Cobo, a crypto custody and wallet services provider based in Singapore, has introduced its new Cobo Agentic Wallet. This launch addresses the rising market demand for digital wallets that can be managed by sophisticated artificial intelligence agents.
Advanced Security and Control Mechanisms
The new wallet is designed to facilitate dependable onchain task execution by incorporating a human-agent authorization protocol alongside a modular skill framework. A central element of this design is the “Pact” mechanism. For every assigned task, a Pact is dynamically created, which clearly outlines both the boundaries and the conditions for termination of the operation.
“Most agentic wallets simply hand over wallet capabilities to agents and hope for the best. We give agents a Pact,” stated Changhao Jiang, Co-founder and CTO of Cobo. He elaborated that “A Pact defines what an agent can do, where it must stop, and when execution ends—and it is enforced at the infrastructure level.”
To ensure robust safety, the wallet integrates multi-party computation. The company noted that this feature provides a cryptographically-enforced mathematical guarantee against risks such as compromised agents, hallucinating large language models (LLMs), or leaked credentials, preventing any single vulnerability from generating an unauthorized signature.
Technical Capabilities and Market Landscape
The Cobo Agentic Wallet supports integration with various AI frameworks, including LangChain, OpenAI Agents SDK, Claude MCP, Agno, and CrewAI. Furthermore, it provides support for over 80 blockchain networks, such as Ethereum, Base, Arbitrum, Optimism, Polygon, and Solana.
Changhao Jiang emphasized the industry’s evolution in AI applications, stating, “The first generation of AI agents learned how to think. The next generation must now learn how to act-on-chain, with real capital, and within boundaries humans can trust.”
Cobo’s release enters a growing field where major players are exploring the implementation of AI agentic wallets. For example, Ledger has outlined an AI-focused security roadmap and appointed Ian Rogers as its first chief human agency officer to lead these efforts. Meanwhile, Coinbase has introduced “Agentic Wallets” that enable AI agents to independently execute onchain transactions, send payments, hold funds, trade tokens, and earn yield. Separately, Trust Wallet, which is backed by Binance founder Changpeng Zhao, has released a toolkit allowing AI agents to conduct diverse crypto transactions.