From Mobile Commerce Will Go Mainstream in 2015: Collison · · Bloomberg Originals
“we actually think you know 2015 will be the year that mobile Commerce actually goes mainstream. We're seeing uh you know Apple announced at WWDC that they're seeing uh two times the conversion rate uh thanks to Apple pay inside of apps uh and uh that's very meaningful because you talk to any online retailer and actually you know letting people buy inside their app is is one of the biggest problems they have right cuz before it was so so clunky you're there kind of typing in your details on your phone with this tiny screen uh and with Apple pay you just press the thumbprint sensor and you're done.”
On , John Collison, President & Co-founder at Stripe, spoke about mobile commerce during Mobile Commerce Will Go Mainstream in 2015: Collison on Bloomberg Originals.
John Collison, president and co-founder of Stripe, has been a prominent voice on the intersection of artificial intelligence and commerce, particularly during Stripe Sessions 2026 in late April. He described the current period as "day 119 of the singularity," a phrase he used to characterize the rapid pace of AI development. Collison demonstrated Stripe's new Agent Wallet, which allows AI agents to make purchases using single-use tokens, and discussed the concept of "agentic commerce," where AI agents autonomously perform tasks such as buying domains and deploying websites. He noted that new business creation on Stripe was up 71% year-over-year in Q1, attributing this growth to AI lowering barriers to entrepreneurship. Collison also addressed broader economic trends, stating that Stripe businesses are responsible for about 1.6% of global GDP. He argued that the minimum efficient size of a serious business is "collapsing" and that solopreneurs are scaling to seven figures. In interviews, he suggested that AI agents may prefer stablecoins for microtransactions due to near-zero transaction costs, and he predicted a "really big first mover advantage" for businesses that enable machine-to-machine payments. Collison also commented on tariff impacts, saying that "tariff costs are still working their way through to the consumer" and that the story is "not written yet."