If you zoom out, finance has always upgraded in layers. First it was joint-stock companies, then electronic trading, then blockchains. Each step made capital easier to move, faster to deploy, more global. But strategy never really evolved with it.
We still rely on banks and asset managers to interpret signals and make decisions on our behalf. Not because they own the money, but because they control the systems that turn ideas into trades. That’s starting to feel outdated. And honestly, recent developments are making that gap harder to ignore.
The Old Model: You Own Capital, Someone Else Thinks for You
For years, the deal was simple. You bring capital, institutions bring strategy. Want exposure to AI stocks? A hedge fund handles it.
Want to play macro trends? Same story. Strategy lived behind closed doors, models, analysts, internal tools. You didn’t really see it, you just trusted it.
However, that setup is getting shaky. Look at what’s happening right now. The rise of AI agents in finance, plus new regulatory momentum like the CLARITY Act moving through the U.S. Senate, is pushing the industry toward more transparent, structured systems. Regulators are basically saying: we need clearer rules for how digital assets and automated systems operate.
At the same time, the Securities and Exchange Commission and Commodity Futures Trading Commission are finally trying to align on who oversees what. That March 2026 memo separating securities from commodities was a small step, but it matters.
All of this points to one thing: the infrastructure is being rebuilt. And when that happens, strategy doesn’t stay locked up forever.
Signals Are Everywhere, Acting on Them Isn’t
The advantage institutions had wasn’t just capital, it was coordination. They could take in tons of data and act on it fast. That edge used to be real. But now? Information is everywhere.
You’ve got on-chain data, prediction markets, macro feeds, sentiment on platforms like X. Honestly, most people can see the same signals now. That part’s not exclusive anymore.
The problem is execution.
There’s still a gap between “I see something happening” and “I’ve positioned capital around it.” That gap is where institutions still win. But that gap is shrinking fast.
We’re starting to see tools that let you define logic directly, basically “if this happens, do this with my money.” Not in a theoretical way, but actually deployed systems. AI agents handling trades, rebalancing portfolios, reacting in real time.
And this ties back to the broader agentic economy conversation. If agents can manage tasks, why not financial strategy too? The bottleneck isn’t intelligence anymore, it’s infrastructure.
Strategy as Infrastructure
What’s changing now is subtle but kind of huge. Instead of giving money to a fund and inheriting its entire strategy, you start interacting with strategy directly, almost like software.
You pick components like a momentum trigger, a hedging rule, maybe a sentiment-based allocation, then you combine them, adjust them, swap them out. It’s modular.
That’s a completely different model from traditional asset management, where everything is bundled and opaque. Here, strategy becomes something you can compose. And we’re already seeing early signs of this direction.
Tokenized funds are gaining traction, platforms are experimenting with on-chain strategy vaults, and even large institutions are testing automated portfolio systems.
BlackRock’s continued push into tokenized assets, for example, isn’t just about distribution, it’s about programmable exposure. Same with the growth of DeFi strategy platforms, where users allocate into logic-driven vaults instead of human-managed funds.
So the idea that strategy could become a shared, programmable layer, isn’t that far off anymore.
Institutions Don’t Disappear But Their Role Changes
To be fair, this doesn’t mean banks and asset managers vanish overnight.
They still matter, for liquidity, regulation, risk frameworks. That stuff doesn’t magically decentralize, but their role shifts.
Instead of being the only ones who execute strategy, they might design strategies, audit them or provide data and infrastructure. Basically, they become part of the system, not the gatekeepers of it.
We’ve seen this before in other industries. Cloud computing didn’t kill software companies, it just changed how software gets built and delivered. Finance feels like it’s heading in a similar direction.
The Shift From Allocator to Operator
If you strip it down, this is what’s actually happening, people are moving from passive allocators to active operators. Before, your role ended when you invested. Now, you can shape how that capital behaves.
That’s a big mindset shift, and it aligns with everything else happening right now: AI agents, decentralized systems, real-time data. The world is getting more programmable, so finance has to follow.
About the author
Dylan Dewdney is a veteran crypto entrepreneur and early blockchain pioneer. He was among the earliest Bitcoin enthusiasts and miners and one of the first investors in Ethereum’s genesis sale. Over the past decade, Dylan has founded and scaled multiple ventures across Web3, AI, and decentralized finance—raising over $20 million and contributing to projects that have collectively reached multi-billion-dollar valuations. He’s now the CEO and Co-Founder of Kuvi.ai, a company building the world’s first Agentic Finance Operating System, designed to democratize algorithmic trading through intelligent, modular, agentic frameworks. Dylan’s journey blends conviction, foresight, and hard-earned lessons from the front lines of crypto innovation.