New crop of AI trading products
Retail and institutional-facing AI trading products expanded this week: MoneyFlare pitched a fully automated crypto bot, Bitget upgraded its Agent Hub toward full execution, and product reviews are comparing top Hyperliquid bots as competition for alpha tightens. ( )
MoneyFlare’s announcement ran on March 27–30, 2026 and names RICHMOND AI FINANCIAL SERVICES LTD as the operator; Companies House records show that legal entity was registered on August 27, 2021 under company number 13588994. (markets.businessinsider.com)) The MoneyFlare website advertises tiered “AI trading plans,” including a Free Trial with $100 credit and a 24‑hour payout example of $0.80 and a listed Cross‑Exchange Arbitrage plan showing a $1,200 stake over seven days with a $21.60 daily return in its marketing materials. (moneyflare.com)) Crunchbase lists MoneyFlare (also shown as MoneyFlare / RICHMOND AI FINANCIAL SERVICES LTD) as an active private AI/crypto firm but does not display a disclosed venture funding round on its public profile. (crunchbase.com)) Bitget’s March 31, 2026 expansion of Agent Hub added five analytical “AI Skills” and 19 integrated data tools, extending the Hub from market access toward an integrated analysis‑to‑execution stack. (coinedition.com)) That expansion builds on Bitget’s March 9 update that introduced Skills and a CLI and completed an “MCP + API + Skills + CLI” invocation stack that Bitget says allows third‑party agents (example: OpenClaw) to connect and begin trading in roughly three minutes with access to spot, futures, account and asset management. (bitget.com)) BraveNewCoin’s sponsored roundup published March 31 lists the “Top 7 Hyperliquid Trading Bots for 2026” and names providers such as Hyperbot, Katoshi AI and goodcryptoX while noting Hyperliquid’s large community and a reported retrodrop valued at over $12 billion that helped drive demand for third‑party bot tooling. (bravenewcoin.com)) Independent comparison pages and bot reviews point to cleavages reviewers use to rank providers—custody model, supported algo types (DCA, Grid, Infinity Trailing), fees and TradingView/webhook integration—positions that directly answer Hyperliquid’s native gap on advanced order types. (coinlaunch.space)) Security and risk signals surfaced in coverage this week: media and commentary pieces flagged that promotional plan returns and “no‑code” automation claims are marketing points on vendor sites and urged scrutiny of backtests, custody arrangements and undisclosed track records before capital allocation. (moneyflare.com))