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American Express releases tools to build AI payments -- and pledges to pay the price if agents go awry | Fortune
That includes American Express, which on Tuesday announced an agentic commerce developer kit as well as purchase protection for erroneous purchases made by registered AI agents. The move is a signal that a niche industry could expand quickly as the AI era evolves. "To date there have probably been as many press releases [on agentic commerce] as transactions, but no doubt it will happen," Luke Gebb, American Express executive vice president and head of global innovation, told Fortune. "It will start within zones where there is just a good value for the user." Indeed, there have been a number of agentic commerce press releases: Mastercard, Visa, and Stripe have all released infrastructure in the sector over the past several months. A future where AI agents book flights and refill paper towel stockpiles is one where consumers could save considerable time, but it also opens up risks around what happens when AI agents do not carry out tasks as intended. The agentic commerce space has yet to figure out what to do with that risk, Gebb said. American Express is pledging to protect users from erroneous transactions made by agents that are registered with Amex. Gebb argued the company is in a good position to do so, given that it already has processes in place for handling disputed transactions from its customers. When asked about the cost to American Express of protecting against AI errors, Gebb said that agents will improve over time, and if consumers have the confidence to transact using agents on the Amex network, that will ultimately bring more transaction volume to the company. An American Express spokesperson also made the case that the developer kit will reduce customer disputes and chargebacks because the kit only gives payment credentials to verified agents, and Amex will authenticate card members before allowing them to use agents, thereby giving merchants a stronger baseline of legitimacy. Some in crypto circles are making the case that the agent economy ought to run on stablecoin rails. Gebb said American Express has a "variety of plans" surrounding stablecoins -- which he sees as useful more for settlement than for payments -- but declined to go into specifics.
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Amex launches agentic commerce development kit
This content has been selected, created and edited by the Finextra editorial team based upon its relevance and interest to our community. The Amex Agentic Commerce Experiences (ACE) developer kit is a framework that provides technical specifications to bring American Express-issued cards and membership value into AI-powered interactions. The kit will provide developers with access to agent verification services; account enablement; "intent intelligence" to ensure purchase intent is accurately captured; payment credentials to enable verified agents to complete payments; and cart context to support the sharing of cart details. "AI agents are beginning to reshape how people discover products and services, plan travel and dining, and make purchases," says Luke Gebb, EVP, head, global innovation, Amex. "As these capabilities evolve, Card Members and Merchants will expect the same level of trust and security that they always relied on from American Express. The ACE Developer Kit enables this in AI-powered commerce." Amex is also promising an industry-first commitment to offer customers protection for registered agent purchases. In the future, if a card member authorises an AI agent to make a purchase and that agent sends American Express the customer's authenticated purchase intent, the firm will protect eligible customers from charges related to AI agent error.
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American Express unveiled its Agentic Commerce Experiences developer kit and an industry-first purchase protection program for registered AI agents. The move addresses a critical gap in the emerging agentic commerce space: what happens when AI agents make mistakes. While competitors like Mastercard, Visa, and Stripe have released infrastructure, Amex is the first to pledge financial protection for AI agent errors.

American Express announced Tuesday the launch of its Agentic Commerce Experiences (ACE) developer kit, a comprehensive framework designed to integrate American Express-issued cards into AI-powered interactions
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. The agentic commerce developer kit provides technical specifications that enable developers to build secure payment experiences through AI agents, marking a significant step as the financial services industry adapts to autonomous AI commerce.The ACE framework offers developers access to several critical components: agent verification services, account enablement capabilities, "intent intelligence" to ensure purchase intent is accurately captured, payment credentials for verified agents to complete transactions, and cart context features that support sharing of cart details
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. Luke Gebb, American Express executive vice president and head of global innovation, told Fortune that while agentic commerce remains nascent—"there have probably been as many press releases as transactions"—the technology will gain traction "within zones where there is just a good value for the user"1
.What distinguishes American Express from competitors is its industry-first commitment to offer customers protection for registered agent purchases. If a card member authorizes an AI agent to make a purchase and that agent sends American Express the customer's authenticated purchase intent, the company will protect eligible customers from charges related to AI agent errors
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. This purchase protection program directly tackles what Gebb identified as an unresolved challenge: "The agentic commerce space has yet to figure out what to do with that risk"1
.Gebb argued that American Express is well-positioned to absorb this risk, given existing processes for handling disputed transactions from customers. When questioned about the financial cost of protecting against AI errors, he emphasized that AI agents will improve over time, and that building consumer confidence will ultimately drive greater transaction volume to the company's network
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. An American Express spokesperson further noted that the developer kit should reduce chargebacks because it only provides payment credentials to verified agents and authenticates card members before allowing agent use, giving merchants stronger legitimacy baselines1
.Related Stories
American Express joins Mastercard, Visa, and Stripe in releasing infrastructure for the AI-powered payment sector over recent months
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. However, the purchase protection commitment represents a differentiating factor that could accelerate adoption. A future where AI agents autonomously book flights and refill household supplies promises considerable time savings for consumers, but also introduces new vulnerabilities around transaction accuracy and intent verification.The emphasis on trust and security reflects American Express's broader positioning. "AI agents are beginning to reshape how people discover products and services, plan travel and dining, and make purchases," Gebb stated. "Card Members and Merchants will expect the same level of trust and security that they always relied on from American Express"
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. The company's willingness to financially backstop AI mistakes signals confidence that agent verification and authentication protocols will minimize errors while encouraging developer participation.Gebb also addressed the role of stablecoins in the agent economy, noting that American Express has "a variety of plans" surrounding stablecoins, which he views as more useful for settlement than payments, though he declined to provide specifics
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. As agentic commerce evolves from concept to reality, the balance between enabling autonomous transactions and maintaining consumer confidence will determine which platforms gain traction in this emerging market.Summarized by
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