IBM has launched a bold new generation of AI at the World Economic Forum in Davos on January 19, 2026. Called “Agentic AI,” these systems go beyond chatbots, capable of reasoning, planning, and executing complex business tasks on their own.
The tech giant also announced a major partnership with e& (formerly Etisalat Group). The first rollout targets Policy, Risk, and Compliance, using IBM watsonx Orchestrate and IBM OpenPages to automate governance tasks—already proven in an eight-week pilot.
IBM Consulting is rolling out a new framework to help companies adopt autonomous workflows. Its “Agent Registry” organizes task-specific AI agents—like purchasing or security agents—to avoid conflicts and ensure clear responsibilities.
These “narrow agents” are tightly controlled, acting like microservices within corporate systems. This allows multiple AI agents to operate simultaneously without stepping on each other’s toes.
Industry research backs IBM’s push. Gartner predicts enterprise AI agent adoption will jump from under 5% in 2025 to 40% in 2026. Companies are moving from keyboard-based assistants to goal-driven autonomous operators.
Experts warn of “Agent Sprawl,” where uncoordinated AI agents could clash and disrupt workflows. IBM’s orchestration layer aims to prevent this, keeping autonomous operations smooth and reliable.
Analysts say this launch marks the start of the “Intelligent Operations Era,” where humans set strategic goals and AI agents independently coordinate across legal, finance, and procurement to execute them.