Exploring the role of generative AI in banking - KPMG Australia (2024)

Exploring the role of generative AI in banking - KPMG Australia (1)

Learn how the banking industry can improve productivity using genAI and automation without compromising good governance and risk management.

Learn how the banking industry can improve productivity using genAI and automation.

  • 1000
  • View Print friendly version of this article Opens in a new window
  • Home
  • Insights
  • Exploring the role of generative AI in banking

| Timing| Bias | Cost | Key genAI themes |Article series | Download | Contact

Banking executives have always been quick to embrace new technologies. First, it was the internet and quickly created online banking services.

Banks turned smartphones into mobile banking solutions. Cloud allowed them to collaborate with clients and colleagues in real-time. Now, they see genAI emerging and are asking themselves (and the rest of the business) how this new and disruptive technology might change their world for the better.

Bank executives are clearly very bullish about the potential of genAI. In fact, inKPMG's 2023 global tech report, 61 percent of banking technology leaders said they believe genAI, AI and machine learning will be critical to enabling the business to achieve its short-term ambitions.

Discussionswith bank technology leaders suggest they are inundated with requests from the business for genAI support.

Exploring the role of generative AI in banking - KPMG Australia (2)

Risks and opportunities of genAI in banking

Rarely has a new technology garnered so much attention. When ChatGPT launched in late November 2022, it took just 5 days to attract over 1 million users. Consumer media ran with the story and executives spent the holiday season playing with it.

By January 2023, ChatGPT was estimated to have reached more than 100 million monthly active users.1 Bankers poured back into the office with dreams of massive productivity improvements and – perhaps – a little more free time.

However, it's worth taking a step back from the hype to really understand what genAI is, what it can do, and the risks and opportunities involved. It is not the silver bullet to every banker’s problem. It is a key part of society in which people and machines work together.

At this point in its development, genAI can be categorised into 5 main buckets:

  1. Content generators: GenAI can be used to write routine documents and communications, such as emails or announcements, or to generate images. For example, a bank may use a content generator to create the first draft of a marketing email, thereby allowing bank employees to focus on editing rather than writing.
  2. Information extractors: Bankers might use genAI to summarise and analyse larger documents, in short and long-form – this could be particularly useful when looking for anomalies across a range of similar documents like employee benefits contracts, for example, or supplier terms and conditions.
  3. Smart chatbots: This would be an upgrade to the traditional narrowly programmed chatbots most banks use today, using genAI to enable conversational interactions that are based on a defined logic. They will likely be deployed internally at first (for example, to allow employees to find out how many vacation days they have remaining), before being adopted into higher-risk client solutions.
  4. Language translators: GenAI tools make fantastic language translators and are able – to with a high level of reliability – translate and build new content in multiple languages simultaneously. This should allow banks to add a new level of personalisation to their client and employee communications.
  5. Code generators: Somewhat related, genAI can convert text and natural language into code for various programing languages. This could be particularly useful for banks seeking to update their old Common Business Oriented Language (COBOL)-based programs using new-generation coding skills or for those seeking to enable low-code/no-code business solutions.

Timing of genAI implementation in banks

Banks are innovative, but they are also (rightfully) risk averse. For now, most applications of generative AI and large language models (LLMs) that you may have seen in banks have been limited to lower-risk internal purposes.

Some chatbots have been deployed to manage employee queries about product terms and conditions, for example, or to provide details on employee benefits programs. KPMG professionals have helped banks pilot genAI as information extractors to find anomalies within contracts or flag potentially fraudulent transactions. GenAI has also been used to quickly create bits of code that allow legacy systems to interact with new technologies.

There are thousands of potential use cases for genAI in banking. A recent report, The generative AI advantage in financial services, by KPMG in the US, found that 76 percent of executives plan to use generative in fraud and prevention, 62 percent in customer service and personalisation and 68 percent in compliance and risk.2 Yet, for now, most banks are moving cautiously – using internal experimentation to learn iteratively and building proof-of-concepts around external use cases.

Potential banking genAI use case:

GenAI can assist in loan underwriting by analysing a customer financial data and helping to reduce the risk of default. With a better understanding of their customers’ needs and wants, genAI can help create personalised product recommendations, such as credit card offers, and cross-sell new products to existing customers.

KPMG in the US
The generative AI advantage in financial services
(August 2023)

The risk of bias and genAI

To be clear, banks have every reason to be cautious when it comes to AI – generative AI in particular. The biggest concern is around bias. AI is only as good as the data it is trained on, and if the model receives biased data, it will make biased decisions. Large language models and generative AI systems are trained on huge amounts of data which leaves significant room for bias to creep in.

Tied to this are concerns around explainability. AI often operates within a ‘black box’ that even its developers don’t always understand, which means that the decisions being made by the model aren’t always auditable or explainable. True: you can ask genAI to justify its decision, but those justifications are also based on a generative model, creating an eternal loop of inexplicability. Until the explainability piece is solved, banks are likely to remain hesitant to unleash AI in some higher-risk areas.

Bank CEOs are also concerned that genAI might be a double-edged sword when it comes to cyber security. On the one hand, most seem to believe that the technology could dramatically increase their ability to detect and predict attacks. But, at the same time, they worry that the enterprise adoption of a new technology might create new attack vectors.

