CommBanks Buys Minority Stake in H2O.ai

November 8, 2021

Commonwealth Bank of Australia recently acquired a minority stake in Silicon Valley-based AI firm H2O.ai, in an effort to help the bank improve its banking experience for its customers.

While the actual monetary details of the deal were not disclosed, CBA was the leading investor in H2O.ai’s $100 million Series E growth financing rounding. The bank is also poised to become the exclusive financial services partner for the AI firm in Australia and New Zealand. This will give CBA access to H2O.ai’s AI cloud platform as well as a full team of machine learning engineers who will develop new AI solutions for the bank.

In 2019, CBA launched its banking app, touted as a “world-leading” in machine learning, data analysis and behavioural science. Coinciding with the launch, CBA announced that it would run around 200 machine learning models in addition to 157 billion data sets.

The launch of the app also coincided with the completion of the customer loyalty machine, which the bank has announced will use AI and machine learning to improve the customer experience.

CBA has turned to AI and machine learning technology to eliminate abusive transaction descriptions and automate the cheapest routing for transactions between Eftpos and international systems such as Mastercard and Visa.

For more information, you may view the original story from ZDnet.

Top Stories

Related Articles

December 31, 2025 Meta is buying Manus, a fast-growing agentic AI startup that already generates subscription revenue, in a deal more...

December 31, 2025 AST SpaceMobile has launched the largest satellite ever deployed in low-Earth orbit, escalating competition with SpaceX’s Starlink more...

December 31, 2025 Microsoft engineer Galen Hunt briefly set off alarm bells across the developer community after declaring an ambition more...

December 31, 2025 Global PC shipments could fall by as much as 9 per cent in 2026 as worsening memory more...

Jim Love

Jim is an author and podcast host with over 40 years in technology.

Share:
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn