In a significant advancement within the cryptocurrency sector, Ledger has announced compatibility with MoonPay Agents, enabling users to manually verify and sign transactions initiated by AI agents. This development, unveiled by MoonPay, responds to the growing utilization of artificial intelligence in decentralized finance through autonomous agents capable of executing various transactions.
The integration with Ledger hardware wallets ensures that transactions such as trades, swaps, and transfers generated by AI agents undergo a security protocol that mandates manual confirmation via the hardware wallet. MoonPay’s CEO, Ivan Soto-Wright, emphasized that this integration represents the initial step towards broader support for other hardware wallets, announcing plans for future collaborations within the cryptocurrency ecosystem. He mentioned, “Any developer building an agent that needs to move value can plug MoonPay in as the financial rail across trading, gaming, commerce, treasury, and beyond.”
MoonPay Agents now cater to a range of Ledger hardware wallets, including the Nano S Plus, Nano X, Nano Gen5, Stax, and Flex. The capability of these agents extends to networking with various blockchains, such as Ethereum, Solana, Optimism, Avalanche, and Base. This allows for seamless transitions across different blockchain networks, optimizing the transaction process through automatic app switching on the Ledger devices.
Ian Rogers, Chief Experience Officer at Ledger, indicated the increasing importance of security as a host of new command line interface (CLI) and agent-centric wallets emerge. He stated, “There is a new wave of CLI and agent-centric wallets emerging, and these will need Ledger security as a feature, too.”
The trending adoption of AI agents in cryptocurrency trading is exemplified by initiatives from developers like Eliza Labs, Fetch AI, and Coinbase. These firms are creating systems designed to autonomously send, receive, and manage digital assets. MoonPay launched its Agents software earlier this year to empower AI systems with access to crypto wallets and facilitate transactions.
However, this wave of innovation brings along significant risks. Granting access to cryptocurrency to AI systems raises security concerns, particularly with the vulnerabilities associated with these agents. Erik Reppel, head of engineering for the Coinbase Developer Platform, previously highlighted the risks involved, noting, “Today, most agents with wallets just have a private key sitting on disk somewhere, and you’re already seeing those wallets get exploited, or people lose access when agents make mistakes.”
This latest enhancement in Ledger’s service offerings underscores the ongoing evolution of security protocols as the cryptocurrency landscape becomes increasingly intertwined with advanced AI technologies.


