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Mar 5, 2026
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NewDecoded
3 min read

Image by Dyna.AI
Singaporean AI firm Dyna.Ai has announced an undisclosed eight-figure Series A funding round led by Lion X Ventures. The investment, advised by OCBC Bank’s Mezzanine Capital Unit, aims to accelerate the deployment of Agentic AI systems across the financial sector. This capital injection marks a shift from mere experimentation toward operationalizing AI for measurable business outcomes.
The round saw participation from technology firm ADATA, a Korean financial institution, and several industry veterans. These funds will support the company's expansion across Asia, the Middle East, and the Americas. By securing backing from both technology and banking leaders, Dyna.Ai reinforces its position as a bridge between complex software and regulated financial environments.
Dyna.Ai specializes in what it calls Agentic AI, which performs autonomous tasks rather than just generating content. These task-ready agents are designed to execute workflows like loan processing and fraud detection within strict compliance frameworks. This approach allows institutions to move beyond simple chat interfaces into fully automated operational systems.
Operating under a Results-as-a-Service model, the company prioritizes commercial impact over research projects. Tomas Skoumal, Chairman and Co-Founder, noted that the industry is moving past broad applications to solve specific, pressing operational challenges. This focus has already led to live deployments in leading global and regional banks worldwide.
The investment arrives as the Southeast Asian AI market is projected to surpass $16 billion by 2033. Singapore continues to bolster this growth through a commitment of over $778 million in public AI research. Dyna.Ai leverages this regional momentum to provide scalable solutions for banks looking to optimize employee and customer experiences.
Decoded
The successful funding of Dyna.Ai signals a maturation of the enterprise AI market, moving from the initial hype of 2024 to a revenue-first era in 2026. While early AI efforts often stalled in pilot purgatory, this investment validates the demand for vertical-specific solutions that handle the regulatory rigors of banking. The involvement of ADATA also suggests a strategic alignment between software providers and hardware manufacturers to support high-performance enterprise stacks. Ultimately, this move highlights that the next phase of digital transformation is defined by agency: AI that does not just talk, but works.
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