Dyna.Ai has raised an eight-figure, USD-denominated Series A as it positions its agent-based artificial intelligence software for wider use in large organisations, particularly in regulated industries such as banking and financial services.
Lion X Ventures led the financing. The firm is advised by OCBC Bank’s Mezzanine Capital Unit.
ADATA, a Taiwan-listed technology company, also joined the round, alongside a Korean financial institution and a group of finance industry veterans.
From pilots to production
Dyna.Ai is targeting the gap between early AI trials and live deployment in day-to-day operations. Many large companies have built proof-of-concept systems, but fewer have moved them into production environments with governance, controls and accountability.
The company markets what it calls a “Results-as-a-Service” approach, framed around measurable commercial outcomes rather than experimentation.
Dyna.Ai offers software for building AI agents, pre-built agents designed for specific tasks, and agent-based applications that run within defined workflows. It positions these tools for settings that require auditability and compliance.
Its software is already deployed in live enterprise environments. Dyna.Ai cited global and regional banks and other financial institutions in Asia, the Americas and the Middle East as users, but did not disclose customer names.
Investor group
The investor syndicate suggests an emphasis on financial services use cases and highlights the growing role of regional corporate and institutional investors in early-stage AI companies in Asia.
The company said the funding will support faster deployment of its agentic AI offering across large organisations. It described the next phase as continued delivery, governance and longer-term platform development.
Regional backdrop
The round comes as Southeast Asia attracts more AI investment and policy attention. Dyna.Ai cited forecasts that the region’s AI market could exceed USD $16 billion by 2033.
Singapore has been positioning itself as a hub for responsible AI development, and has committed to invest more than SGD $1 billion in public AI research over the next five years, according to figures cited by the company.
Founded in 2024, Dyna.Ai said its early product direction was shaped by operational bottlenecks inside large enterprises.
Chairman and Co-Founder Tomas Skoumal said the leadership team drew on experience inside large organisations when setting that focus.
“Fundamentally, we are innovation-driven and commercial people who have experienced the same operational challenges we are solving today,” Skoumal said. “While much of the industry was focused on how broadly AI could be applied, we doubled down early on a specific, pressing problem and built with outcomes in mind. That focus continues to guide how we work with enterprises today and has built trust with C-suite leaders across institutions around the world.”
Execution focus
For investors, the pitch centres on implementation inside complex organisations rather than model development. Lion X Ventures said the market is moving beyond experimentation.
“Enterprise AI is entering a phase where execution and measurable outcomes matter more than experimentation,” said Irene Guo, CEO of Lion X Ventures. “Dyna.Ai differentiates itself through strong domain expertise, operational discipline, and the ability to deploy agentic AI within complex, regulated enterprise environments. We are pleased to support the team as they scale across global enterprise and financial services markets.”
Dyna.Ai’s Head of Investor Relations and General Manager for Singapore and Hong Kong, Cynthia Siantar, pointed to a similar shift in enterprise buying behaviour across the region.
“Across the region, we’re seeing a shift in how enterprises approach AI,” Siantar said. “The focus has moved past pilots and experimentation to how AI can be deployed in day-to-day operations and deliver real outcomes. With Dyna.Ai, we are proud to take a Singapore-built platform to leading BFSI enterprises in the region and across the world.”
Dyna.Ai said it has operations across Asia, the Middle East and the Americas, and is targeting further expansion in global enterprise and financial services markets.




