Catena Labs Secures $30M Series A and Files for US Bank Charter

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Catena Labs, co-founded by Circle’s Sean Neville, has secured $30M in Series A funding led by Acrew Capital and is filing for a U.S. bank charter. The firm, which aims to build financial infrastructure for AI agents, previously raised $18M in May 2025 from investors including a16z crypto and Circle Ventures. The bank charter filing underlines its push to support liquidity and crypto markets with a regulated framework. As global regulatory frameworks like MiCA advance, Catena’s move signals a step toward institutional integration for AI-driven financial services.

Catena Labs, the AI-native financial infrastructure company founded by Circle cofounder Sean Neville, has closed a $30M Series A led by Acrew Capital. The company is simultaneously filing for a US bank charter, a move that would make it one of the first startups purpose-built to serve as a regulated financial institution for AI agents.

From stealth to Series A in 12 months

Catena’s trajectory has been notably fast. The company emerged from stealth in May 2025 with $18M in backing from a roster of crypto-native heavyweights including a16z crypto and Circle Ventures. Now, roughly a year later, it has nearly tripled its total known funding with this $30M raise.

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The bank charter filing is the more significant development. Raising venture capital is one thing. Voluntarily subjecting yourself to the full weight of US banking regulation is another thing entirely. Neville is betting that the companies and developers deploying AI agents at scale will need a financial partner that is actually licensed to hold deposits, process payments, and operate within the existing regulatory framework.

Why AI agents need their own financial infrastructure

Every bank account requires a human owner. Every payment processor assumes a person clicked “confirm.” Every compliance check, from KYC to anti-money laundering, is built around the assumption that a human being is on at least one end of the transaction. AI agents break that assumption.

Neville’s background makes him unusually well-positioned for this specific problem. As cofounder of Circle, the company behind the USDC stablecoin, he spent years navigating the intersection of digital payments and financial regulation.

What the bank charter changes

Filing for a bank charter transforms Catena from a fintech infrastructure company into something with far more regulatory gravity. A chartered bank can hold deposits, issue loans, and process payments without relying on a partner bank to do the regulated parts. That independence matters enormously when your entire value proposition is being a trusted, compliant intermediary.

The a16z crypto involvement in the earlier round suggests that even crypto-native investors see value in a compliance-first approach. The competitive landscape is still forming, but few companies pursuing AI agent financial infrastructure have taken the step of actually pursuing a bank charter.

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