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Stablecoin Firm Rain Valued at $1.95 Billion in $250 Million Fundraise

Stablecoin company Rain said on Friday it raised $250 million in a Series C funding round led by ICONIQ, valuing the firm at $1.95 billion, as investor appetite for crypto-related businesses continues to strengthen.

Stablecoins — cryptocurrencies pegged to assets such as the U.S. dollar — have gained traction among consumers, investors and major financial institutions as digital assets move closer to the financial mainstream. The sector has also benefited from a more accommodating regulatory environment under U.S. President Donald Trump’s administration, encouraging traditional financial firms to explore crypto-based products.

Rain said the latest round brings its total funding to more than $338 million and comes just four months after its previous fundraise. The company added that its valuation has risen more than 17-fold in the past 10 months.

A spokesperson for Rain said the company’s priority is to expand its presence in key licensed markets and deepen its full-stack stablecoin payments platform, including through strategic acquisitions.

Rain provides infrastructure that allows businesses to issue and manage stablecoin-linked payment cards and digital wallets, enabling users to transact anywhere Visa is accepted.

“Stablecoins are quickly becoming the way money moves in the 21st century, but adoption by users worldwide requires cards and apps that just work,” said Rain CEO and co-founder Farooq Malik. He added that Rain’s active card base has grown 30-fold over the past year, while annualized payment volume increased 38%, though the company remains “in the early innings.”

Malik said the new capital will be used to enter additional markets, scale operations and support more enterprise product launches.

Other investors participating in the round included Sapphire Ventures, Dragonfly, Bessemer Venture Partners, Galaxy Ventures, FirstMark, Lightspeed, Norwest and Endeavor Catalyst.

Legal AI Pioneer Clio Hits $5 Billion Valuation After $500 Million Funding Round

Clio, a Canadian legal artificial intelligence firm, announced on Monday that it has raised $500 million in fresh funding led by New Enterprise Associates (NEA), boosting its valuation to $5 billion.

The Vancouver-based company, founded in 2008 by Jack Newton and Rian Gauvreau, develops AI-powered tools that help law firms and legal departments manage cases, automate workflows, conduct research, and streamline operations. Clio’s platform is currently used by legal professionals in over 130 countries.

The funding round also saw participation from existing backers TCV, Goldman Sachs Asset Management, Sixth Street Growth, and JMI Equity, highlighting continued investor confidence in the booming market for AI productivity tools.

In addition to the equity raise, Clio secured a $350 million debt facility led by Blackstone and Blue Owl Capital, which will help fund AI product development and future strategic acquisitions.

The new valuation marks a significant leap from last year’s $3 billion figure, underscoring the surging demand for AI solutions in professional services, as firms increasingly turn to automation to improve efficiency and reduce costs.

Venture capital interest in legal tech and generative AI has soared this year, as companies across industries race to integrate intelligent systems capable of handling administrative, analytical, and compliance tasks once performed by human professionals.

Southeast Asia’s Digital Economy Sees Slower Private Funding Growth Despite AI Boom

Private funding for Southeast Asia’s digital economy rose 15% year-on-year to $7.7 billion in the 12 months to June 2025, lagging the global private investment growth rate of 25%, according to a new report by Google, Temasek Holdings, and Bain & Company.

While the figure marks an improvement from 2024, it remains about 70% below the region’s 2021 record high of $27 billion, reflecting a slower recovery from the post-pandemic investment cooldown.

The report found that funding is increasingly concentrated in late-stage rounds, with the share of seed-to-Series B deals dropping from around 30% to 20% over the past year.

This year’s edition expanded its coverage to include Brunei, Cambodia, Laos, and Myanmar, alongside Indonesia, Thailand, Vietnam, Singapore, Malaysia, and the Philippines — a region of nearly 700 million people and one of the world’s fastest-growing internet markets, driven by a young population and rising smartphone use.

Despite the funding slowdown, AI startups remain a bright spot, attracting 32% of all private capital in the region during the first half of 2025 — up slightly from 30% in the second half of 2024. Over 680 AI startups secured more than $2.3 billion, with Singapore hosting more than 495 of them.

The report also highlighted rapid data center expansion, as countries rush to build infrastructure for the AI boom. Data center capacity in Southeast Asia is expected to grow 2.8 times, surpassing the 2.2 times growth forecast for the wider Asia-Pacific.

Malaysia leads this expansion, with 2,415 MW of new capacity planned — more than half the region’s total 4,620 MW — attracting major investments from Microsoft, Amazon, Google, Tencent, Huawei, and Alibaba.

Meanwhile, TikTok plans to invest $4 billion in data hosting facilities in Thailand, while Google and Amazon are each investing $1 billion and $5 billion respectively in the country, underscoring the growing competition in Southeast Asia’s digital infrastructure landscape.