Wall Street banks race to deploy AI agents as 51% now pilot digital assistants for productivity

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Major financial institutions are accelerating their adoption of agentic AI systems, with over half of banks now piloting digital assistants that work alongside human employees. Morgan Stanley plans to test client-facing agents this summer, while UBS reports advisors now spend 70% of their time with clients instead of on routine tasks. The technology is transforming functions from wealth management to trading, though regulatory concerns about oversight and accountability remain.

Wall Street Banks Accelerate AI Agents Deployment

Wall Street banks are intensifying their push to integrate AI agents into daily operations as they compete to gain an edge in productivity. A June KPMG survey revealed that 51% of banks piloting AI agents are now testing agentic AI systems that can accomplish tasks with minimal human supervision

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. These digital assistants are being deployed across multiple functions, from wealth management and client vetting to trading and treasury management, marking a significant shift in how financial institutions streamline operations.

Source: PYMNTS

Source: PYMNTS

"We are working with banks in particular on agents and human employees ... to help the banks look at all the roles end to end, and then determine which ones are hybrid roles, which ones are agentic employees, which ones are only human employees," said Peter Torrente, U.S. sector leader for banking at KPMG

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. This strategic approach reflects how AI adoption in banking is evolving beyond simple automation to reshape entire organizational structures.

Morgan Stanley and UBS Lead Client-Facing AI Implementation

Morgan Stanley is preparing to test digital assistants later this summer that will interact with clients at any time of the day, according to Koren Maranca, head of Artificial Intelligence for Wealth Management at the bank

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. These agents will push reminders and recommendations to financial advisors regarding their clients, analyze investments, suggest strategies, and assist in building portfolios

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At UBS, the impact on financial advising is already measurable. Financial advisors receive thousands of alerts daily about actions needed, such as when a client has an annuity maturing and needs to reinvest. "They gather all internal information from meetings, accounts and e-mail communications," said Richard James, head of AI product at UBS

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. Once advisors make decisions about transactions, AI agents can execute trades and complete money transfers. The bank reports that this technology enables advisors to spend 70% of their time on client interaction instead of routine tasks

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BNY Treats Digital Employees as Team Members

BNY has taken a unique approach by treating digital employees as teammates assigned specific tasks, with the ability to communicate with each other. CEO Robin Vince explained on a Wall Street Journal podcast that these agents receive login IDs and nicknames to join teams and work alongside human colleagues

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. "The digital employee has a login, it can actually operate in the systems, and it actually has a ... human manager that's responsible for training it, making sure that it actually is doing all the right things, like a performance review, if you will, quality control, and it has tasks every day," Vince said, describing their digital assistant named Payment Pete

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Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan, and Citi Expand Agentic AI Systems

Goldman Sachs partnered with Anthropic earlier this year to develop agents for trading and transaction accounting, client vetting and onboarding

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. JPMorgan identifies corporate treasury as ripe for transformation through agentic AI, while Citi is preparing to roll out an AI-enabled virtual wealth management "team member"

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"Banks are increasingly using agentic AI and figuring out more ways to use it because it has a lot of potential," said Bhavi Mehta, global lead for advanced analytics in financial services at Bain & Company

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Regulatory Concerns and Human Supervision Requirements

Source: Reuters

Source: Reuters

As banks enhance productivity through automation, regulatory concerns about accountability and oversight are emerging. Organizations are granting digital assistants access to internal systems but implementing guardrails. Morgan Stanley's Maranca emphasized that human supervision will always be present, with agents lacking autonomy to make portfolio decisions

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"They are still primarily using it for internal purposes and are being extremely cautious when it touches the customer and are making sure that there is a human involved for any critical functions," said Mehta

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. Bank investors are also pressing for clarity on return on investment as AI spending scales up. "Investors are asking, where should we be looking for ROI on these tech spends and that's why banks are likely to focus on certain areas of AI spends where the returns are much more evident and can be scaled up," said Torrente

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The efficiency gains are already apparent in lending and insurance, where AI solutions enable small business loans that once required weeks of manual underwriting to be approved in minutes

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. As Maik Taro Wehmeyer, co-founder and CEO at Taktile, noted, the competitive advantage comes from AI's ability to dramatically shrink decision times rather than just cost savings

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