PURCHASE, N.Y., March 10, 2026, 15:00 UTC-04:00
Mastercard Incorporated rolled out Virtual C-Suite on Tuesday, an AI-powered offering aimed at small businesses that debuts with a Virtual CFO. The product is set to reach users later this year via banks, accounting platforms, and software firms. With this launch, the payments giant is taking a bigger step into layering software solutions on its own rails. 1
This shift is gaining traction as payment companies push into agentic AI—software designed to understand instructions and execute tasks like shopping or payments. Mastercard introduced its Agent Suite back in January. Just last week, the company announced a new “Verifiable Intent” framework, aiming to clarify exactly what a user authorized when an AI-driven agent completes a purchase. 2
According to the World Bank, small and medium enterprises make up roughly 90% of all businesses and provide over half of global jobs. But, for many of these companies, a full-time finance team just isn’t there. Mark Barnett, Mastercard’s global head of small and medium enterprises, puts it this way: owners are “buried in spreadsheets and stretched across multiple roles.” 3
Mastercard is rolling out Virtual C-Suite, a tool that will pull together a company’s own financials with data from the 175 billion transactions on its network in 2025. The platform is set up to do performance analysis, flag risks or opportunities, make predictions, and suggest what to do next. Down the line, Mastercard plans to add digital execs for marketing and security, among other roles. “Operational complexity into clarity”—that’s the goal, according to Barnett. 1
There’s a snag. Santander and Mastercard announced on March 2 they’d pulled off Europe’s first live end-to-end payment using an AI agent inside a regulated banking setup. Still, Santander clarified this happened in a controlled setting—not an actual commercial launch. Mastercard, for its part, says Verifiable Intent will be rolled into Agent Pay in the coming months. Google’s Stavan Parikh weighed in as well, stressing that user intent for AI-driven payments must stay “clear, provable and protected.” 4
Competition is heating up on this front. Visa, back in December, reported it had run hundreds of controlled agent-initiated transactions and anticipated rolling out secure, AI-enabled commerce to consumers by early 2026. In January, PayPal announced plans to be a payment choice within Google’s new AI-powered checkout feature. 5
Mastercard is ramping up its AI efforts just weeks after announcing plans to trim roughly 4% of its global staff, a move following a strategic review. Still, the company posted a stronger-than-expected profit for the fourth quarter. Back in January, Reuters reported that the job cuts were part of an effort to redirect investment within the company. 6
Mastercard lost roughly 0.6% in New York afternoon trade Tuesday. Visa edged lower too, off around 0.3%.