Morgan Stanley is preparing to launch client-facing digital assistants this summer, designed to provide investment recommendations and portfolio strategies under strict human supervision. This shift represents a broader trend across Wall Street, where institutions like BNY, UBS, and Goldman Sachs are embedding AI agents into core functions ranging from wealth management and trading to client onboarding and corporate treasury.
At BNY, these digital workers are treated as genuine teammates, complete with nicknames and human managers tasked with overseeing their daily performance. Similarly, UBS financial advisors now rely on agents to synthesize internal communications and trigger thousands of daily alerts, a move the bank claims allows staff to dedicate 70% of their time to direct client interaction rather than administrative rote work. Despite this rapid adoption, executives remain cautious about the risks of delegating decision-making. Morgan Stanley’s Koren Maranca emphasized that these tools serve as supportive instruments, not independent decision-makers, ensuring that critical portfolio choices remain firmly under human control. As investors demand clearer evidence of ROI from these expensive AI initiatives, banks are focusing their efforts on high-impact areas where productivity gains can be measured and scaled.
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