The Wichita Eagle (Sunday)

AI tools could help end worst part of Wall Street careers

- BY ROB COPELAND

Pulling all-nighters to craft PowerPoint presentati­ons. Punching numbers into Excel spreadshee­ts. Finessing the language on esoteric financial documents that may never be read by another soul.

Such grunt work has long been a rite of passage in investment banking, an industry at the top of the corporate pyramid that lures thousands of young people every year with the promise of prestige and pay.

Until now. Generative artificial intelligen­ce – the technology upending many industries with its ability to produce and crunch new data – has landed on Wall Street. And investment banks, long inured to cultural change, are rapidly turning into Exhibit A on how the new technology could not only supplement but supplant entire ranks of workers.

The jobs most immediatel­y at risk are those performed by analysts at the bottom rung of the investment banking business, who put in endless hours to learn the building blocks of corporate finance, including the intricacie­s of mergers, public offerings and bond deals. Now, AI can do much of that work speedily and with considerab­ly less whining.

“The structure of these jobs has remained largely unchanged at least for a decade,” said Julia Dhar, head of BCG’s Behavioral Science Lab and a consultant to major banks experiment­ing with AI. The inevitable question, as she put it, is “do you need fewer analysts?”

Some of Wall Street’s major banks are asking the same question, as they test AI tools that can largely replace their armies of analysts by performing in seconds the work that now takes hours, or a whole weekend. The software, being deployed inside banks under code names such as “Socrates,” is likely not only to change the arc of a Wall Street career, but also to essentiall­y nullify the need to hire thousands of new college graduates.

Top executives at Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley and other banks are debating how deep they can cut their incoming analyst classes, according to several people involved in the ongoing discussion­s. Some inside those banks and others have suggested they could cut back on their hiring of junior investment banking analysts by as much as two-thirds, and slash the pay of those they do hire, on the grounds that the jobs won’t be as taxing as before.

“The easy idea,” said Christoph Rabenseifn­er, Deutsche Bank’s chief strategy officer for technology, data and innovation, “is you just replace juniors with an AI tool,” although he added that human involvemen­t will remain necessary.

Representa­tives for Goldman, Morgan Stanley, Deutsche Bank and others said it was too early to comment on specific job changes. But the consulting giant Accenture estimated that AI could replace or supplement nearly three-quarters of bank employees’ working hours in the industry.

Goldman is “experiment­ing with the technology,” said Nick Carcaterra, a bank spokespers­on. “In the near term, we anticipate no changes to our incoming analyst classes.”

JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon wrote in his annual shareholde­r letter this month that AI “may reduce certain job categories or roles,” and labeled the technology top among the most important issues facing the nation’s largest bank. Dimon compared the consequenc­es to those of “the printing press, the steam engine, electricit­y, computing and the internet, among others.”

Investment banking is a hierarchic­al industry, and banks typically hire young talent through two-year analyst contracts. Tens of thousands of 20-somethings (both from undergradu­ate and MBA programs) apply for some 200 spots in each major bank’s program. Pay starts at more than $100,000, not including year-end bonuses.

If they persevere, they move up the ranks to associate, then director and managing director; a handful end up running divisions. Although grueling, the life of a senior banker can be glamorous, involving traveling around the globe to pitch clients and working on big-money corporate merger deals. Many who get through the two-year analyst program have gone on to become business titans – billionair­es Michael Bloomberg and Stephen Schwarzman began their careers in investment banking – but a majority will leave before or after their two years are up, bank representa­tives said.

There are jokes among junior bankers that the most common tasks of the job involve dragging icons from one side of a document to another, only to be asked to replace the icon over and again.

“One hundred percent drudgery and boring,” said Gabriel Stengel, a former banking analyst who left the industry two years ago. Val Srinivas, a senior researcher for banking at Deloitte, said a lot of the work involved “gathering material, poring through it and putting it through a different format.”

Gregory Larkin, another former banking analyst, said the new technology would start “a civil war” inside Wall Street’s biggest firms by tilting the balance of power to technologi­sts who program AI tools, as opposed to the bankers who use them – to say nothing of technology giants like Microsoft and Google, which license much of the AI technology to banks for hefty fees.

“AI will enable us to do tasks that take 10 hours in 10 seconds,” said Jay Horine, co-head of investment banking at JPMorgan, describing analyst jobs. “My hope and belief is it will allow the job to be more interestin­g.”

Goldman Sachs has assigned 1,000 developers to test AI, including software that can turn what it terms “corpus” informatio­n – or enormous amounts of text and data collected from thousands of sources – into page presentati­ons that mimic the bank’s typeface, logo, styles and charts. One firm executive privately called it a “Kitty Hawk moment,” or one that would change the course of the firm’s future.

Among Goldman Sachs’ sprawling AI efforts is a tool under developmen­t that can transfigur­e a lengthy PowerPoint document into a formal “S-1,” the legalese-packed document for initial public offerings required for all listed companies.

The software takes less than a second to complete the job.

 ?? CALUM HEATH The New York Times ?? Artificial intelligen­ce tools can replace much of Wall Street’s entry-level white-collar work, raising tough questions about the future of finance.
CALUM HEATH The New York Times Artificial intelligen­ce tools can replace much of Wall Street’s entry-level white-collar work, raising tough questions about the future of finance.
 ?? ?? Jamie Dimon
Jamie Dimon

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