(Thanks to Rob Saunders, CEO, WhoFiled for curation.)
The week’s big theme: AI agents are no longer augmenting deal teams. They’re replacing workflow steps entirely.
Rogo raised $160M in a Series D led by Kleiner Perkins, with Sequoia, Thrive Capital, Khosla Ventures, and J.P. Morgan Growth Equity Partners participating. Total funding now exceeds $300M. The company’s AI agent, Felix, is used by more than 35,000 financial professionals at 250+ institutions including Rothschild & Co, Jefferies, Lazard, Moelis, and Nomura. Felix doesn’t just answer questions. It executes multi-step financial processes autonomously: deal screening, CIM generation, buyer outreach, and data room diligence. CEO Gabriel Stengel put it directly: “The institutions at the forefront are rapidly moving beyond automating tasks to becoming AI-native firms, with agentic systems that work across the firm and get smarter with every deal.”
The investor roster tells you where the market thinks this is going. When Kleiner Perkins, Sequoia, and JP Morgan Growth Equity all back the same investment banking AI platform, they’re not betting on a tool. They’re betting on an operating system. Rogo also acquired two companies recently: Plux AI (UK-based financial market intelligence) and Offset (AI agent execution).
Notable investment tech raises
Rogo raised $160M Series D (Kleiner Perkins, Sequoia, Thrive Capital, Khosla Ventures, J.P. Morgan Growth Equity Partners). See above.
Patlytics raised $40.5M in a Series B led by SignalFire, with N47, Relativity, and Myriad Venture Partners participating. AI-native patent workflow platform that automates claim mapping, infringement analysis, and opportunity identification. Used by 40%+ of Am Law 100 firms including Quinn Emanuel, Latham & Watkins, and Foley & Lardner, plus corporate IP teams at Rivian, Google, and Canon. Strategic investment from Relativity and the involvement of former Kirkland & Ellis chairman Jeff Hammes signal category validation.
Spektr raised $20M in a Series A led by NEA, with Northzone, Seedcamp, and PSV Tech. The Copenhagen-based company builds AI compliance infrastructure for banks and fintechs, deploying specialized agents that automate KYC and KYB workflows. Clients include Pleo, Santander Leasing, Mercuryo, and Monta. Every fund has a compliance team doing manual document review, ownership mapping, and risk assessments. Spektr is automating the analysts, not just the workflow.
On the radar
AngelList launched USVC on April 22, a registered venture capital fund that lets any U.S. investor, accredited or not, invest in private companies starting at $500. Naval Ravikant chairs the investment committee. The initial portfolio holds stakes in OpenAI, Anthropic, xAI, Sierra, Vercel, Crusoe, and Legora. The same week, Robinhood Ventures Fund I purchased $75 million in OpenAI common stock through a publicly traded vehicle, and Destiny Tech100 (Nasdaq: DXYZ) continued raising capital through its publicly listed portfolio of 100 venture-backed companies. Three different vehicles for retail private market access, all active in the same two-week window.
Finfuego raised $495K for Finley, an AI agent that automates cash forecasting, treasury optimization, and capital access. Tiny raise, but the product concept matters. If AI agents can reliably handle treasury and cash management, the same architecture applies to fund-level cash management and LP capital calls.
The takeaway for your tech stack
The three largest investment tech raises this period, Rogo ($160M), Patlytics ($40.5M), and Spektr ($20M), share the same architecture: specialized AI agents that execute professional-grade work autonomously, with humans reviewing outputs rather than producing them. Rogo’s agents screen deals and draft CIMs. Patlytics’ agents map patent claims. Spektr’s agents research companies and generate risk assessments.
The next generation of investment tech doesn’t assist professionals. It performs the work and asks professionals to approve it. For firms still evaluating AI adoption, the window for “wait and see” is closing. Your competitors at Rothschild and Lazard aren’t waiting.
Scope: All material fundraising activity, product launches, and infrastructure developments in the investment tech space.
Coverage definition: U.S. and global investment tech transactions and product activity. We define investment tech as tools, platforms, and infrastructure whose primary buyer is a fund manager, allocator, or financial advisor. This includes deal sourcing and modeling, portfolio analytics, fund administration, LP reporting, compliance and reg-tech, cap table management, alternative data for diligence, and AI tools purpose-built for the investment workflow. Consumer fintech, retail banking, and general SaaS are excluded.
Data sourced from SEC Form D filings, developer activity, and alternative signal tracking by Rob Saunders at WhoFiled.
