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Home Sci-Fi

Steward raises $5M to automate AML compliance

March 17, 2026
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Compliance is the part of financial services that nobody likes to talk about, and nobody can afford to get wrong. For investment managers, the obligation to know your client, verify their business, and monitor them continuously has historically meant armies of analysts working through documents, running database checks, and filing reports that no one reads until something goes wrong.

Steward, the US-based fintech that has built an AI-driven compliance platform, announced this week that it has raised $5M to expand its reach in this market. The company says it currently manages compliance processes across $100B in assets under management, a figure that implies meaningful institutional traction, even if it reflects assets monitored rather than assets managed by Steward itself.

The platform automates investor onboarding, KYC (know your customer), KYB (know your business), and KYI (know your investor) processes across the US, UK, and EU. Document review, risk scoring, and periodic compliance reviews, tasks that typically require significant manual effort, are handled through AI agents trained on regulatory frameworks in each jurisdiction.

The AML software market is crowded, but compliance automation at the growth-stage investment firm level remains an underserved segment. Larger banks have bespoke systems; smaller fund managers tend to patch together manual processes and off-the-shelf tools that do not talk to each other.

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Steward’s pitch is that a purpose-built AI layer, one that understands investment management structures rather than just retail banking, can close that gap.

Agentic AI has become a common framing for this category in early 2026, with several compliance platforms repackaging existing functionality under the agent banner. Whether Steward’s architecture goes beyond smart document processing into genuinely autonomous compliance workflows remains, on the basis of public information, unclear.

The company’s growth trajectory and the $100B AMS figure suggest the market sees value in the proposition regardless.

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