At the Consensus 2026 event held in Miami, executives from Bridge and Deus X Capital outlined the major growth opportunities ahead for the stablecoin ecosystem. The panel predicted that modernizing institutional payment systems and the rise of autonomous artificial intelligence applications will become leading drivers of expansion in the coming years.
Rising Institutional Demand
Lindsey Einhaus, head of strategy and operations at stablecoin infrastructure company Bridge, noted that large institutional players are expected to adopt stablecoin technology at a quicker pace over the next two years. Bridge, recently acquired by Stripe for $1.1 billion, sees significant potential for stablecoins in cross-border payments and in corporates’ treasury transactions.
“Large institutions are seeking new methods to manage cross-border money flows and simplify account management through stablecoins,” Einhaus emphasized.
Projects like Tempo—which is focused on payments and receives backing from Stripe and Paradigm—are expected to accelerate institutional adoption. According to Einhaus, most blockchains to date have not sufficiently supported functions common in conventional payment systems, such as refunds, disputes, and confidential transactions.
Stablecoins Meet AI
Einhaus suggested that the next phase of growth could be powered by micro-payments enabled by artificial intelligence. She explained that stablecoin-centric blockchain platforms could make small-value internet transactions cost-effective. Previously, the transaction fees for micro-payments often outweighed the value being transferred, while price volatility made crypto payments challenging for mainstream use.
“Blockchain networks tailored for stablecoins will significantly lower transaction costs,” Einhaus added.
This shift could enable easy pricing for low-value content and services online and lay the groundwork for autonomous AI applications to conduct commercial transactions independently.
Regulatory and Infrastructure Challenges
Tim Grant, CEO of Deus X Capital, argued that standalone AI payment systems could prove to be one of stablecoins’ strongest use cases. He said that the need for machines to transact money with each other online is increasingly being recognized by both industry practitioners and end users.
“We are currently underestimating the profound impact that autonomous payments will soon have,” Grant observed.
However, Grant pointed out that the current infrastructure is fragmented across multiple blockchains and wallets, and regulatory processes for autonomous financial activities are still in early stages. Although Grant remains optimistic about the long-term prospects, he conveyed that regulatory uncertainty and integration challenges persist as obstacles to widespread stablecoin adoption.
Nevertheless, Grant believes institutional attitudes toward stablecoins are shifting rapidly, especially as regulators begin to take more supportive positions.
“Previously, you had to actively educate institutions; now, they are showing direct interest themselves,” Grant commented.




