Cardano is already being used by roughly 200 large companies in Germany through agentic AI deployments, even if those firms do not realize the blockchain is sitting underneath their stack, according to Cardano Foundation CEO Frederik Gregaard. The claim, made during an interview with Jane King on GBBC’s Markets on Chain series from the New York Stock Exchange published April 16, points to a version of blockchain adoption that is less visible to end users but potentially more embedded in enterprise infrastructure.200 German Companies Use Cardano Without Even Knowing ItGregaard framed the Cardano Foundation’s role as pushing blockchain into systems people use without necessarily recognizing it. “We have about 200 companies in Germany who live on agentic AI, fairly large companies, and they don’t even know they’re using Cardano as a security layer, as a digital identity layer and as an accountability layer,” he said. “Part of when you have, for instance, agentic AI who’s using data from two different databases, [is] ensuring that the agentic AI is who they say they are, that they have the data they claim without disclosing it, because we want privacy.”That argument was central to Gregaard’s broader pitch: blockchain, in his view, is becoming an underlying trust and coordination layer for AI-driven systems rather than simply a rails story for tokens or payments. He described a model where users could interact with seamless consumer applications while Cardano handles provenance, identity and compliance in the background. The point was less about visible crypto branding than about infrastructure-level deployment.Payments still featured prominently. Gregaard said AI agents in some of these systems are already transacting using a regulated stablecoin called USDM, with microtransactions used to meter prompt activity and align incentives between participants. “The AIs are actually paying themselves using regulatory compliant stablecoins,” he said. “There’s a microtransaction happening just to do the prompts. And that’s also part of the security layer, which ensures that one database who has more computing power than the other doesn’t do unlimited prompts and can circumvent the security.”Why Cardano Could Strive In The EU And USThe interview also tied that enterprise and AI narrative to policy. Gregaard said the US stablecoin framework under the GENIUS Act had moved the market closer to Europe’s MiCA regime, but argued the more consequential shift could come from the Clarity Act. He said he expects that legislation, if passed, to unlock materially broader blockchain usage beyond financial applications, adding that “hundreds of companies” are already waiting on that kind of legal certainty. He further claimed that recent regulatory language had made clear that “Cardano is a commodity,” and suggested the US could move faster than Europe on this front.Alongside adoption, Gregaard leaned heavily on security. He said Cardano’s on-chain governance model and distributed validator base make it harder to compromise through a single point of failure, a contrast with networks he described as effectively controlled by a small number of insiders. He also argued that Cardano is emerging as a “first level quantum secure environment” through its interoperability with legal entity identity standards, which he said is drawing interest from banks, brokers, exchanges and central securities depositories.At press time, Cardano traded at $0.2566.