Thursday, April 9, 2026

The Agentic Shift: How Nous Research’s Hermes is Redefining Singapore’s Smart Nation Ambitions

In this briefing, we examine the emergence of Hermes—the flagship agentic model from Nous Research—and its profound implications for the global AI landscape. Far from being just another open-source LLM, Hermes represents a pivot towards autonomous reasoning and tool-integrated workflows. For Singapore, a nation currently executing its National AI Strategy 2.0, the arrival of such high-reasoning, customisable models offers a blueprint for sovereign AI development, productivity gains in a tight labour market, and the next evolution of the Smart Nation initiative.


The New Cadence of Autonomy

There is a certain quiet intensity to the morning rush at Raffles Place. Beneath the glass-and-steel canopies, the conversation has shifted. A year ago, the chatter in the queue for a flat white at Common Man Coffee Roasters was about generative curiosity—how to make a chatbot write a clever email. Today, the discourse is about agency. Specifically, how an AI model can move beyond mere mimicry to take actions, execute code, and manage complex, multi-step projects without constant human intervention.

Enter Hermes. Developed by the vanguard collective at Nous Research, Hermes (and its latest iterations like Hermes 3) is not merely a linguistic engine. It is a reasoning core designed for the "Agentic Era." As the world’s leading technology hubs scramble to define what comes after the initial LLM hype, Hermes offers a compelling answer: models that are fine-tuned not just to talk, but to do. For a city-state like Singapore, which prides itself on efficiency and "plug-and-play" infrastructure, the shift from passive chatbots to active agents is more than a technical upgrade; it is an economic necessity.

The Architecture of Reasoning: What Makes Hermes Different

To understand the significance of Hermes, one must look past the parameters. While the industry often obsesses over size—billion-parameter counts and trillion-token datasets—Nous Research has focused on the "how." Hermes is the result of meticulous fine-tuning, specifically designed to excel in complex reasoning, function calling, and long-context coherence.

Beyond the Stochastic Parrot

Early iterations of large language models were often criticised as "stochastic parrots"—highly sophisticated prediction machines that lacked a true internal model of logic. Hermes 3, however, leans heavily into "Chain-of-Thought" (CoT) reasoning. It doesn't just output an answer; it simulates a multi-pathway thought process to arrive at the most logical conclusion.

For the developer in a shophouse office in Tanjong Pagar, this means the model can handle "Agentic Workflows." If tasked with researching a market entry strategy for a fintech firm into Vietnam, Hermes doesn't just provide a summary. It can be programmed to browse the web, verify data against local regulatory APIs, format a structured JSON report, and even draft the necessary legal checklists—all within a single, autonomous loop.

The Open-Source Renaissance

The ethos of Nous Research is deeply rooted in the open-source movement. In a world where AI power is increasingly concentrated in the hands of a few "Closed AI" giants in Silicon Valley, Hermes provides a sophisticated alternative. It allows organisations to host their own "brain."

This is particularly relevant for Singapore’s "Sovereign AI" goals. By utilizing models like Hermes, local entities—from government agencies to SMEs—can maintain data residency and privacy, ensuring that sensitive information never leaves the Little Red Dot. It is the digital equivalent of building one's own high-precision tools rather than renting them from a distant landlord.


The Singapore Context: Navigating NAIS 2.0

Singapore’s National AI Strategy 2.0 (NAIS 2.0) is built on the premise that AI should be a "public good" and a "necessity for survival." The strategy emphasises three distinct pillars: Systems, People, and Communities. Hermes fits squarely into the "Systems" and "People" categories, acting as a force multiplier for a workforce that is perpetually stretched.

From Smart Nation to Agentic Nation

The transition from a "Smart Nation"—characterised by digitisation and connectivity—to an "Agentic Nation" is underway. Imagine the Municipal Services Office (MSO) using an agentic model like Hermes to manage citizen feedback. Instead of a simple triage system, a Hermes-backed agent could autonomously cross-reference a complaint about a fallen tree with NParks' maintenance schedules, verify the location via GeoSpace, and dispatch a work order directly to the nearest contractor, notifying the citizen at every step.

This is the promise of "High-Information Density" governance. It moves the needle from "e-government" (which still requires significant human processing) to "autonomous administration."

Localising the Global Brain

One of the challenges with global AI models is their inherent Western bias—a lack of nuance regarding Southeast Asian cultures, legal frameworks, and the idiosyncrasies of Singlish. However, because Hermes is built to be a flexible reasoning engine, it provides the perfect foundation for "Post-Training" and "Fine-Tuning" on local datasets.

The researchers at AI Singapore (AISG) have already demonstrated the power of regional models with the SEA-LION project. Integrating the agentic capabilities of Hermes with the linguistic nuance of SEA-LION could create a "Hyper-Local Agent"—one that understands the legal requirements of the Personal Data Protection Act (PDPA) as well as it understands the nuances of regional trade agreements.


Economic Implications: The Productivity Paradigm

Singapore faces a structural challenge: a low birth rate and a desire to limit reliance on low-skilled foreign labour. To maintain its status as a global financial and logistics hub, it must achieve massive gains in white-collar productivity.

