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Singaporean fintech MetaComp has secured $35 million in funding through two investment rounds completed within three months, reflecting increasing investor interest in regulated platforms that bridge traditional financial systems and digital assets.
The newly announced Pre-A+ round, supported by investors including Spark Venture and Alibaba, comes after the company secured $22 million in a Pre-A round in December. That earlier round drew participation from Sky9 Capital, Eastern Bell Capital, Freshwave Fund, Noah, and Beingboom Capital. MetaComp said the additional funding will be used to scale its financial infrastructure platform that supports transactions across both fiat and stablecoin networks.
MetaComp announced the completion of the Pre-A+ round on March 13, 2026, saying the funding will accelerate the development of its regulated “Web2.5” financial architecture. The term refers to a model that combines traditional financial systems with blockchain-based payment and investment services.
MetaComp positions itself as a platform that connects conventional payment rails with digital asset networks. Its technology allows businesses and financial institutions to make cross-border foreign exchange payments using stablecoins while still interacting with traditional fiat banking systems.
This hybrid approach aims to address some of the inefficiencies of international payments, where transactions often take several days to settle and involve multiple intermediaries.
The company operates under a Major Payment Institution licence issued by the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) since December 2022. It is part of the Alpha Ladder Group, formerly known as MVGX Holdings, which provides financial services across digital asset infrastructure and capital markets.
Together with its affiliate Alpha Ladder Finance, MetaComp provides payment and treasury services to enterprises, financial institutions, and ultra-high-net-worth individuals across Asia, the Middle East, and Africa.
MetaComp has introduced several products aimed at improving global payment efficiency.
Last year the company completed its first cross-border transaction under the CNT Carbon Stablecoin framework, followed by the launch of the StableX Network, an infrastructure layer designed to support instant settlement between institutions.
The company says StableX will form the backbone of its global payment ecosystem, enabling faster and more compliant transfers across multiple financial markets.
According to the company, the latest funding will help expand the network across high-growth financial corridors where demand for real-time cross-border payments is increasing.
Key expansion regions include:
These regions are seeing rapid growth in digital payments and international trade, creating demand for faster settlement systems that operate beyond traditional banking rails.
In addition to expanding its payment network, MetaComp plans to invest in artificial intelligence to support its platform.
Part of the funding will be used to develop what the company calls an Agent-Skills-MCP (Model Context Protocol) architecture. The framework is intended to support AI-driven financial services, enabling automated systems to interact with payment and wealth management tools within the company’s platform.
The broader idea behind MetaComp’s strategy is the emergence of “Web2.5” finance — an environment where traditional finance and digital assets operate within unified regulatory frameworks rather than separate ecosystems.
Growing institutional demand for regulated digital asset platforms
The company says its business model reflects rising institutional demand for regulated digital asset infrastructure.
MetaComp currently serves enterprises, financial institutions, and wealthy individuals, offering services that combine stablecoin-based payments with access to traditional and tokenized investment products.
According to the company, it achieved full-year net profitability in 2025, an uncommon milestone for early-stage fintech platforms operating in the digital asset sector.
The company said that, when combined with operating revenue and other funding sources, the recent investment increases its available liquidity to over $100 million. It added that this stronger financial position will support its plans for international expansion and further development of its platform.
Investors backing the company believe hybrid payment infrastructure could become a major market as regulatory frameworks for digital assets mature.
“MetaComp was built on the conviction that the future of cross-border finance will not be purely traditional or purely digital,” said Tin Pei Ling, Co-President of MetaComp.
“It will be an integrated architecture where fiat rails and stablecoin networks operate together.”
She added that the latest funding will accelerate the rollout of the StableX Network, particularly in markets where demand for compliant and real-time cross-border settlement is growing rapidly.
Investors also highlighted the broader opportunity in digital financial infrastructure as blockchain technology, artificial intelligence, and financial regulation continue to converge.
MetaComp’s growth also reflects Singapore’s increasing importance as a hub for regulated digital asset innovation.
The Monetary Authority of Singapore has taken a cautious but supportive approach to digital asset regulation, allowing companies to experiment with blockchain-based financial services while maintaining strict compliance standards.
For fintech companies, this regulatory clarity has helped position Singapore as a base for developing global digital finance platforms.
MetaComp’s strategy—combining stablecoin payments with regulated financial services—fits within this broader trend of building institutional-grade digital asset infrastructure.
Cross-border payments remain one of the most complex and costly parts of the global financial system. Even as digital payments become more common, settlement across countries still relies heavily on traditional banking networks.
Platforms like MetaComp aim to change that by creating systems where traditional finance and digital assets can operate together under regulatory oversight.
With fresh funding and growing institutional interest, the company now faces the challenge of scaling its infrastructure across multiple regions while maintaining compliance in a rapidly evolving regulatory landscape.
If successful, MetaComp’s hybrid approach could offer a glimpse into how the next generation of global financial infrastructure may evolve—bridging the gap between the conventional banking system and the emerging digital asset economy.