A new Cryptopolitan report published June 18, 2026, highlights a stark divide in the cryptocurrency community regarding the use of AI agent wallets. While infrastructure from giants like MetaMask and Coinbase is now live, a reader poll conducted by the publication found that 30% of respondents said “Nope” to handing over wallet control.
This group represents a significant block of users who remain committed to the philosophy of self-custody and personal decision-making.
Conversely, the data reveals that 70% of readers are open to the idea in some form, provided certain conditions or safeguards are met. About 25.9% of those polled indicated they would trust an AI agent if it originated from a “trustworthy company” with a proven reputation.
Infrastructure and Security in the Age of AI Agents
This suggests that for a majority of the crypto-native audience, the barrier to entry is not the technology itself, but the credibility of the entity providing the rails.
The rise of the “agentic economy” is already reflected in on-chain activity. Coinbase’s Agentic Wallets, launched in February 2026, utilize the x402 protocol for machine-to-machine transactions. As of June 2026, this protocol has crossed 480,000 active agents and processed over 165 million transactions worth more than $50 million in volume.
Weekly transaction counts have surged by 265% since March, growing from roughly 548,000 to 2 million as Ethereum network outlook improves alongside automated DeFi activity.
Major wallet providers are racing to build the security frameworks necessary to win over skeptical users. On June 8, 2026, MetaMask opened early access to its Agent Wallet, a self-custodial solution that executes trades across nine EVM chains and Hyperliquid.
To address safety concerns, MetaMask includes threat-scanning for every transaction and offers a $10,000 coverage guarantee for any transaction it deems “safe” that later proves problematic.
Coinbase has taken a hardware-centric approach to security. Its Agentic Wallets use Trusted Execution Environments (TEEs) so that the AI agent never actually “touches” the private keys. This is a critical distinction for users concerned about logic errors or “hallucinations.” As institutional Bitcoin exposure grows, the demand for these audited, secure autonomous systems is expected to rise among enterprise players who cannot monitor markets 24/7.
The x402 Foundation, which oversees the protocol used by Coinbase, now counts Google, Visa, AWS, and Anthropic among its backers. This suggests that AI agent wallets are moving beyond the “crypto corner” and into the broader financial plumbing. Brian Armstrong, CEO of Coinbase, has even suggested that the agentic economy could eventually surpass the human economy in total transaction volume.
Evaluating the Performance Paradox and User Trust
Reader sentiment often contradicts expectations of performance. According to a CoinGecko survey conducted between February 20 and March 10, 2025, approximately 50% of participants believe AI agents will be better than humans at crypto trading and investing most of the time. However, that same survey showed that 37.
5% of participants do not trust AI agents to manage crypto wallets, while 34.5% do trust them, and 27.9% remain neutral.
This “trust gap” highlights the psychological friction of moving from manual execution to delegation. While users acknowledge that AI can process data and execute swaps faster than a human, the fear of losing funds due to software error remains high. Porter Stowell, CEO of W3.
io, noted that human oversight is not disappearing but rather moving “up the stack,” where people will act as auditors of autonomous systems rather than manual traders.
Expert opinions on these systems remain cautious. Dipendra Malhotra, the head of wealth technology at Citi, recently raised questions about the “memory” of AI agents. He questioned how long an agent can manage high-stakes financial advisory before it begins to hallucinate or lose the thread of a user’s intent. This is likely why 30.
22% of Cryptopolitan readers still view plugging an autonomous third party into the signing flow as a step in the wrong direction.
Projected Growth and Market Realities
Global investment in AI is expected to hit $2.52 trillion in 2026, with AI projects drawing 80% of all venture capital funding in the first quarter alone. For many investors, the shift toward automation is inevitable as Bitcoin exchange supply remains at multi-year lows.
In such a tight market, the speed and efficiency of an AI agent can provide a significant edge over human participants.
McKinsey estimates that by 2030, AI agents could move between $3 trillion and $5 trillion in consumer commerce annually. Research and Markets projects the global AI agent market will reach $53.2 billion by 2030, growing at a compound annual rate of 44.9%. These figures suggest that while individual retail traders may be hesitant, the enterprise and institutional sectors are already moving toward full implementation.
Ultimately, the successful adoption of AI agent wallets will likely depend on the “simple conditions” outlined by MihnChi Park, Co-founder of CoinFello.
He argues that delegation works if agents only act within strict user instructions, if the user can halt the process at any time, and if the assets never move to an unapproved third party. Without these guarantees, the 30% of users currently saying “Nope” are unlikely to change their minds.
