable machine-to-machine payments using stablecoins, with no API keys or subscriptions required. An agent simply pays for a resource or service at the time of access. MoonPay's inclusion of x402 compatibility positions MoonPay Agents within the emerging standard that Stripe, QuickNode (which extended x402 support across more than 80 chains), and a growing number of infrastructure providers have rallied around.
MoonPay Agents is not architected for one or two bots. The infrastructure is built to support thousands, eventually millions, of agents running concurrently across use cases that range from trading and portfolio management to gaming economies, commerce automation, and corporate treasury operations.
The Ledger Integration
MoonPay's solution was to bring Ledger into the loop. By integrating Ledger's Device Management Kit into the CLI wallet for MoonPay Agents, the company now allows every AI-generated transaction to be routed through a physical hardware device for approval. The agent constructs and proposes the transaction. The user confirms it on the Ledger. Private keys never touch the software layer at any point.
MoonPay says this makes the CLI wallet the first agent-focused wallet to support Ledger's secure signing through the Device Management Kit. Soto-Wright put the strategic framing plainly: "Autonomous agents will manage trillions in digital assets. But autonomy without security is reckless. We built MoonPay Agents with Ledger so intelligence can scale without surrendering control. The agent executes. The human stays in the loop."
Ledger's chief experience officer, Ian Rogers, acknowledged that the partnership reflects a real shift in what wallet infrastructure needs to support. "There is a new wave of CLI and agent-centric wallets emerging," he said, "and these will need Ledger security as a feature, too." It is a meaningful endorsement from a company whose entire value proposition is built on the premise that hardware is the only storage you can actually trust.
The model that results from the integration is structurally similar to two-factor authentication in traditional finance: the AI handles the analytical and execution work, but physical confirmation is required to release funds. Even a fully compromised software environment cannot move money without the physical Ledger device and its PIN.
For developers building agents that need to touch money, the practical implications of MoonPay Agents are fairly direct. The product abstracts away most of the hard parts: custody, key management, fiat connectivity, cross-chain routing, compliance. A single CLI install and a one-time user verification is genuinely all that stands between a developer and an agent that can fund itself, trade across chains, and off-ramp back to a bank account.
The ability to add custom skills also matters. MoonPay Agents ships with 54 tools across 17 categories, but the open extension model means developers can build on top of the existing toolkit rather than working around its edges. That kind of extensibility is usually what determines whether a platform becomes a default or a footnote.
What remains to be seen is how the ecosystem grows around it. MoonPay has the infrastructure and the user base. The question now is whether developers building the next generation of agentic applications pick MoonPay Agents as their default financial layer, or whether a competitor, or a collection of open standards, fills that space instead.
It is worth stepping back from the product details for a moment to consider what MoonPay is actually doing here. This is not a company adding AI features to an existing payments product. It is a payments company making a deliberate bet that the financial system is about to acquire a new class of participant, one that is not human, that will require infrastructure designed specifically for machine-speed, machine-scale capital movement, and that will need to be anchored to compliant fiat rails if it is ever going to interact with the broader economy.
That bet is not obviously wrong. Stablecoin volumes are growing at rates that would have seemed implausible even two years ago. Agent tokens and AI-driven trading systems are proliferating faster than most infrastructure providers anticipated. The convergence of AI and crypto, long discussed in the abstract, is becoming a concrete engineering problem that real companies are being paid to solve.
MoonPay's move is a claim that it has already built most of what that future requires, and that the work of this moment is connecting those existing rails to the autonomous systems that will run on them. It is an ambitious claim. The next 18 months will do a lot to determine whether it holds up.

MoonPay is making a bold move.
The crypto payments firm has signed an eight-figure, multi-year title sponsorship deal with the newly launched Moonpay X Games League, becoming the first company ever to put its name directly on an X Games competition format. The partnership signals a deeper push by crypto infrastructure companies into global sports, and a shift in how action sports are being commercialized.
Under the agreement, the competition will officially operate as the MoonPay X Games League, or XGL, a team-based, season-long league designed to modernize the X Games brand and create recurring engagement beyond standalone events.
For decades, the X Games have been synonymous with big moments rather than long seasons. Events were iconic but episodic, built around festival-style showcases of skateboarding, BMX, snowboarding, and freestyle skiing.
The X Games League changes that structure entirely.
Instead of isolated competitions, XGL introduces a formal league model with teams, standings, and year-round storytelling. Athletes will compete under team banners across multiple events, creating continuity that mirrors traditional professional sports while staying rooted in action sports culture.
X Games leadership has positioned the league as a necessary evolution. Younger audiences increasingly expect ongoing narratives, not one-off spectacles, and sponsors are looking for longer engagement windows rather than weekend-only exposure.
MoonPay’s investment gives the league financial stability at launch and a high-profile partner willing to commit for multiple seasons.
MoonPay has spent the last several years positioning itself as the easiest on-ramp into crypto, focusing less on trading hype and more on payments, infrastructure, and consumer access. Sponsorships have become a core part of that strategy.
By aligning with X Games, MoonPay is targeting an audience that is global, young, digitally native, and culturally influential. These are users who may not be active crypto traders today but are comfortable with digital wallets, online payments, and emerging financial tools.
The company already has a track record of partnering with gaming, esports, and entertainment brands. Action sports fit naturally into that ecosystem, especially as athletes and leagues explore new revenue models, fan engagement tools, and digital ownership concepts.
Just as important, the deal gives MoonPay category exclusivity across crypto and financial services within the league. That means no competing exchanges, wallets, or fintech firms sharing the same stage.
MoonPay is not the only major name backing the X Games League. Legacy action sports sponsor Monster Energy has also signed on as a founding partner, signaling confidence in the league’s long-term viability.
That mix of crypto infrastructure and established lifestyle brands reflects where sports sponsorships are heading. New leagues need both cultural credibility and financial scale, and the XGL appears to be aiming for both from day one.
For crypto companies, these partnerships are no longer just about logos and hype cycles. They are about legitimacy, durability, and reaching audiences outside the usual crypto echo chambers.
Crypto sponsorships in sports have gone through boom and bust cycles, especially during the last market downturn. Stadium naming rights and short-term promotional deals often disappeared as quickly as they arrived.
This deal feels different.
Rather than chasing maximum visibility during a bull market, MoonPay is tying its brand to infrastructure, long-term league development, and athlete ecosystems. It is a slower bet, but potentially a more durable one.
For X Games, the partnership provides the financial runway to experiment with new formats, athlete compensation models, and media strategies without relying solely on traditional broadcast economics.
The MoonPay X Games League is expected to roll out full seasonal competition across both summer and winter disciplines, with teams, rosters, and standings that evolve over time. If successful, it could reshape how action sports are organized and monetized.
For MoonPay, the sponsorship is a statement. Crypto infrastructure companies are no longer content operating quietly behind the scenes. They want cultural relevance, mainstream trust, and staying power.
Whether the XGL becomes the future of action sports remains to be seen. But one thing is clear. Crypto is no longer just sponsoring moments. It is helping build leagues.