OmniPact has secured $50 million in a private funding round to advance its decentralized trust infrastructure. The New York-based protocol is building a trust layer for peer-to-peer transactions involving both physical and digital assets.
A consortium of institutional investors and family offices backed the round, requesting anonymity. The capital will speed up mainnet development, cross-chain integration, and the launch of a decentralized arbitration module, bringing the project closer to full global deployment.
A large share of the proceeds will fund the final development of OmniPact’s core contracts. Security audits of the multi-chain infrastructure are also scheduled as part of this phase.
Both steps must be completed before the protocol can advance into public deployment. This work is set to run alongside active engineering efforts on the mainnet.
OmniPact also confirmed that its testnet launch remains on schedule for Q1 2026. This milestone gives the protocol a clear timeline as it moves toward full market entry. Reaching this target would place OmniPact ahead of many competitors in the decentralized commerce sector.
Part of the capital will also go toward expanding OmniPact’s engineering team. More developers are expected to speed up real-world asset (RWA) integration across the platform. AI agent transaction capabilities are also being developed as part of this funding cycle.
Co-founder and CEO Alex Johnson commented on the raise, stating: “The funding validates our thesis that the future of commerce requires a neutral, transparent, and trustless foundation.”
Johnson added that the infrastructure “eliminates intermediaries entirely, returning power to users.” He further noted that investor confidence would allow the team to bring secure, decentralized custody to a global audience.
OmniPact’s protocol is built to solve the trust problem that persists in peer-to-peer transactions. The platform deploys smart contracts as on-chain guarantors, removing reliance on any centralized platform. Two parties can therefore transact directly, with no third-party intermediary required.
Furthermore, the protocol pairs algorithmic custody with a built-in decentralized arbitration module. A reputation system operates alongside both tools, reinforcing accountability across all user activity.
Together, these mechanisms support secure and verifiable peer-to-peer asset exchange. The model also removes single points of failure common in traditional escrow services.
Cross-chain integration forms another technical pillar of OmniPact’s core architecture. The protocol is engineered to function across multiple blockchain networks at the same time. This gives the platform access to users operating across different digital asset ecosystems.
Institutional backers expressed confidence in OmniPact’s roadmap at the time of the announcement. They cited the protocol’s capacity to set new standards across both Web4 and traditional commerce.
Johnson concluded that the round gives the team the resources to “execute our roadmap” and deliver a live, fully operational protocol to a global audience.
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