Cover image generated via Hyperbolic
Source: Olas
AI agents feel a lot like the internet in the ’90s—there are skeptics everywhere, but soon, everyone and every company will have their own agent.
Soon enough, we will live in a world where AI agents outnumber humans—a hundred billion of them.
It’s also quite likely that AI agents will be handling the majority of transactions on the blockchain instead of humans.
AI agents are strong at processing unstructured data and adapting to dynamic environments with minimal human input. They’re getting smarter by the day, steadily improving in reasoning and planning tasks.
Olas (rebranded from Autonolas) is positioning itself for this agentic future.
Their bold mission: to unleash an ocean of autonomous AI agents, all owned and powered by users like you and me.
Olas has been around for a while. Plenty has been written about them, but there’s one thing missing—a fresh, up-to-date report covering the latest developments through Q4 2024. So, we rolled up our sleeves and did the research ourselves.
In this piece, we’ll explore what OLAS has been building, its current traction, and how it impacts the OLAS token.
Founded in 2022, Olas has been consistently rolling out new features. 2023 was a pivotal year, marked by the release of their whitepaper in February, their TGE in July, and surpassing 100,000 transactions for their AI agents by September 2023.
Fast forward to 2024, and Olas is now deployed on eight blockchains: Ethereum, Polygon, Gnosis, Solana, Arbitrum, Celo, Optimism, and Base. Notable milestones include crossing $1 million in protocol fees by January 20th and, by June 8th, accounting for 20% of all SAFE transactions on the Gnosis chain.
The chart above illustrates the steady growth of autonomous service transactions on Gnosis since May 2023, showing a consistent upward trend. By September 2024, weekly transactions hit record highs, with >1.2M cumulative transactions since the start.
But let’s dig deeper to understand what’s driving these numbers and what they reveal about OLAS’s future — should we be bullish or bearish?
In this section, we’ll provide a high-level overview of the product you can grasp in just a few minutes. If you’d like to dive deeper, you can check out their whitepaper
To achieve its vision of “an ocean of AI agents”, Olas provides a robust suite of AI agent products and services, building a framework necessary for large-scale deployment.
One of the challenges with bringing AI agents on-chain is that they must run continuously, which can be computationally expensive.
Smart contracts, while powerful, aren’t practical for this purpose—they’re constrained by processing capabilities (memory, cost) and can’t access data outside their native blockchain (like external APIs).
Olas addresses this by using an off-chain system to handle the agent’s logic, paired with an on-chain presence, typically a wallet.
This synergy between off-chain and on-chain systems is the heart of the Olas platform…
…The Open Autonomy Framework.
Olas has developed a software framework for creating and managing decentralized autonomous agents. As far as we know, this is one of the few open-source agentic frameworks that is explicitly crypto-friendly.
Source: Autonolas
The framework includes a Multi-Agent Systems (MAS) Architecture that enables multiple agents to operate autonomously while working together to achieve a common goal. Each agent handles different tasks, making decisions based on its environment or data shared with other agents. This decentralized decision-making ensures the system can function without a central authority.
The MAS framework is modular and flexible, allowing developers to customize agents by combining components like skills, protocols, and connections to fit specific services. While agents themselves operate off-chain, their decisions and actions are anchored on-chain for transparency.
Olas agents work in conjunction with a consensus node, and each agent runs an application within a finite state machine (FSM) replicated on a temporary blockchain. Agents achieve consensus on this temporary blockchain, allowing them to coordinate actions.
Key building blocks include:
Source: Autonolas
Source: Autonolas
By combining these components, Olas has enabled the development of various AI agents that can interact both off-chain and on-chain. The result is a robust framework that supports a decentralized AI agent economy.
Here are the AI agents we’ve found that are created on Olas:
You can see that most agent transactions thus far are from Trader and Mech agents, largely tied to the prediction markets service.
In June 2024, Olas released Pearl, a simple and intuitive interface for users to get involved with AI agents without any coding required.
With Pearl, you can easily participate in Olas Predict: Olas’ most prominent AI agent economy. This economy centres around prediction markets, where AI agents bet on the likelihood of events occurring.
Source: Autonolas
On Pearl, your AI agent assumes the role of the trading agent in the diagram above. The Trader asks the Mech agent to estimate the probability of a prediction market coming true. With that information, the Trader executes an action accordingly.
You can check this out for the full example. After the process is complete, the agent will receive its Olas emissions.
Olas aims to promote the growth and sustainability of agent economies by incentivizing entities that own/create agents through Olas emissions. To qualify for emissions, agent operators must stake OLAS. All of this can be interacted with through Pearl.
Source: Autonolas
P.S. If you’re curious about what’s happening on-chain, you can follow the trail from the wallet address in the Pearl desktop app. Exploring the address on Gnosis Scan provides a first-hand experience with the Olas Open Autonomy Framework and Protocol
Source: Gnosis Scan, an example of a contract that deploys agents. Our Pearl wallet had a few interactions with this contract.
