Tether is converting its stablecoin profits into equity stakes in physical AI, placing crypto wallets inside humanoid robots.
Tether is converting its stablecoin profits into equity stakes in physical AI, placing crypto wallets inside humanoid robots.

Tether is converting its stablecoin profits into equity stakes in physical AI, placing crypto wallets inside humanoid robots.
Tether led a $1.4 billion Series C investment round in German robotics company Neura Robotics on June 10, embedding its self-custodial wallet technology directly into the machines. Nvidia and Amazon also participated in the round, which Handelsblatt called the largest startup financing round in German history.
"Robots with their own wallets can transact, pay for services, and settle payments without human approval," Paolo Ardoino, chief executive of Tether, said in a statement. "This is the financial infrastructure layer for the physical world."
The deal integrates Tether's Wallet Development Kit, an open-source tool that gives Neura's robots self-custodial crypto wallets. A warehouse robot could automatically process USDT micropayments for tasks like moving pallets or paying for charging stations, with no human intermediary. The arrangement positions Tether alongside Nvidia and Amazon as a backer of physical AI infrastructure, converting the company's stablecoin profits — USDT remains the dominant dollar-pegged token by trading volume — into equity stakes in deep-tech hardware.
Tether has spent the past year deploying USDT profits across compute, energy, and media investments. The Neura round marks its largest single bet on hardware and reflects a strategy that treats stablecoin revenue as venture funding for the AI buildout. The company now sits at the same cap table as Nvidia and Amazon, two of the largest investors in robotics and artificial intelligence.
The timing coincides with a broader push to make crypto rails the default settlement layer for autonomous agents. Mastercard launched Agent Pay for Machines this week, a system that lets AI agents buy services and settle payments using cards, bank accounts, or stablecoins, built with Coinbase, Ripple, and Solana. MetaMask shipped a wallet designed specifically for AI agents. Y Combinator's Locus Founder lets users text a business idea and have an AI agent build, market, and sell products autonomously, settling all payments in USDC.
The demand for machine-to-machine payments is real but early. Chainalysis data shows agents ran more than 100 million payments over Coinbase's x402 protocol on Base by early 2026, all settled in stablecoins. Yet a Redwood Research experiment this spring gave an AI agent $5,000 and four days to make money — it made nothing, stopped by CAPTCHAs and identity checks that banks require but crypto rails bypass.
A self-custodial wallet means the holder — in this case, a robot — controls its own private keys, with no bank, government, or company able to freeze or restrict access. For human users, this removes intermediaries. For machines, it creates a new legal and regulatory category: an autonomous entity that can hold and spend money without a human account owner.
The difference matters because banks require a named person behind every account. Fintechs like Meow have tested letting agents clear KYC, but the liability still attaches to a human. Crypto rails solve this by design — stablecoins settle in seconds at any hour, with no bank account required. The question that remains unanswered is who bears liability when a machine's wallet is exploited or makes an unauthorized transaction.
For markets, the Neura round signals that stablecoin issuers are becoming meaningful venture investors in deep tech. Tether's $1.4 billion bet on robotics, alongside Nvidia and Amazon, puts crypto capital on equal footing with traditional tech giants in funding the physical AI buildout. The next test will be whether the machines that emerge from this funding carry wallets that work as intended — and whether regulators decide that changes the rules.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.