Orbs Unveils “Agentic”: A Layer-3 Execution Stack for Autonomous DeFi Agents
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Orbs has moved to the front lines of automated DeFi execution with the launch of a dedicated execution layer, which it calls Orbs Agentic, a platform the team says is built to let autonomous trading agents operate onchain with stronger safety and verifiability. The new layer, created on top of Orbs’ Layer-3 architecture, adds a cosigned oracle verification step that independently checks agent-submitted execution parameters, things like slippage bounds, reference-price checks and trigger conditions, before a transaction is cosigned and broadcast to the underlying chain.
The move is an explicit response to a fast-growing corner of crypto: programmatic, agent-driven trading and portfolio management. As wallets and bots begin acting as full-time traders, watching markets, rebalancing positions and firing complex strategies, Orbs Agentic is pitched as an intermediary execution layer that separates a strategy’s intent from the mechanics that actually touch user funds.
Rather than trusting a single agent to both decide and execute, the platform routes parameterized requests through Orbs’ infrastructure for independent verification and cosigning. That architecture is aimed at reducing the kinds of unilateral execution and key-management risks that have bedeviled some automated systems. Orbs Agentic exposes a toolbox for structured actions: autoswap and execswap for swaps, autolimit for limit orders, and a set of safety-first flows intended for time-weighted and intent-based strategies.
Those tools are deliberately parameterized and auditable, the company says, so developers can plug popular agent frameworks into the Orbs runtime without building bespoke execution stacks. That design is consistent with Orbs’ existing roster of Layer-3 DeFi execution products, protocols such as dTWAP and dLIMIT, that aim to bring institutional-grade order types and deterministic execution to decentralized exchanges.
At the core of the announcement is the cosigned oracle mechanism. Under the model, price and condition checks are validated with decentralized oracle data and only requests that meet the objectively defined constraints are cosigned. The approach creates a verifiable separation between what an agent wants to do and what is allowed to happen onchain.
It is an arrangement, Orbs argues, that will make continuous, policy-driven trading safer for both end users and the wider markets. The company plans a phased rollout. As per the official details, a proof-of-concept stage already enables basic swaps and orders via existing infra, while later stages will bring the full cosigned oracle stack, hybrid multisig executor wallets and an onchain trust-score system for formalizing secure agent execution.
Orbs’ Layer-3 Play Has Traction
Its execution stack is already integrated across several DEXs and, in prior product rollouts, the network claims protocols in its stack have supported billions in trading. Orbs’ Perpetual Hub family, for example, has been credited with over $2.2 billion in processed trading volume across integrations with platforms such as SpookySwap and THENA, a metric the company and partners have used to argue for the production-readiness of its execution primitives.
That real-world activity gives Orbs an operational baseline from which to extend services to agentic systems. The market’s immediate reaction to infrastructure news tends to be muted, and Orbs’ native token, ORBS, remains a relatively small-cap alt with sub-$0.01 pricing as of this week; data aggregators show ORBS trading near $0.0097 with daily volumes in the low millions and a market capitalization under $50 million.
That profile suggests adoption and usage, rather than speculative headlines, will be the key driver for meaningful token revaluation. Traders and integrators will be watching whether Agentic’s verification and trust scoring actually reduce execution incidents and whether partner projects adopt the cosigned flow at scale.
“As DeFi evolves, we’re seeing a clear shift from manual trading toward automated, policy-driven execution,” said Ran Hammer, Head of Business Development at Orbs. “We’ve spent years building execution infrastructure for DeFi. Orbs Agentic extends that foundation to a new class of users: autonomous agents.”
If the promise holds, Orbs Agentic could become a standardized execution backend for builders focused on continuous, policy-governed trading, an infrastructure play that leans into auditability, deterministic outcomes and stake-secured verification rather than opaque, agent-level authority. For now, adoption will be measured in integrations and live volume; the staged rollout gives the market a runway to assess whether cosigned verification actually changes the risk profile of automated onchain trading.
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