Olas employs a staking mechanism called Proof of Active Agent to help grow its ecosystem.
Launchers can set specific KPIs and commission autonomous services aligned with their objectives by creating staking contracts.
The DAO plays a key role by voting to direct OLAS emissions toward agent use cases they believe are valuable, providing incentives for builders and operators. Agent operators that meet the defined KPIs are rewarded through staking, with all verifications handled via smart contracts.
So far, entities like GnosisDAO with its Omen prediction markets and OP SuperChain with Optimus have launched agents with emissions directed towards them. Any group or organization that wants to incorporate agents into their user base can create a staking contract to incentivize agent operation.
Olas was founded by Valory, a group of scientists and developers that publish extensive research in AI agent fields, distributed technology, and blockchains. Olas was the first of their projects.
While Olas was launched via an LBP on Fjord Foundry, Valory raised about $4M from True Ventures, Signature Ventures, and others in 2022.
OLAS tokenomics is complex, with multiple different supply and demand drivers. The goal is to build a self-sustaining ecosystem of autonomous services.
Let’s break it down.
The initial allocation for OLAS is:
The token has a 1B token cap in the first ten years. Subsequently, token inflation will be capped at 2% per annum.
As of October 2024, ~540M OLAS have been minted:
As for future supply, ~460M tokens will be minted over the next 8 years. About 56M tokens will be minted in 2025, representing ~10% inflation of total tokens but 121% inflation of curently circulating tokens (!)
Newly minted tokens are distributed as follows:
At the current price of $1.25, that implies that OLAS has a circulating market cap of $57M, total market cap of $675M, and a FDV of $1.25B.
Note that OLAS’s market cap on Coingecko can appear misleadingly low because it does not account for the veOLAS and DAO tokens.
Utilities of OLAS:
Rewards for LP Bonding
Staking rewards for operating AI agents on Olas
Our simple interpretation of the ideal economic flywheel for OLAS works like this:
OLAS Price Chart. Source: Coingecko
OLAS was launched in October 2023 and has since gone through a chart pattern very typical of low-float, high-FDV tokens — an initial pump based driven by early attention and then slow bleed out over time.
After peaking at $7.69 in January 2024, it has since dropped 84% to $1.25. Because of the low circulating supply, prices can move quickly upwards, but investors have to be wary of sell pressure as new tokens are released into circulation. There are 18,536 OLAS holders across all chains, a reasonably healthy distribution.
We’re keeping OLAS on our Crypto AI token watchlist and staying patient, while looking out for major positive catalysts.
Cover image generated via Hyperbolic
Source: Olas
AI agents feel a lot like the internet in the ’90s—there are skeptics everywhere, but soon, everyone and every company will have their own agent.
Soon enough, we will live in a world where AI agents outnumber humans—a hundred billion of them.
It’s also quite likely that AI agents will be handling the majority of transactions on the blockchain instead of humans.
AI agents are strong at processing unstructured data and adapting to dynamic environments with minimal human input. They’re getting smarter by the day, steadily improving in reasoning and planning tasks.
Olas (rebranded from Autonolas) is positioning itself for this agentic future.
Their bold mission: to unleash an ocean of autonomous AI agents, all owned and powered by users like you and me.
Olas has been around for a while. Plenty has been written about them, but there’s one thing missing—a fresh, up-to-date report covering the latest developments through Q4 2024. So, we rolled up our sleeves and did the research ourselves.
In this piece, we’ll explore what OLAS has been building, its current traction, and how it impacts the OLAS token.
Founded in 2022, Olas has been consistently rolling out new features. 2023 was a pivotal year, marked by the release of their whitepaper in February, their TGE in July, and surpassing 100,000 transactions for their AI agents by September 2023.
Fast forward to 2024, and Olas is now deployed on eight blockchains: Ethereum, Polygon, Gnosis, Solana, Arbitrum, Celo, Optimism, and Base. Notable milestones include crossing $1 million in protocol fees by January 20th and, by June 8th, accounting for 20% of all SAFE transactions on the Gnosis chain.
The chart above illustrates the steady growth of autonomous service transactions on Gnosis since May 2023, showing a consistent upward trend. By September 2024, weekly transactions hit record highs, with >1.2M cumulative transactions since the start.
But let’s dig deeper to understand what’s driving these numbers and what they reveal about OLAS’s future — should we be bullish or bearish?
In this section, we’ll provide a high-level overview of the product you can grasp in just a few minutes. If you’d like to dive deeper, you can check out their whitepaper
To achieve its vision of “an ocean of AI agents”, Olas provides a robust suite of AI agent products and services, building a framework necessary for large-scale deployment.
One of the challenges with bringing AI agents on-chain is that they must run continuously, which can be computationally expensive.
Smart contracts, while powerful, aren’t practical for this purpose—they’re constrained by processing capabilities (memory, cost) and can’t access data outside their native blockchain (like external APIs).
Olas addresses this by using an off-chain system to handle the agent’s logic, paired with an on-chain presence, typically a wallet.
