
Tag: Artificial Intelligence


Safeguarding, AI Proposals Scrutinized by Lawmakers

How Will AI Change Institutional Investing?
CIO’s NextGen honorees share a mix of anticipation and caution about artificial intelligence yet remain confident there is no replacement for human oversight.

Nvidia Stock Is on Fire, But How Long Will That Last?

SEC Proposes New Conflict of Interest Regime for Predictive Technology

‘Transformative’ Artificial Intelligence May Still Present Conflicts of Interest

AI Investment Is Booming—What Happens When It Flags?
With tighter regulation on the way and the potential for firms to feign artificial intelligence influence, SocGen recommends a diverse approach.

Earnings Calls Include Fewer ESG Mentions, but Talk of AI Is Rising
While political controversy dogs green initiatives, artificial intelligence replaces them as the new popular topic.

AI Application ChatGPT Beats Stock Market, Study Says

SEC Staff to Provide Recommendations on AI Regulations, Says Chairman Gensler
AI has been a topic of interest for Gensler lately, and this likely marks the first confirmation that the SEC is already working on the issue.

AI Will Send Profits Skyward Over the Next 10 Years, Goldman Says
Artificial intelligence-fueled productivity should expand margins by 4 percentage points, the firm projects, but it won’t happen right away.

Goldman: Artificial Intelligence Will Boost Global GDP by 7%
There will also be a job-loss toll, but, as in previous technology leaps, many displaced workers will fit into newly created positions, the firm’s study says.

Allocators Need to Adopt More Technology for Investing, Says PSP Strategist
Artificial intelligence is available to find insights in vast reams of data, Herman Bril argues—so use it, already.

Tech Companies, Not Factories, Are Getting the Capital Spending Dollars Now

About That Tech Slowdown: The Big Digital Tomorrow Will Restore Its Place
Legacy stocks are leaders now, but 5G and other digital revolutions promise to return the disregarded innovators of yore to the fore again, Citi says.