Oracle to integrate Lucinity's AI technology into financial crime platform
Oracle has acquired rights to Lucinity's AI-native investigation technology to strengthen its financial crime and compliance management (FCCM) portfolio. The integration will embed Lucinity's capabilities into Oracle's AI Investigator platform, giving financial institutions new AI agent-driven tools for case investigation and management.
The move addresses a specific problem: financial institutions want to automate compliance work but resist adding disconnected tools to their existing systems. Oracle's approach keeps everything within its platform, reducing integration complexity and change management overhead.
What changes for product teams
The integrated capabilities will enhance investigator workflows by automating routine tasks while keeping humans in control. Lucinity's technology surfaces relevant context at the moment investigators need it, rather than replacing investigation work entirely.
Jason Wynne, senior vice president of finance, risk, and compliance product development at Oracle, said the integration simplifies processes through AI agents and automation while letting customers innovate within their existing platform.
Gudmundur Kristjansson, founder and executive chairman of Lucinity, described Oracle as the right platform for "human-AI-centric investigation capabilities" that transform how investigators work rather than eliminate their role.
Timeline and availability
Oracle expects to deliver these capabilities on its FCCM platform within 12 months. The rollout will give financial services organizations access to agent-driven execution without requiring new infrastructure investments.
For product development teams, this represents a strategy of building AI into existing products rather than launching standalone tools. The approach reduces customer friction and strengthens portfolio value.
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