Wall Street’s AI adoption surges from 10% to 70% in one year, but regulators are sounding alarms
Buy-side firms are racing to deploy AI across trading desks while the Bank for International Settlements warns of dangerous bubbles forming beneath the hype
A year ago, roughly one in ten buy-side investment managers was using AI in their front offices. Today, that number is seven in ten. According to SimCorp’s 2026 InvestOps Report published in early June, 70% of buy-side firms now actively deploy AI tools in their front-office operations. That’s a sevenfold increase from the roughly 10% figure recorded in 2025.
The money flowing into AI is staggering
Goldman Sachs pegged AI-related capital expenditure consensus for hyperscalers at $527 billion for 2026, a figure published in December 2025. Financial institutions specifically are projected to allocate about 2% of their revenues to AI in 2026, according to BCG’s January 2026 estimates.
Morgan Stanley and BlackRock have both made significant investments in AI technologies, deploying tools across portfolio optimization, trading strategy development, and operational workflows.
Portfolio managers are using AI to run scenario analyses that would have taken teams of quants weeks to complete. Trading desks are deploying models that can adjust positions in response to real-time data feeds. Compliance teams are using AI to monitor the AI, scanning for regulatory risks in automated decision-making processes.
The warning signs regulators don’t want you to ignore
The Bank for International Settlements issued a warning in late June 2026 about the economic and financial perils of AI-driven investment strategies, specifically citing investor complacency as a growing concern and suggesting that the rush to deploy AI tools may be creating vulnerabilities in equity markets.
The SEC intensified enforcement actions in June 2026 specifically targeting AI compliance among Wall Street firms, with regulatory concern centering on transparency around algorithmic investment decisions and accountability to clients and regulators.
Market volatility, including declines in indices like the Nasdaq, has raised questions about whether AI-related spending is creating overheated expectations.
Where crypto fits into the picture
Tokenization—the process of representing real-world assets as digital tokens on a blockchain—is one area where AI tools are being deployed to optimize trading operations, with AI applied to price discovery, liquidity management, and risk assessment for tokenized assets.