Skip to content

JOBUZO

  • News
  • Indonesia
  • Toggle search form
Goldman Sachs Makes a Huge AI Bet

Goldman Sachs Makes a Huge AI Bet

Posted on 24 June 2025 By jobuzo

Goldman Sachs has just launched its generative AI assistant across the entire firm, making it available to all employees in what the bank calls a major milestone in its technology strategy.

The move follows more than a year of internal development and testing that involved over 10,000 employees piloting the tool. The GS AI Assistant is a conversational AI interface that allows employees to safely interact with large language models like GPT and Gemini, firewalled within Goldman’s own secure compliance framework.

“We have been developing AI and machine learning applications and infrastructure for a number of years, including several generative AI-powered tools that have been transforming the way we work,” said Chief Information Officer Marco Argenti in a memo seen by Gizmodo.

These tools include a developer copilot for coding, a translation tool for internal teams, and a fledgling “Banker Copilot” designed to streamline workflows for investment bankers. The GS AI Assistant, however, is the first generative AI system to be rolled out across the entire company. The official purpose is to help employees manage tasks like summarizing complex documents, drafting content, and analyzing data, work that can consume hours of human time.

The initiative is not about replacing jobs but about improving how employees work, a person familiar with the launch told Gizmodo. Goldman Sachs, the source said, hopes the tool will enable its employees to drive efficiencies.

But this move is part of a quiet arms race on Wall Street, where firms like Citi, Bank of America, and Morgan Stanley are also deploying AI chatbots to automate the tedious, white-collar work that has employed legions of junior bankers for decades.

News :<div>12 weeks' jail for school IT support technician who took upskirt videos of teachers</div>

According to experts, AI is already transforming these banks. Instead of deploying armies of analysts to manually scan legal documents, for example, some on Wall Street now use AI to identify key clauses in contracts and flag items that require human attention.

Some banks have even built AI to handle margin calls. “When a client replies to a margin call email with ‘yes,’ ‘no,’ or a vague question, the AI analyzes the free-text reply and decides what to do,” a banker at a large investment bank told Gizmodo. If the AI is confident enough, the system automatically books the call. No humans needed.

Even management tasks are being automated. The banker said their firm uses AI to help managers generate staff reviews and objectives, freeing up time and ensuring documentation is more polished.

While the official line is that AI frees up employees for “higher-value work,” the real-world consequence is a reduced need for human labor. The banker confirmed that because their AI system now processes 85% of all client responses for margin calls, “the operations team avoided hiring 30 new people.”

At Goldman Sachs, the AI deployment began last year with a developer copilot that is now used by over 12,000 engineers, yielding substantial productivity improvements. Following that success, the firm began expanding the GS AI Assistant, with overwhelmingly positive internal feedback prompting this week’s company-wide rollout.

“Our people across the firm are already integrating generative AI into their workflows, driving productivity gains for our teams and delivering benefits for our clients,” Argenti wrote in the internal memo.

News :Migrant acquitted in first trial over US border military zones

Although using the assistant is optional, the message is clear: everyone is encouraged to give it a try. For the tech industry, Goldman’s move is a major validation, giving legitimacy to generative AI’s role in financial services. It also reflects a broader trend: with AI being baked into software like Microsoft Teams and Outlook, employees are now using it by default.

Of course, this productivity revolution comes at a human cost. If one AI tool is replacing the need for 30 back-office staff in one corner of one bank, what happens when the entire industry scales that up?

Goldman Sachs Makes a Huge AI Bet


News

Post navigation

Previous Post: The next Samsung Unpacked event takes place on July 9
Next Post: Samsung Teases ‘Ultra’ Foldable for Unpacked Event Next Month

Related Posts

Why ‘SLOMW’ Star Jessi Draper Says She Looks “F--king Hideous” After Plastic Surgery Why ‘SLOMW’ Star Jessi Draper Says She Looks “F–king Hideous” After Plastic Surgery News
North Korea vows response as it accuses the South of flying drones across the border North Korea vows response as it accuses the South of flying drones across the border News
'Never-before-seen' images of Epstein's island released - showing 'disturbing look into his world' ‘Never-before-seen’ images of Epstein’s island released – showing ‘disturbing look into his world’ News

Latest

  • Indonesian police arrest dozens, as Surabaya protesters decry fuel hike, free meals scheme management
  • Heatwave sends Italy’s Po River to record lows, threatens crops and fisheries
  • Rogers sharp again for the Orioles in a 3-1 victory over Washington
  • Marte’s tiebreaking homer in 8th after 4-run inning against Skenes helps Reds beat Pirates 6-4
  • S’porean photographer whose photo was shared by Cristiano Ronaldo says it was ‘an absolute honour’
  • France forward Ousmane Dembele scores a first-half World Cup hat trick in 4-1 win over Norway
  • Ariana Grande Spends Time With Ex Ricky Alvarez After Ethan Slater Breakup
  • Corgi, the buzzy Y Combinator-backed insurance tech startup, says it didn’t steal an open source product
  • Novak Djokovic has a new job — advisor to private equity firm General Atlantic
  • AI agents get ‘digital ID cards’ under China’s first connectivity standard

Copyright © 2025 JOBUZO. Disclaimers | Privacy Policies

Powered by PressBook Masonry Blogs