This synergy between off-chain and on-chain systems is the heart of the Olas platform…
…The Open Autonomy Framework.
Olas has developed a software framework for creating and managing decentralized autonomous agents. As far as we know, this is one of the few open-source agentic frameworks that is explicitly crypto-friendly.
Source: Autonolas
The framework includes a Multi-Agent Systems (MAS) Architecture that enables multiple agents to operate autonomously while working together to achieve a common goal. Each agent handles different tasks, making decisions based on its environment or data shared with other agents. This decentralized decision-making ensures the system can function without a central authority.
The MAS framework is modular and flexible, allowing developers to customize agents by combining components like skills, protocols, and connections to fit specific services. While agents themselves operate off-chain, their decisions and actions are anchored on-chain for transparency.
Olas agents work in conjunction with a consensus node, and each agent runs an application within a finite state machine (FSM) replicated on a temporary blockchain. Agents achieve consensus on this temporary blockchain, allowing them to coordinate actions.
Key building blocks include:
Source: Autonolas
Source: Autonolas
By combining these components, Olas has enabled the development of various AI agents that can interact both off-chain and on-chain. The result is a robust framework that supports a decentralized AI agent economy.
Here are the AI agents we’ve found that are created on Olas:
You can see that most agent transactions thus far are from Trader and Mech agents, largely tied to the prediction markets service.
In June 2024, Olas released Pearl, a simple and intuitive interface for users to get involved with AI agents without any coding required.
With Pearl, you can easily participate in Olas Predict: Olas’ most prominent AI agent economy. This economy centres around prediction markets, where AI agents bet on the likelihood of events occurring.
Source: Autonolas
On Pearl, your AI agent assumes the role of the trading agent in the diagram above. The Trader asks the Mech agent to estimate the probability of a prediction market coming true. With that information, the Trader executes an action accordingly.
You can check this out for the full example. After the process is complete, the agent will receive its Olas emissions.
Olas aims to promote the growth and sustainability of agent economies by incentivizing entities that own/create agents through Olas emissions. To qualify for emissions, agent operators must stake OLAS. All of this can be interacted with through Pearl.
Source: Autonolas
P.S. If you’re curious about what’s happening on-chain, you can follow the trail from the wallet address in the Pearl desktop app. Exploring the address on Gnosis Scan provides a first-hand experience with the Olas Open Autonomy Framework and Protocol
Source: Gnosis Scan, an example of a contract that deploys agents. Our Pearl wallet had a few interactions with this contract.
Olas employs a staking mechanism called Proof of Active Agent to help grow its ecosystem.
Launchers can set specific KPIs and commission autonomous services aligned with their objectives by creating staking contracts.
The DAO plays a key role by voting to direct OLAS emissions toward agent use cases they believe are valuable, providing incentives for builders and operators. Agent operators that meet the defined KPIs are rewarded through staking, with all verifications handled via smart contracts.
So far, entities like GnosisDAO with its Omen prediction markets and OP SuperChain with Optimus have launched agents with emissions directed towards them. Any group or organization that wants to incorporate agents into their user base can create a staking contract to incentivize agent operation.
Olas was founded by Valory, a group of scientists and developers that publish extensive research in AI agent fields, distributed technology, and blockchains. Olas was the first of their projects.
While Olas was launched via an LBP on Fjord Foundry, Valory raised about $4M from True Ventures, Signature Ventures, and others in 2022.
OLAS tokenomics is complex, with multiple different supply and demand drivers. The goal is to build a self-sustaining ecosystem of autonomous services.
Let’s break it down.
The initial allocation for OLAS is:
The token has a 1B token cap in the first ten years. Subsequently, token inflation will be capped at 2% per annum.
As of October 2024, ~540M OLAS have been minted:
As for future supply, ~460M tokens will be minted over the next 8 years. About 56M tokens will be minted in 2025, representing ~10% inflation of total tokens but 121% inflation of curently circulating tokens (!)
Newly minted tokens are distributed as follows:
At the current price of $1.25, that implies that OLAS has a circulating market cap of $57M, total market cap of $675M, and a FDV of $1.25B.
Note that OLAS’s market cap on Coingecko can appear misleadingly low because it does not account for the veOLAS and DAO tokens.
Utilities of OLAS:
Rewards for LP Bonding
Staking rewards for operating AI agents on Olas
Our simple interpretation of the ideal economic flywheel for OLAS works like this:
OLAS Price Chart. Source: Coingecko
OLAS was launched in October 2023 and has since gone through a chart pattern very typical of low-float, high-FDV tokens — an initial pump based driven by early attention and then slow bleed out over time.
After peaking at $7.69 in January 2024, it has since dropped 84% to $1.25. Because of the low circulating supply, prices can move quickly upwards, but investors have to be wary of sell pressure as new tokens are released into circulation. There are 18,536 OLAS holders across all chains, a reasonably healthy distribution.
We’re keeping OLAS on our Crypto AI token watchlist and staying patient, while looking out for major positive catalysts.