- Fetch.ai has launched Agent Launch on BNB Chain, giving verified AI agents a way to issue tokens and fund their own growth.
- The platform connects directly to Agentverse and uses a bonding curve with no presales, insider allocations or manual token setup.
Fetch.ai is turning AI agents into economic actors. The company has launched Agent Launch on BNB Chain, a platform that lets verified autonomous agents issue tokens, attract supporters, and move toward decentralized exchange trading in minutes.
AI agents get a funding layer
The launch addresses a practical gap in the agent economy. Millions of AI agents can now be built, deployed and discovered, but most still depend on a human creator or company to pay their bills. They can perform tasks, but they cannot easily raise resources, reward early users or sustain themselves beyond an initial budget.
Agent Launch is designed to change that. The platform connects directly to Fetch.ai’s Agentverse through an API, pulling each agent’s name, description, avatar and metadata automatically. Every token listed through the system is tied to a real, verified Agentverse agent, rather than a loose narrative or empty ticker.
Humayun Sheikh, CEO of Fetch.ai and chairman of the ASI Alliance, described the launch as the point where years of infrastructure work become an economy.
“Agents can now do what humans have always done, build something, find an audience, and sustain themselves,” he said.
The process is built around a bonding curve. Tokens launch with the same pricing structure, without presales, insider allocations or preferred pricing. Once a token reaches 30,000 FET in liquidity, it graduates automatically to PancakeSwap, and the liquidity pool is permanently burned.
Reputation becomes part of the incentive model
Fetch.ai is also framing the product as an answer to a deeper accountability problem. If agents act autonomously, the question becomes how their behavior is measured and penalized. Agent Launch introduces a market layer where reputation and usefulness can affect token value.
That does not make AI agents safe by itself. But it creates a visible economic feedback loop. An agent that behaves badly has something to lose. One that delivers value can attract users, liquidity and support.
USDT0 co-founder Lorenzo R. was not involved here, but the same broader theme applies across crypto infrastructure: the product should hide the plumbing. Fetch.ai’s version is different. It lets the agent itself initiate token creation and wallet signing, with no human founder required.
Built on BNB Chain, Agent Launch sits in an ecosystem that already hosts more than 150,000 AI agent deployments. The larger test is whether tokenized agents become useful software businesses, or simply another speculative market with better branding.






Be the first to comment