Interlace intensified its focus this week on building payments infrastructure for autonomous AI agents, outlining an AI Agent Payment Solution designed for high-volume, low-value machine-to-machine transactions. The company frames its platform as financial plumbing for an emerging autonomous economy, where software agents and connected devices can transact under strict human-defined controls.
Claim 30% Off TipRanks
- Unlock hedge fund-level data and powerful investing tools for smarter, sharper decisions
- Discover top-performing stock ideas and upgrade to a portfolio of market leaders with Smart Investor Picks
Across several LinkedIn posts, Interlace highlighted anticipated demand for instant settlement, low-cost micropayments, and strong rule-based controls as AI agents begin to execute real-world payments. The platform aims to combine virtual cards with on-chain wallets, enabling programmable, tokenized transactions with embedded limits, oversight, and risk management for enterprises.
Interlace also drew attention to ecosystem momentum, referencing TRON DAO’s AI fund expansion from $100 million to $1 billion, along with initiatives from Solana, Base, Visa, Stripe, and the Ethereum Foundation around AI-native transaction rails. A cited Bitcoin Policy Institute study suggested AI agents may favor Bitcoin for value storage and stablecoins for payments, reinforcing Interlace’s focus on hybrid fiat–crypto rails.
In parallel with its product narrative, Interlace secured Canadian Money Services Business registration from FINTRAC, allowing it to provide regulated foreign exchange, money transfer, and virtual currency-related services in Canada. This regulatory milestone strengthens the company’s compliance posture for cross-border and digital asset flows, a key consideration for enterprise adoption.
The week’s updates suggest Interlace is positioning early in a nascent but potentially significant niche at the intersection of AI agents, crypto-based settlement, and programmable payments. While the company has not disclosed customer traction or revenue metrics, its emphasis on security, auditability, and regulation could support future integrations if AI-driven transactional workflows scale.
Overall, Interlace used the week to sharpen its product vision around agentic payments and to reinforce its regulatory foundation, aiming to compete as a specialized infrastructure provider in next-generation digital payments markets.

