The new partnerships with prominent Asian financial institutions, including Bank of Singapore and Hong Leong Bank (HLB), underscore Arta Finance ambition to bring institutional-grade AI-driven wealth-management capabilities to the global market.

Arta Finance announced a significant milestone in its growth journey: the adoption of its AI-powered wealth platform Arta AI by leading banks in Asia, Bank of Singapore, Hong Leong Bank, and Ethivo Asset Management (HK) Ltd, formerly known as UCAP HK AM Ltd, joining existing clients Wio Invest operated by Wio Securities LLC and Income Advisory Financial Advisers.
Arta AI is a SaaS platform for advisors, wealth managers, and banking institutions. It combines client portfolio data, firm research, real-time pricing, and product intelligence in a conversational interface that helps automate workflows, deepen client engagement, and support personalized investment advice.
The advanced AI platform brings together multiple technologies, such as agentic systems, function calling, retrieval-augmented generation (RAG), and traditional AI techniques like machine learning and convex optimization. It continuously learns from each user’s financial data to deliver highly personalized insights and recommendations.
At the Bank of Singapore, the platform will be deployed to support external asset managers (EAMs) and family offices with advanced investment analytics capabilities. Meanwhile, HLB is embedding Arta AI into its wealth-management ecosystem to better equip relationship managers with consistent, personalised recommendations aligned with each client’s risk appetite.
With the latest expansion, Arta AI becomes available globally (via the portal at arta.ai) and is now being delivered alongside Arta’s Wealth-as-a-Service model, enabling banks and institutions to embed the platform under a white-label arrangement or integrate selected modules.
This latest effort follows a broader push by Arta: earlier global launch initiatives included obtaining a regulatory licence from the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) and opening its Singapore-based hub for international operations.
Therefore, in the continuation of its expansion strategy, Arta will likely target further markets in Asia, the Middle East, and beyond, seeking to replicate its model of embedding AI into advisory workflows and enabling seamless integration with client portfolios, firm research, and product data. As the company grows its institutional base, the next phase may focus on deeper analytics, multi-asset support, and further customisation for bank-specific workflows.


