Virtuals Protocol powers Monvera AI broker for tokenized equities on Robinhood Chain Virtuals Protocol launched Monvera, an AI-powered broker that enables users to trade approximately 95 tokenized equities on Robinhood Chain with a single click. The platform, which went live on July 14 with its $MONVERA token, represents a milestone in using AI agents to manage real-world assets on-chain. Nearly 70% of the token supply is available for immediate claims, posing potential selling pressure. Virtuals Protocol powers Monvera AI broker for tokenized equities on Robinhood Chain The AI agent platform launched an autonomous broker that lets users trade roughly 95 tokenized stocks with a single click Monvera, an AI-powered broker built on Virtuals Protocol, went live on July 14 with its own $MONVERA token and direct access to tokenized equities on Robinhood Chain. The platform represents one of the first concrete examples of AI agents managing real-world assets on-chain, rather than just trading memecoins and posting tweets. What Monvera actually does The platform connects to approximately 95 real tokenized stocks available through Robinhood’s blockchain infrastructure, giving users the ability to execute trades, manage portfolios, and liquidate positions through an AI interface. The headline feature is portfolio-level actions. Instead of manually selling each position, users can dump their entire tokenized stock portfolio in a single click. Monvera also supports gasless interactions, meaning users don’t need to hold native tokens to pay transaction fees. The $MONVERA token launched with a total supply of 1 billion tokens. The allocation breakdown: 69.3% is reserved for pledger allocation and available for immediate claims, 23% goes to the liquidity pool, and 7.7% is set aside for developer vesting. The Virtuals Protocol backbone Monvera is built on Virtuals Protocol, which has been assembling infrastructure for AI agent tokenization across multiple blockchains including Base and Solana. The critical milestone came on July 1, when Virtuals Protocol integrated its AI agent infrastructure with Robinhood Chain’s mainnet. In June, the platform was involved in trading tokenized assets alongside Ondo Finance, one of the larger players in the tokenized treasury and real-world asset space. What this means for investors With nearly 70% of supply available for immediate claims, early selling pressure could be significant. The 23% liquidity pool allocation should help absorb some of that, but it’s a structure that rewards early movers and could punish latecomers. Virtuals Protocol has a first-mover advantage in combining AI agents with tokenized equities. Any protocol that can replicate this functionality, especially with access to a broader range of tokenized assets beyond Robinhood’s current catalog of roughly 95 stocks, could quickly become a serious competitor. Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy https://cryptobriefing.com/editorial-policy/ .