Samaya AI, startup building AI for financial services, raises $43.5 million in VC funding
Samaya AI cofounder and CEO Maithra Raghu. · Fortune · Photo courtesy of Samaya AI

Samaya AI, a startup that creates AI models that assist financial analysts and which is backed by a number of leading figures both in Silicon Valley and on Wall Street, has raised $43.5 in new venture capital financing.

Venture capital firm New Enterprise Associates led the funding round. The valuation of Samaya following the new funding was not disclosed. Also participating in the new investment round were former Google CEO turned prominent Silicon Valley investor Eric Schmidt; AI “godfather” Yann LeCun, who is Meta’s chief AI scientist; David Siegel, who is a confounder of the hedge fund Two Sigma; and Marty Chavez, the former Goldman Sachs technology executive who is now vice chair of the investment firm Sixth Street Partners.

The company was founded in 2022 by AI researchers who were working at leading AI labs, including Google Brain, Meta’s Fundamental AI Research lab, Amazon Web Services, and the Allen Institute for Artificial Intelligence. Maithra Raghu, Samaya’s co-founder and CEO, said that she and her co-founders were seeing the development of generative AI within these labs and saw obvious applications in financial services.

But at the same time, she says, the founders believed that rather than developing broad, general-purpose large language models (LLMs) that were designed to perform any task, better quality results could be obtained from creating products that would be specialized for particular domains. “We deeply believed back then that expert intelligence emerges from specialization,” she said. “It is hard to hit the level of quality and reliability [financial firms require] without specialization.”

The company’s first product is a tool that can conduct financial research and analysis. It can both look across the web for high quality sources of financial data—such as SEC filings—or be attached to a firm’s own knowledge base and data sources and use those to find information. The system can be used to find comparable companies and compare their financial valuation and performance—a task financial analysts often undertake. It can also be used to help with due diligence on potential investments.

It is already being deployed at Morgan Stanley’s Institutional Securities Group and at a number of hedge funds. Katy Huberty, global director of research at Morgan Stanley, said that Samaya is creating “actionable insights from both our extensive Research library as well as external sources, enhancing our ability to provide world class analysis to our clients.”

Today Samaya also announced the debut of a new AI agent it calls Causal World Models. The system excels at modeling economic systems. In a trial project, Samaya used the new AI software to model the effect of the Trump administration’s proposed tariffs on the entire U.S. economy. The system produced a complex flow diagram highlighting the interaction between various economic sectors and providing both quantitative and qualitative analysis.

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