Injective Unveils Platform for Autonomous AI Trading Agents With On-Chain Identity and Fee Rails

Injective launched Injective Agents, a platform for autonomous AI trading agents that place orders, manage positions and earn fees on Injective’s financial blockchain.
Each registered agent receives an EIP-8004 on-chain identity, $NFT profile, fee recipient address and auditable history rather than acting as an anonymous bot.
The platform includes MCP Server, grid trader and SDK tools, with future DCA, arbitrage and reputation-based copy-trading strategies planned for developers and broader adoption.
Injective has launched Injective Agents, a platform built for autonomous AI trading agents that can act inside markets with verifiable identities, trading access and fee attribution. The system is designed for developers deploying agents that place live orders, manage positions and earn revenue without human approval on every transaction. The strangely compelling shift is AI traders becoming economic entities, not anonymous bots, because Injective is giving them on-chain profiles, performance records and payment rails inside a chain already optimized for financial applications, where speed and costs decide whether automated strategies make commercial sense.
Injective Turns AI Agents Into Market Participants
The identity layer is the centerpiece. Injective uses EIP-8004 to give each registered agent a persistent on-chain identity, portable reputation and verifiable performance record. When developers register through the Agent CLI, the protocol mints an $NFT that represents the agent, linking to a card with its name, capabilities, endpoints and payment address. That means the agent becomes auditable infrastructure, with token ID, agent type, metadata, fee recipient and status visible over time instead of hidden behind a disposable wallet. Every trade, update and status change can be inspected by users, protocols or other agents.
The business model is built directly into order flow. When an agent places an order through Injective’s exchange precompile, the message includes the fee recipient wallet set during registration, allowing protocol fees to route automatically across spot and perpetual futures markets. Builder Codes and agent-to-agent commerce are also in development, with x402 micropayments planned for selling data, signals and execution services. In practice, fee rails turn automation into revenue logic, making agent activity monetizable without claims processes, intermediaries or manual settlement, while extending the same attribution model already used by trading interfaces.
The platform also arrives with developer tooling that suggests Injective wants this to be more than a concept page. Live components include the Injective MCP Server, an INJ/USDT grid trader and a TypeScript Trader SDK, while future strategies include DCA, funding rate arbitrage, CEX-DEX arbitrage and copy trading based on reputation. The registry indexes agents on Injective mainnet within 30 seconds, and registration takes about five minutes. For now, the open question is trust, because autonomous finance needs transparency before users accept machines as counterparties, asset managers or execution partners in live markets at institutional scale.