A LinkedIn post from Shiga Digital Holdings Limited describes the rapid emergence of “agentic payments,” in which AI agents initiate financial transactions. The post notes that major cloud platforms, payments providers, and stablecoin firms are reportedly rolling out infrastructure to support AI-originated payments, moving the concept from theory toward practical deployment.
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According to the post, most current enterprise pilots sit between two early stages of autonomy, where AI agents either recommend transactions for humans to execute or prepare transactions for human approval. The post suggests this phased approach is appropriate while trust and controls are established, before moving to a third stage where agents transact within strict limits, approved counterparties, and full audit trails.
The company’s LinkedIn commentary argues that legacy payment “rails” may struggle to enforce granular, real-time controls required for fully autonomous AI transactions at the point of settlement. It highlights stablecoin-based infrastructure as structurally better suited, citing fast settlement, programmability, and built-in auditability as advantages for enforcing per-transaction limits and daily ceilings.
As outlined in the post, Shiga Digital appears focused on applications across supplier payments, payroll, treasury operations, and B2B settlement, areas where automated workflows and compliance requirements are significant. For investors, this emphasis hints at a strategic positioning in the intersection of AI-driven automation and digital asset payment infrastructure, a niche that could gain importance as enterprises experiment with autonomous finance.
If Shiga Digital can translate this thought leadership into concrete products or implementation projects, the company could benefit from early-mover advantages in defining standards and best practices for agentic payments. However, adoption will likely depend on regulatory clarity, enterprise risk tolerance, and competitive responses from established payments networks and financial institutions, which could influence the timing and scale of any financial impact.

