 When the oil market enters a phase of high volatility and the window for hedging risks shrinks to 3-4 months, traders find themselves in a familiar trap: the market moves faster than a human can react. But in parallel, another crisis is unfolding—a quiet, digital one, and therefore even more insidious. 96% of enterprise companies have already deployed AI agents into production. They automate procurement, trade on exchanges, write code, and manage supply chains. It sounds like a victory for technology. But here's what's actually happening: only 12% of companies can answer the question, "What exactly are our agents doing right now?" The remaining 88% live with agent sprawl—the uncontrolled proliferation of AI agents across the infrastructure. I am a trader. I am used to calculating risks. And the 12% figure is not just a bad KPI. It is a compliance time bomb. When your AI agent accidentally sends an order for the wrong volume or picks up a prompt injection via a GitHub comment (a real case with Copilot Agent and Gemini CLI last week), regulators will not accept the excuse, "We didn't know it could do that." The oil market and AI agents are a perfect pair for a crisis. High volatility means trader margins are under pressure, the decision-making window narrows, and everyone wants to automate faster than the competition. It is in this rush that companies lose control. They deploy agents that trade, analyze, and procure—but cannot explain on what data those agents make decisions. ASI Biont solves this problem at the architecture level. Not just a dashboard to "view logs," but a built-in governance system: each AI agent operates in a transparent framework, its actions are logged, decisions are explainable, and authority boundaries are strictly defined. You don't lose speed—you gain control without brakes. While 88% of companies wonder what their agents are doing in production, you can be among the 12% who sleep soundly. And a volatile market is just another workday. Sign up for ASI Biont and get the first month of AI agent monitoring for free. Because controlling your agents is not paranoia. It's professionalism.