By Jesse Fowler, Founder of J&J Renovations and J&J Plumbing Services
The finance industry doesn’t just use AI anymore. It runs on it. From fraud detection to trading floors, artificial intelligence has become the backbone of modern financial services. The numbers tell a story that’s impossible to ignore.
The spending spree is massive
Financial services firms spent roughly $45 billion on AI in 2024. That figure is expected to hit $97 billion by 2027, growing at 29% per year. Meanwhile, the total AI-in-finance market is on track to reach $190 billion by 2030.
JPMorgan Chase leads the pack with an $18 billion technology budget and roughly $2 billion earmarked for AI alone. Bank of America pours $4 billion into new tech initiatives every year. Citigroup isn’t far behind with $11.8 billion in technology spending plus another $2.9 billion in transformation projects.
These aren’t experimental budgets. They’re operating costs. McKinsey estimates generative AI could unlock $200 to $340 billion in annual value for banking, which works out to 9 to 15% of total operating profits.
Real use cases are driving real results
AI touches every part of financial services today. Here’s where it’s making the biggest impact.
Around 87% of global financial institutions now use AI-powered fraud detection. These systems prevented an estimated $25.5 billion in fraud losses in 2025 alone, catching threats with 92 to 98% accuracy. This matters more than ever because fraud itself has gone digital. Deepfake-enabled fraud jumped 3,000% since 2023, and over half of all fraud now involves some form of AI.
Algorithmic trading accounts for about 60% of total volume in major markets. BlackRock’s Aladdin platform manages over $20 trillion in assets using AI analytics. In November 2025, Citadel Securities committed $300 million to GPU-accelerated trading algorithms through a partnership with NVIDIA.
Credit scoring has been transformed too. Upstart’s AI models provide 5 to 6 times more precision than traditional FICO scores. As a result, they approve 43 to 44% more borrowers at 36 to 43% lower interest rates. Some 92% of their loan approvals are fully automated.
On the customer service front, Bank of America’s Erica assistant now has nearly 50 million users and has handled over 3 billion interactions. Across the industry, banking chatbots process 3.1 billion interactions per month, saving banks an estimated $7.3 billion in 2025.
The big players are going all-in
JPMorgan’s internal AI tool, LLM Suite, went from zero to 250,000 active employees in just eight months. About half of those users rely on it daily. In a live demonstration, the tool produced a five-page investment banking deck in roughly 30 seconds.
Goldman Sachs rolled out its GS AI Assistant to all 46,500+ employees in June 2025. The platform cuts pitch material creation time by about 50%. CEO David Solomon stated that AI can now draft 95% of an IPO prospectus in minutes.
Singapore’s DBS Bank offers the clearest proof that AI investment compounds over time. The bank generated SGD 750 million (roughly $585 million) in AI-driven value in 2024. That’s more than double the SGD 370 million it generated in 2023, which itself doubled from SGD 180 million in 2022.
Among fintechs, Stripe leads with a $91.5 billion valuation and $1.4 trillion in payment volume. Revolut reached $75 billion in valuation with $4 billion in revenue. Nubank serves over 120 million customers across Latin America as the world’s largest digital bank outside Asia.
Jobs are shifting, not just disappearing
Citigroup found that 54% of financial jobs face high automation potential. McKinsey projects 30% of work hours in financial services could be automated by 2030. Already, Citigroup plans to cut up to 20,000 jobs by the end of 2026. Morgan Stanley cut 2,000 employees in March 2025, citing AI as a factor.
However, the story isn’t all displacement. About 76% of banks expect to increase tech headcount because of AI adoption. For every 10 jobs displaced, an estimated 6.7 new AI-related positions are created. These include prompt engineers, algorithm auditors, and AI ethics officers. AI-focused software engineers in finance earn an average of $245,000 per year in the U.S.
Citigroup also mandated AI prompt training for 175,000 employees across 80 locations. JPMorgan launched a $600 million workforce reskilling initiative focused on data science. The message is clear: learn to work with AI or risk being replaced by someone who can.
What comes next
The frontier is moving fast. Agentic AI, where systems autonomously execute multi-step financial tasks, is projected to grow from $2.1 billion to $80.9 billion by 2034. Mastercard launched Agent Pay for agentic payments in April 2025. Visa partnered with OpenAI, Microsoft, and Anthropic to build intelligent commerce tools.
Quantum computing is still in R&D, but JPMorgan published a landmark paper in Nature in March 2025 demonstrating the first certified quantum randomness. Goldman Sachs research suggests quantum could make derivative pricing up to 1,000 times faster.
The bottom line is simple. AI in finance has moved from a competitive advantage to a survival requirement. Institutions that fall behind risk losing up to $170 billion in profits as customers use AI to optimize their own financial decisions. The revolution isn’t coming. It’s already here.
