WEF_Special_Edition_European business magazine spring 2022_web

Page 88

AI In Banking

Hype Or Revolution

S

everal years ago, the CEO of Deutschebank stated in an interview that he thought AI would replace up to half of its staff. The prediction sent shockwaves through the industry and made a lot of employees feel uncomfortable about the longevity of their roles. The bank soon fired him and replaced him with somebody else, so he won’t be responsible for the organization’s sweeping changes. But it did reveal just how much hype there is in financial circles about the promise of AI. Other people have joined the fray, calling for the end many routine jobs in the banking industry. Citigroup executives believe they will say goodbye to around a third of workers. Japanese financial group Mizuho says that it is looking to replace more than 19,000 by the end of the present decade. But whether the digital transformation in banking will bear fruit remains to be seen. Currently, there’s a problem right at the core of AI research. The people at the forefront of the movement know that the technology is very good when it has an objective function - something to optimize - but it isn’t so good in other situations. So, for example, it can maximize the probability that an image shows a cat. Still, it can’t engage very well in regular conversation - the sort of thing you need for healthy client relationships.

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Artificial intelligence is also a long way from becoming what you might call “general intelligence.” The software is good at performing cognitive tasks, but it has no subjective experience of them. It doesn’t know what it is doing - it just goes through the motions. This fact of the matter means that some of the more outlandish predictions probably won’t come true. What we seem to be looking at is something that will allow software to perform a subset of cognitive tasks. However, it is doubtful we will see programs with subjective agency any time soon. When you tell them what to do, they’ll do it well. But they won’t be running their own companies just yet. That’s very futuristic. AI, however, is a wishy-washy concept. Unlike the tech revolutions of the last decade - like the cloud - you can’t easily pin it down. AI doesn’t just do one thing - it is a solution for a whole bunch of tasks. The banking sector, therefore, is going to have to figure out how to deploy it sensibly. For now, it won’t replace people. Instead, it’ll be more like a tool that makes them more valuable. It is, in a sense, a form of cognitive assistance, just like machines are assistance for manual labor. Robots can’t do all the work themselves, but they can dramatically increase the output per worker. The same may

now be coming to the banking industry. You’ll still need officers to process business banking customers manually, but AI could speed up aspects of the process, like credit checking. The banking sector needs to be careful not to set unrealistic expectations of AI. The people at the forefront of the field are more than willing to point out that the science isn’t done yet. They can replicate some aspects of intelligence, but they can’t fabricate it wholesale. Researchers still need to make fundamental breakthroughs to usher in that exciting and giddy new world. To call AI in banking pure hype, though, is taking it too far. There are n umerous examples of AI in banking already, and the technology only continues to improve.

Biometrics For Added Security We first saw biometrics in banking in the film Blade Runner. But advances in technology and AI have made it to make it a reality. And it’s already been done. British bank Natwest, for instance, now allows customers to open accounts with a selfie. It then stores their data securely, linking their biological profile to their financial information. The security benefits of AI could be quite extraordinary. It might sound unsafe, but it is actually a massive improvement over the current system of using government-mandated IDs like passports and driving licenses. Biometric forms of identification are much more challenging to forge and, generally, safer than their paperbacked rivals.

Investment Trading Currently, bankers rely on seasoned traders’ quick wits to make investment decisions in the equity markets on behalf of their clients. Movements, however, are often so fast-paced and unpredictable, that many traders struggle to equal the market, let alone beat it.


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Articles inside

Building Remote Partnerships

21min
pages 91-100

Schroders, Aviva and other UK asset managers seek to profit from demand for biodiversity-focused investment products

4min
pages 84-85

AI In Banking: Hype Or Revolution

5min
pages 88-90

Building a finance function from the ground up

3min
pages 86-87

Cryptocurrencies: Why they’ve crashed and what It may mean for the future

3min
pages 82-83

Venture Capitalists Pour Into NFTs

6min
pages 80-81

Not all Intent Data is created equal

5min
pages 78-79

What You Need to Know About Ad Fraud

8min
pages 68-70

Is the metaverse as disruptive as it should be

5min
pages 66-67

How shops and retailers use psychology tricks to influence your purchasing decisions

4min
pages 64-65

European Business Magazine talks to Esha Mansingh

25min
pages 54-61

Aciety Is Solving The Talent Shortage In The Blockchain Technology Sector

4min
pages 52-53

Ukraine war’s surprising links to the 2008 financial crisis – and the parallels with 1939

5min
pages 62-63

What the explosion in Uranium prices means for the nuclear industry

5min
pages 50-51

Things that economists know, but sound wrong to other people

5min
pages 48-49

The truth about the ‘great resignation’

4min
pages 46-47

Global AI-powered Order-to-Cash platform

7min
pages 41-43

Global Coordination Could Unlock more Efficient Trade, New TradeTech Report Reveals

5min
pages 38-39

Private equity firms can be catalysts to fighting climate change, here is how

4min
pages 34-35

News

49min
pages 8-26

Why Businesses which are being hit by tax hikes and higher energy costs will hurt the poor

2min
page 40

Between a rock and a hardpalce

6min
pages 28-29

Davos Agenda Closes with Calls for New Models of Public-Private Cooperation

6min
pages 44-45

Preparing for the wave of Covid Related Disputes to hit

3min
page 27
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