JPMorgan Chase has become the latest firm to harness the potential of AI as it arms thousands of its employees with powerful new virtual assistant.
The Wall Street giant has launched a generative AI assistant, known as LLM Suite, to more than 60,000 of its employees as the first phase of a broader strategy to integrate AI technology across the global financial institution, according to CNBC.
The AI assistant, whose existence was earlier revealed via an internal memo viewed and reported by Bloomberg, is designed to assist employees with tasks such as drafting emails, summarizing documents, and generating ideas.
According to sources familiar with the project, LLM Suite serves as a gateway that allows users to access external large language models or LLMs, with the initial deployment incorporating technology from OpenAI, the creator of ChatGPT.
Teresa Heitsenrether, JPMorgan’s chief data and analytics officer, emphasized the flexibility of the system, stating “Ultimately, we’d like to be able to move pretty fluidly across models depending on the use cases. The plan is not to be beholden to any one model provider.”
Wall Street watchers might argue that the firm’s just playing catch-up as its rival bank Morgan Stanley has already released a pair of OpenAI-powered tools for its financial advisors. But according to Heitsenrether, JPMorgan’s initial hesitation – including an order restricting employees from using ChatGPT – was borne out of caution.
“Since our data is a key differentiator, we don’t want it being used to train the model,” she told CNBC. “We’ve implemented it in a way that we can leverage the model while still keeping our data protected.”
As of now, LLM Suite is reportedly being utilized across various divisions within the bank, including its consumer division, investment bank, and asset and wealth management business. The assistant is proving useful for problem-solving in Excel and summarizing complex reports, among other use cases across the organization.
However, JPMorgan remains cautious about deploying generative AI in areas that directly affect individual customers, according to Heitsenrether, due to the potential risks associated with inaccurate information provided by AI-powered chatbots.
The growing adoption of AI across the financial sector may unlock serious growth opportunities, but it’s not without risk. In June, Finra reminded its member firms that they must still stick to applicable securities laws and rules as they increasingly embrace advanced technologies like generative AI.
Meanwhile, the 2024 Investment Management Compliance Testing Survey published in July found 46 percent of investment adviser firms surveyed saw artificial intelligence and predictive analytics as a top compliance issue, though AI isn’t on their near-term compliance agenda as it’s still very early in its evolution.
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