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Emerging Challenges of Generative AI in Finance

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Emerging Challenges of Generative AI in Finance

The financial services sector has long served as the proving ground for the application of emerging technologies. The current era of disruption is no exception to this history. Generative artificial intelligence (AI) represents the latest in this line of transformative technologies reshaping finance and banking, with applications for everything from enhancing consumer interactions to refining risk assessment models. Its influence is already pivotal in financial decision-making, yet generative AI introduces significant challenges. These encompass the risks of propagating incorrect financial information, exposing sensitive banking data to security breaches, and expanding the digital gulf between modern and developing economies.

Banks and financial institutions (FIs) are actively developing strategies to navigate these complexities, employing innovative approaches to mitigate the risks associated with generative AI integration. Moreover, the institution and expansion of regulatory guardrails are crucial for managing these challenges, ensuring that the deployment of generative AI in the financial sector is both safe and secure. The focus lies not only in recognizing — and harnessing — the potential of generative AI but also in emphasizing the importance of strategic and regulatory frameworks to fully capitalize on its capabilities.

Generative AI catalyzes the financial services shift to BaaS.

With the aid of generative AI, the financial industry has accelerated the adoption of banking as a service (BaaS) and embedded finance, marking a shift from planning to implementation. A recent report reveals a substantial increase in BaaS adoption across global financial institutions, rising to 48% from 35% in 2022. Similarly, embedded finance is witnessing significant growth, jumping by 8% in the past 12 months.

Generative AI is rapidly gaining traction in the financial sector, primarily as a tool to meet the rising demand for personalized customer services. However, its applications extend far beyond this usage to encompass critical areas like environmental, social and governance (ESG) and anti-money laundering (AML) initiatives. The global rise in implementation this year has rendered generative AI an instrumental technology in advancing key focus areas within financial services.

AI’s expansion in the U.K. financial sector introduces challenges.

Generative AI’s emergent role in financial services is significant, as approximately 90% of FIs in the United Kingdom were already employing predictive AI in back-office functions. Predictive AI in finance is largely used to forecast future events based on historical data, while generative AI creates new, synthetic data and insights with implications for financial modeling and analysis beyond existing patterns. More than 60% recognize the potential of generative AI to drive substantial cost reductions and operational improvements. Supporting this level of optimism will require a thorough reassessment of business models, workforce capabilities and the considerable resource demands of AI technologies, particularly in the context of supply chain sustainability.

In the highly regulated financial sector, caution prevails, with more than 70% of generative AI applications still in experimental stages. Achieving a return on investment depends on the quality of data and the technology’s seamless integration into existing frameworks, a process anticipated to take the average solution three to five years. At the confluence of predictive and generative AI is where transformative potential lies, yet it introduces new challenges like the now-infamous hallucinations and complexities that plague external model sourcing. Despite these hurdles, 60% of U.K. institutions feel equipped within their current risk management strategies to accommodate generative AI.

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Finance

Fed’s Barr Warns Bank Deregulation Threatens Financial Stability | PYMNTS.com

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Fed’s Barr Warns Bank Deregulation Threatens Financial Stability | PYMNTS.com

Recent moves by the Federal Reserve and other banking regulators to weaken regulation and supervision of banks threaten to undermine the safety and soundness of the financial institutions and increase financial stability risks, Federal Reserve Gov. Michael S. Barr said in a recent speech.

Speaking Saturday (June 6) at American University in Washington, D.C., Barr pointed to what he described as decreases in capital requirements, lighter-touch bank supervision, a potential push for lower liquidity requirements and declines in consumer protection.

“Taken together, the regulatory and supervisory changes recently enacted or proposed represent the most significant deregulation of the banking system since the Global Financial Crisis,” Barr said. “They tip the imperative balance that must be maintained between openness and innovation, on the one hand, and safety and soundness, on the other, in a way that will increase the risks of financial instability.”

“I have voted against these changes, and I feel it is also my duty to continue to speak about them and explain that the costs they impose, in the form of risk, greatly outweigh the promised benefits of a lighter regulatory burden,” Barr said.

Barr also highlighted what he described as growing risks in the nonbank sector and said these risks require a strong banking sector.

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Some have argued that the banking sector should be deregulated so it can better compete with private credit and other nonbanks, but the sector needs improved regulation to protect banks from their exposure to nonbanks, Barr said.

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Banks are exposed to nonbanks through credit lines and asset-holding commonalities, he said.

“What all of this means is that we need strong banks at the core of the financial system to deal with shocks, including from nonbanks,” Barr said. “Dealing with those shocks requires robust capital and liquidity, and loosening bank regulatory standards moves in the opposite direction.”

“Bank deregulation can also lead to a race to the bottom,” Barr said. “If the goal is greater overall safety, it is perverse to relax safeguards. Deregulating banks so that they can better compete with nonbanks may lead to even more risk-taking by nonbanks. The answer is thus not to regulate banks less, but to regulate unsafe practices at nonbanks more.”

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Finance

Exclusive: U.S. bank regulators ramp up scrutiny of AI use at financial companies

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Exclusive: U.S. bank regulators ramp up scrutiny of AI use at financial companies
U.S. banking regulators are stepping up scrutiny of how lenders deploy artificial intelligence as the developing technology sweeps through the industry, pressing firms on everything from data access and governance controls ​to risks posed by third-party vendors, according to people familiar with the situation.
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Crime Stoppers of Michigan could shut down while in dire financial straits

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Crime Stoppers of Michigan could shut down while in dire financial straits

Crime Stoppers of Michigan is in jeopardy. The anonymous crime tipline, responsible for helping solve countless cases, needs a financial fix and fast.

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FOX 2 got a pretty frantic call from Detroit police brass Thursday morning to explain what was going on with Crime Stoppers, and essentially they told us the nonprofit is in dire financial straits.

Since then, we have learned that if Crime Stoppers of Michigan doesn’t raise upwards of $250,000 by July 1, they’re going to cut almost all of their services, specifically, 90% of their services.

The only thing that would remain is the anonymous tip line you know it: 1-800-SPEAK-UP.

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By the numbers:

They generate 5,000 anonymous tips a year, but a bulk of their work is elsewhere. This cut would mean no additional services for victims of crimes.

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No press conferences. No posters. No community events.

“Sometimes I think people see the press conferences, the posters or the social media, and they forget there’s a mother, there’s a father, there’s a child. They have no clue what’s going on, and they’re seeking help from us, saying, ‘Please help us, please do something,’” said Dan DiBardino, President & CEO of Crime Stoppers.

A huge chunk of those 5,000 tips goes to Detroit police. They could be seriously affected by this if Crime Stoppers folds.

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