Eight Percent and the Trust Deficit: AI's Procurement Problem

The industry can build the models, but until it can prove the wiring, investors will keep the final decision for themselves.

The capital markets have a trust problem, and no amount of inference speed will solve it. Despite the rapid adoption of artificial intelligence for market research and data parsing, a mere eight percent of investors are willing to let the machines make the final call on where to park their capital. [1] The finding, emerging from a survey of investment professionals in Singapore, lays bare the central bottleneck in the business of intelligence: you can build the model, but you cannot force the customer to trust the wiring.

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