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54% of fintech companies with over 5,000 employees have adopted AI

With 92% of consumers expecting a fast, frictionless experience while also getting one that is as trustworthy and secure as possible, financial technology companies are working to make their products more personal while also making them efficient and seamless.

This was revealed in the findings of The Payments Association (formerly The Emerging Payments Association or EPA) in its latest research, ‘Using AI Intelligently: Smart ways to use Artificial Intelligence in Payments’. The report shows how artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning (ML) are being used in the payments, finance and banking sectors and how they may be used in the future.

Documenting anti-fraud applications

With AI offering a way to combine the best elements of human operators and traditional digital automation, the efficiency savings are potentially astronomical, but more important is the ability of AI to improve itself in real time by analysing results and spotting patterns. Use cases for AI range from giving more accurate credit scores to document processing and anti-fraud applications.

Supported by Fable Fintech, an international payments company, the report shows the majority of financial services organisations with over 5,000 employees are using some form of AI. These technologies allow companies to scale processes faster than human beings, process data far more efficiently than current decision-making programs and, most importantly, can find patterns and make inferences.

Rise in regulatory interest in AI

It also shows how interest and uptake in AI was slow but steady pre-COVID, but following the pandemic interest increased dramatically as financial organisations sought ways to become more efficient. This in turn caused a rise in regulatory interest in AI to mitigate risks relating to privacy, unlawful discrimination, and security. Venture capital has also flowed into the industry, with AI-orientated start-ups in the finance and insurance industry being the seventh largest sector for investors.

According to Tony Craddock, Director General at The Payments Association, by giving AI technology ‘oversight’ over different processes companies are creating datasets that allow AI to make predictions and improve processes. “We have also seen how important AI is from a financial inclusion perspective: less advanced decision-tree based systems could only work with limited amounts of data when doing things like approving a new customer for a loan, but AI systems can see a holistic picture of who a person is and make a much more nuanced decision, which will open up financial options to people who would otherwise have been excluded. Much of this is enabled by Open Banking, which explains why so many innovations in payments are interdependent,” he said.

Effective utilisation of  AI

Naushad Contractor, Chief Executive and Founder of Fable Fintech, said: “The financial services industry is going through a period of profound change and disruption. Technology is providing the means for firms to reimagine the way in which they operate and interact with their customers, suppliers and employees. One significant area of development is the effective utilisation of  AI. AI is fashion but it’s at an early stage and we are not really seeing it applied across the board on a consistent basis in a way that we all recognise and understand. AI is big Data, Big Processes but when AI starts to predict rather than just correlate, then we will see the true value of what it brings.”

The post 54% of fintech companies with over 5,000 employees have adopted AI appeared first on UKTN (UK Tech News).

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