Decentralized protocol OmniPact has secured $50 million in a private funding round to advance its infrastructure for trustless peer-to-peer transactions. The investment, backed by a consortium of anonymous institutional investors and family offices, will accelerate the development of OmniPact's mainnet, cross-chain features, and decentralized arbitration module.
The funds are earmarked for final development and security audits of the protocol's core smart contracts and multi-chain infrastructure. A significant portion will also support the scheduled testnet launch in Q1 2026 and expand the engineering team to hasten the integration of real-world asset (RWA) and AI agent transaction capabilities.
"The funding validates our thesis that the future of commerce requires a neutral, transparent, and trustless foundation," said Alex Johnson, Co-founder and CEO of OmniPact. "Our infrastructure eliminates intermediaries entirely, returning power to users. This investors' confidence lets us execute our roadmap and bring secure, decentralized custody to a global audience."
The protocol aims to solve the "trust problem" in P2P exchanges by using smart contracts as on-chain guarantors, combining algorithmic custody with decentralized arbitration and reputation systems. The goal is to enable secure transactions of both physical and digital assets without centralized platforms.