OmniPact, a decentralized protocol building a trust layer for peer-to-peer transactions of physical and digital assets, announced it has raised $50 million in a private funding round. The investment will accelerate the development of its mainnet, integration of cross-chain features, and deployment of its decentralized arbitration module.

Institutional investors and family offices backed the round, expressing confidence in OmniPact's roadmap to set new standards for secure, intermediary-free transactions. A significant portion of the funds will support final development, security audits, and the protocol's testnet launch, scheduled for Q1 2026. Expansion of the engineering team to integrate real-world asset and AI agent transaction capabilities is also planned.

"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."

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The OmniPact protocol addresses the "trust problem" in peer-to-peer transactions using smart contracts as on-chain guarantors, combining algorithmic custody with decentralized arbitration and reputation systems to enable secure exchanges without centralized platforms.