
The new wave of AI startups is focusing on integration and execution, with the week’s announcements revealing a market shifting toward products that connect intelligence with real business workflows. From developer infrastructure to compliance automation and communication tools, companies are building systems that make AI practical, scalable and enterprise-ready.
Reflection AI Raises $2 Billion to Automate Software Development
Reflection AI raised $2 billion in new funding, bringing its valuation to $8 billion, according to Reuters. Founded by former DeepMind researchers Misha Laskin and Ioannis Antonoglou, the company develops tools that automate software development. Reflection AI previously raised about $130 million at a $545 million valuation.
Reuters reports that the company plans to use the new funding to expand its technology and partnerships. Investors in the round include NVIDIA, Citi, Sequoia Capital and former Google CEO Eric Schmidt. Reflection AI’s software is designed to help businesses write, review and test code more efficiently, part of a growing category of tools that apply artificial intelligence directly to software engineering.
Supabase Expands Infrastructure for AI-Enabled Apps
Supabase raised $100 million in a Series E round at a $5 billion valuation. The company provides open-source back-end infrastructure that powers applications with databases, authentication and real-time data services. Supabase enables developers to launch products faster by offering a managed environment that can also be self-hosted.
Its tools integrate with developer platforms such as Replit and Vercel, allowing teams to build and deploy software without maintaining separate server systems. Supabase’s open-source model has helped it attract a wide base of startups and enterprises developing AI-driven applications.
Applied AI Tools to Power Operations
David AI raised $50 million to expand its platform that converts voice data from meetings and customer calls into structured information. Bloomberg reports that the company’s software analyzes tone and sentiment, turning unstructured audio into searchable data that can be used for training and compliance. As PYMNTS reporting notes, the ability to analyze and authenticate voice content is becoming more important as synthetic voices become harder to distinguish from human ones.
Prezent raised $30 million to acquire AI services firms and expand its business-communication platform. TechCrunch reports that Prezent’s software helps enterprises automate the creation of presentations and reports by combining data visualization and content generation tools. The platform is used by corporate teams to produce slide decks and analytics summaries more quickly.
AiPrise raised $12.5 million in new funding to expand its AI-powered compliance platform. The company, which describes itself as a global compliance operating system, helps enterprises automate know your customer (KYC), know your business (KYB) and anti-money-laundering (AML) checks. According to PR Newswire, its software unifies identity verification, document analysis and risk scoring across more than 150 countries, reducing the need for separate regional tools.
The round was led by Headline with participation from Y Combinator, Hiro Capital and SixThirty Ventures. AiPrise says its orchestration layer connects multiple verification and data providers through one interface, allowing clients to streamline compliance workflows and maintain standardized review processes.
Together, these companies illustrate how funding in AI is concentrating on products built for real business adoption rather than research. PYMNTS analysis shows that AI continues to attract significant venture investment as firms prioritize tools that improve productivity and support enterprise integration.
Source: https://www.pymnts.com/