Institutional-grade wallet software.
Auracle Technologies Inc. is a technology provider. The Auracle platform connects users to financial services provided by licensed third-party partners, including regulated financial institutions. Auracle is not a bank, does not custody client assets, and does not provide investment advice.
What is Auracle?
Auracle is a technology platform and global wallet interface that enables users to access financial services delivered by licensed partners. We build the software layer that powers secure onboarding, account visibility, and partner integrations — while maintaining strict separation between technology and regulated financial services.
Auracle does not provide banking, custody, or investment services. Where financial products are made available, they are offered by appropriately licensed third-party entities and are subject to their terms, eligibility, and jurisdictional availability.
Expertise & Foundation
Auracle was built by a team with backgrounds across institutional finance, cybersecurity, and systems engineering. Our mission is to deliver a modern wallet experience with enterprise-grade security and clear role separation between technology and regulated services.
Our role in the ecosystem
Technology Platform
Auracle provides the secure software infrastructure and wallet interface that connects users to partner services.
Licensed Financial Partners
Financial services are provided by regulated financial institutions and other licensed counterparties, depending on jurisdiction.
User Agency
Users maintain control over decisions through transparent access, clear disclosures, and partner terms.
Security & Integrity
Institutional-grade security architecture, secure sessions, and operational controls designed for reliability.
What Auracle is not
Built for transparency
Every aspect of Auracle is designed for clarity. Auracle provides the software interface; regulated partners provide financial services. This separation helps ensure users understand how access is structured and who is responsible for the underlying service.
