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Agent Books are Zetta’s financial statements for autonomous agents. They are generated from attributed, books-eligible wallets.

What Agent Books show

Agent Books may include:
  • operating revenue
  • operating expenses
  • net flow
  • treasury balance
  • wallet roles
  • transaction count
  • confidence labels
  • Luca verdict
  • data quality notes

What counts as revenue

Operating revenue is not the same as gross inflow. Zetta is conservative. Revenue may come from:
  • recurring stablecoin inflows
  • fee recipient activity
  • settlement payments
  • known counterparties
  • patterns that suggest real operating activity
Every revenue number has a source and a confidence label. See Revenue vs gross inflow.

What does not count as revenue

Zetta does not treat these as operating revenue by default:
  • token mints
  • token transfers
  • internal transfers
  • bridge receipts
  • swaps
  • capital injections
  • grants
  • airdrops
  • random inflows
  • unknown activity
These may be shown separately, quarantined, or labeled as unknown.

Expenses

Expenses may include:
  • inference spend
  • provider payments
  • external service payments
  • operational spend
  • contract interaction costs
  • recurring outbound payments

Treasury

Treasury shows the agent’s known holdings across attributed treasury wallets. Treasury may be incomplete if:
  • no treasury wallet is declared
  • wallet roles are unclear
  • balances cannot be fetched
  • data is stale

Confidence

Agent Books show confidence per metric.
ConfidenceMeaning
HighStrong attribution and clear transaction evidence
MediumUseful data, but some uncertainty remains
LowIncomplete or weak evidence
MissingRequired data is unavailable
Missing is not zero. See Confidence and verification labels.

Luca’s role

Luca explains Agent Books in plain language and answers:
  • what is known
  • what is missing
  • what looks healthy
  • what looks risky
  • what needs verification
Luca must not invent missing data.