The New "Augmented" Professional

In the glass towers of One-North, the role of the software engineer, the lawyer, and the financial analyst is being rewritten. With Hermes-style agents, these professionals no longer spend 60% of their time on data retrieval and synthesis.

  • In Finance: A Hermes agent can monitor real-time feeds from the MAS (Monetary Authority of Singapore), identify subtle shifts in capital requirements, and automatically adjust a bank's risk model.

  • In Law: A junior associate at a firm in Battery Road can use an agent to scan thousands of pages of case law from the Singapore International Commercial Court, identifying precedents with a precision that far exceeds human speed.

  • In Logistics: At PSA Singapore, agents could manage the complex choreography of autonomous guided vehicles (AGVs), predicting bottlenecks before they happen by reasoning through weather data, shipping delays, and port capacity.

The Cost of Intelligence

Cost-efficiency is where Hermes truly shines for the Singaporean SME. Using a closed-source API like GPT-4 can become prohibitively expensive at scale. Hermes, being open-source and optimizable for specific hardware, allows a local start-up to run a highly capable "reasoning agent" on local cloud infrastructure (such as those provided by Singtel or local AWS regions) at a fraction of the cost. This democratisation of high-level AI is essential for ensuring that Singapore’s innovation isn’t restricted to those with the deepest pockets.


Governance and the "Black Box" Problem

As we empower agents to take actions, we encounter the "alignment" and "governance" problem. If a Hermes-based agent makes an error in a medical diagnosis or a financial transaction, who is responsible?

Singapore’s approach to AI governance, led by the IMDA (Infocomm Media Development Authority), has been exemplary. The Model AI Governance Framework focuses on "Explainability, Transparency, and Fairness." Hermes, by its open nature, allows for greater transparency. Unlike closed models, researchers can "look under the hood" to understand why a certain decision was made.

However, the "Agentic" nature of the model introduces new risks:

  1. Recursive Loops: An agent tasked with "maximising efficiency" might inadvertently create feedback loops that crash a local system.

  2. Tool-Use Liability: If an agent is given access to a company's bank account or database, the security perimeters must be significantly hardened.

The Singaporean solution will likely involve "Sandboxing"—the same approach the MAS used for Fintech. We should expect to see "Agentic Sandboxes" where models like Hermes can be tested in controlled environments before being unleashed on the national infrastructure.


A Vignette from Telok Ayer

To see the future, one need only walk down Telok Ayer Street at dusk. In the shadow of the Thian Hock Keng Temple, you’ll find a mix of traditional trades and high-tech incubators. In one such incubator, a group of developers is currently working on an "Agentic Concierge" for the silver generation.

Using a fine-tuned Hermes model, they are building a system that doesn't just "talk" to the elderly via a screen. It monitors their health via wearables, manages their medication schedule, and—most importantly—reasons through their social needs. If it notices a user has been sedentary for three days, it doesn't just send a notification; it searches for local brisk-walking groups in the Bedok area, checks the weather, and asks, "The weather is clear at 5 PM; shall I book a Grab to the park for you?"

This is the "Hermes effect" in action: tech that isn't just smart, but active. It is a sophisticated, invisible layer of intelligence that fits perfectly into the Singaporean ethos of "pragmatic innovation."


Key Practical Takeaways

  • Move Beyond Chat: Organisations should stop viewing AI as a "search replacement" and start viewing it as an "autonomous workforce." Hermes is a tool for building agents, not just chatbots.

  • Prioritise Sovereignty: For sensitive sectors (Law, Finance, Government), the open-source nature of Hermes allows for on-premise deployment, ensuring data never leaves Singapore’s jurisdiction.

  • Invest in "Agentic Infrastructure": The real value lies in the "tools" you give the AI. To leverage Hermes, companies must build robust APIs that the model can call—allowing it to "read" and "write" to the real world.

  • Focus on Logic over Fluency: When evaluating models, look for "reasoning benchmarks" (like those Hermes excels at) rather than just how "human" the prose sounds.

  • Governance is Non-Negotiable: As agency increases, so must oversight. Adopting Singapore’s Model AI Governance Framework is essential for any Hermes deployment.


Frequently Asked Questions

How does Hermes differ from standard models like GPT-3.5 or Llama-3?

While Llama-3 is a foundational model, Hermes is a "fine-tuned" evolution specifically optimised for reasoning and tool-use. It is designed to follow complex instructions and execute functions (like coding or data analysis) more reliably than base models, making it far more suitable for "agentic" tasks where the AI must act autonomously.

Can Hermes be used for local Singaporean applications like processing Singlish or local law?

Yes, but it requires "Post-Training." Hermes provides the logical "brain," but developers in Singapore can fine-tune it on local datasets (such as the Singapore Statutes or regional linguistic data) to ensure it understands the local context while maintaining its high-level reasoning capabilities.

Is it safe to give an AI model like Hermes "Agency" over company systems?

Agency should always be granted in layers. Using a "Human-in-the-loop" (HITL) system is recommended, where the Hermes agent proposes actions (like a trade or a schedule change) and a human provides final approval. As trust and system robustness grow, more autonomy can be granted within defined "sandboxed" parameters.