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Anthropic integrates agent orchestration into the model; wrapper-style startups are in trouble.
Anthropic Wants to Take Full Control of Intelligent Agents
The recently launched managed intelligent agent platform by Anthropic is not just a new product; it’s an expansion of their territory. Screenshots circulating on Twitter show a “Fleet Panel”: 8 intelligent agents running 247 tasks simultaneously, connecting to HubSpot for lead generation and drafting proposals. In simple terms, they’re packaging and selling production-grade infrastructure and models, making third-party “layered” orchestration tools awkward. Companies now have to consider: if Anthropic can handle orchestration themselves, do I still need to add an extra layer in the middle?
The timing is also quite delicate. Developers on Twitter generally find this tool straightforward, and its release coincided precisely after OpenClaw’s subscription was blocked—placing Anthropic simultaneously as an “innovator” and a “rule maker.” The open-sourcing of MCP and the upgrade of code execution capabilities are no coincidences; they’re measures to prevent ecosystem fragmentation. Another data point: multi-agent systems can improve broad-task performance by about 90% compared to single agents, but consume roughly 15 times more tokens. This cost structure makes “on-demand managed scaling” feasible.
Regarding the OpenClaw ban from April 4-6: it wasn’t arbitrary. Developers reported that some proxies, subscribing at $200, could burn through $5,000 worth of tokens in a day, overwhelming the system. Some shifted to local NVIDIA DGX deployments, leading to claims on Twitter of “open-source being rate-limited,” but that misses the point: Anthropic’s real focus is enterprise-grade reliability, not casual experimentation. The GENIUS Act may indirectly promote “agent-based finance” integration in the stablecoin space, but a more immediate highlight is the HubSpot connector—Anthropic positioning itself within the “truly usable integration layer.”
This table reflects public opinion divides, but the overall trend is clear: companies want stable, reliable managed services. Combining incomplete startup funding data, roughly 70% of VC capital betting on the “agent race” faces exposure here. It’s very much like early cloud computing: AWS rapidly marginalized on-prem middleware.
Conclusion: Anthropic is turning “model-internal orchestration” into the default enterprise option. If you’re building or deploying on this system, you’re still early and can benefit from cost efficiencies; if you’ve invested in independent “encapsulation/orchestration” startups, your position is more passive.
Significance: High
Category: Product Launch, Industry Trend, Market Impact
Judgment: Entering managed, model-native intelligent agent platforms now is still early; the most advantage goes to builders, enterprise tech teams, and funds focusing on underlying platform and integration layers. Short-term trading gains are limited; investors heavily weighted in standalone “encapsulation/orchestration” startups are already at a disadvantage.