FILE PHOTO: AI (Artificial Intelligence) letters and robot hand miniature in this illustration taken, June 23, 2023. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo

Global watchdog calls for tighter controls on agentic AI in finance

· CNA · Join

Read a summary of this article on FAST.
Get bite-sized news via a new
cards interface. Give it a try.
Click here to return to FAST Tap here to return to FAST
FAST

LONDON, June 10 : Global regulators said increasingly autonomous forms of AI could amplify risks for the financial system and called for new controls as adoption accelerates. 

The Financial Stability Board (FSB) in a report on Wednesday "strongly" encouraged boards to consider implementing safeguards to mitigate risks from AI, including from “agentic” AI — or those systems capable of planning, reasoning and executing tasks with limited human oversight. 

• Agentic AI is already being used by financial firms for fraud detection, customer service and back-office functions.

• 52 per cent of financial sector respondents to the Cambridge Centre for ​Alternative Finance survey reported active agentic adoption, with 23 per cent of them scaling or transforming and 29 per cent piloting agentic functions.

CNA Games

Guess Word
Crack the word, one row at a time

Buzzword
Create words using the given letters

Mini Sudoku
Tiny puzzle, mighty brain teaser

Mini Crossword
Small grid, big challenge

Word Search
Spot as many words as you can
Show More
Show Less

• Regulators and global standard-setting bodies have stepped up warnings about the risks ​posed by the rollout of AI across the financial sector since Anthropic released Mythos, viewed by experts as ​posing significant cybersecurity challenges to the banking industry.

• The FSB, a global standard setter, said autonomous AI introduces risks that can “materialise at great speed”, including the possibility of unauthorised or illegal actions, data breaches and disruption to connected systems.

• “AI agents pose a distinct challenge for human oversight,” the report said, warning they could pursue actions that stray from firms’ intentions without staff being aware or able to intervene quickly.

• To address those risks, the standard setter has outlined a series of proposed “sound practices”, urging financial firms to define clear boundaries on AI use and embed safeguards. The non-binding guidelines are open for feedback till July 22.

• They also include boundaries on what AI agents can do and require human approval for high-risk actions, such as financial transactions above certain thresholds.

• Firms can also consider adapting HR controls and processes to AI agents in a way that treats them as "synthetic employees," the FSB said.

(Editing by Aurora Ellis)

Source: Reuters

Newsletter

Week in Review

Subscribe to our Chief Editor’s Week in Review

Our chief editor shares analysis and picks of the week's biggest news every Saturday.

Sign up for our newsletters

Get our pick of top stories and thought-provoking articles in your inbox

Subscribe here

Get the CNA app

Stay updated with notifications for breaking news and our best stories

Download here

Get WhatsApp alerts

Join our channel for the top reads for the day on your preferred chat app

Join here