Understanding the cost of genAI in banking

KPMG's 2023 global tech report suggests that banking technology leaders are already seeing the positive benefits of AI and automation more broadly. More than three-in-ten leaders say it has likely increased their profitability or performance by 11 percent or more. However, the research also suggests they are increasingly worried about the costs that the technology may bring to the business.

Exploring the role of generative AI in banking - KPMG Australia (3)

There are two cost buckets to consider. The first is the implementation costs — building out new apps, training them, integrating them into existing systems, testing them, putting them into production and so on. That all takes massive amounts of computing power, loads of data and access to highly skilled people. Centres of excellence may help balance that cost in the initial phases but will likely slow adoption in the long run.

The second cost bucket is operational. As much processing power, computing and energy as it takes to create a model, it takes multiples of that to maintain it. Spin up thousands of different models across the enterprise and the costs rapidly multiply (as do carbon emissions). While the efficiencyof existing models is rising and the cost of deploying LLMs is dropping, the market continues to see newer, larger and more capable models being deployed.

Some might suggest that headcount reductions will rapidly offset these costs. Yet this might be a somewhat optimistic view. Everyone thought desktop computers would lead to mass redundancies. But they didn’t. Nor did spreadsheets, process automation or email. What they did do, however, was allow people to focus on the more value-adding parts of their jobs. GenAI is expected to do the same.

Exploring the role of generative AI in banking - KPMG Australia (4)

The survey of bank technology leaders indicates raised employee satisfaction levels is the biggest benefit most banks see from their use of AI and automation. KPMG professionals have talked with employees who are delighted about the increased level of customer service they can provide thanks to automation and AI, while others say they are inspired by working on higher value tasks and activities.

Three key themes for genAI implementation

Globally, KPMG banking and technology professionals have been working with clients to discuss the opportunities, risks and implications of genAI. Three key themes continue to resonate:

  1. Tackle your biggest problems. Don’t implement genAI for the fear of missing out. This is about helping the business address big problems – speed to market with new products, for example, or risk processes. Understand the business outcome you want to achieve and then consider how you can use genAI to help solve those problems.
  2. Go for transformation. All hype aside, genAI is creating fundamentally new approaches and models that can have a truly transformative impact on banks. Executives should be looking for big impacts at an enterprise level rather than focusing on siloed use cases and productivity gains. This is an opportunity to fundamentally rethink the way the business operates.
  3. Right now, experimentation and innovation are critical. Given the pace of change, this is no time to fall behind. But it must be done within the framework of smart governance and risk management. The desire to move quickly must be balanced against the risks. GenAI can help unlock massive benefits, but only when it is applied smartly, responsibly, and holistically.

Frontiers in Finance article series

Financial ServicescategoryFrontiers in Finance: Harnessing technology for innovationFrontiers in Finance: Harnessing technology for innovationFind out how genAI and tech-enabled transformation solutions are enhancing productivity, value, and performance in the financial services industry.Find out how genAI and tech solutions are transforming the financial services industry.
  • Can technology create value in asset management?
  • How AI could transform the insurance industry
  • The impact of generative AI on private equity firms
  • The value of digital transformation in financial services
  • Frontiers in Finance – all editions

Download

Learn about the opportunities of using AI and tech-enabled change within financial services, and explore thepositive and negative impact of technology innovation in Frontiers in Finance.

Frontiers in Finance: Technology editionTechnology transformation in the financial services industryFrontiers in Finance: Technology editionTechnology transformation in the financial services industryOpens in a new window

How KPMG can help

KPMG's banking and AI specialists can help you to understand the impact of generative AI on the banking industry. Contact us today.

blog postsDavid Heathcote

Head of Banking & Capital Markets and Global Client Lead Partner

KPMG Australia

Profile|

|Phone

blog postsBrendan Gialouris

Partner, KPMG Powered Data

KPMG Australia

Profile|

|Phone

Banking Insights SubscriptionSign up for insights and trends exploring the banking industry delivered to your inbox.
Artificial intelligencecategoryKPMG's Artificial Intelligence hubKPMG's Artificial Intelligence hubRead the latest AI insights, discover our services, and sign up for updates.Read the latest AI insights, discover our services, and sign up for updates.

Footnotes

1“ChatGPT sets record for fastest-growing user base — analyst note.” Reuters website, 2 February 2023.

2KPMG in the US, “The generative AI advantage in financial services” (August 2023).

Exploring the role of generative AI in banking - KPMG Australia (2024)
Top Articles
How Are Cryptocurrency Gifts Taxed in 2023?
How to Respond to Negative Feedback on Amazon | Helium 10
How To Start a Consignment Shop in 12 Steps (2024) - Shopify
Where To Go After Howling Pit Code Vein
Skyward Sinton
Www.paystubportal.com/7-11 Login
Fan Van Ari Alectra
Asist Liberty
Kansas City Kansas Public Schools Educational Audiology Externship in Kansas City, KS for KCK public Schools
DL1678 (DAL1678) Delta Historial y rastreo de vuelos - FlightAware
Gunshots, panic and then fury - BBC correspondent's account of Trump shooting
Samsung 9C8
Owatc Canvas
2021 Tesla Model 3 Standard Range Pl electric for sale - Portland, OR - craigslist
Bubbles Hair Salon Woodbridge Va
What Does Dwb Mean In Instagram
Erin Kate Dolan Twitter
10 Great Things You Might Know Troy McClure From | Topless Robot
Https E24 Ultipro Com
Fredericksburg Free Lance Star Obituaries
Scenes from Paradise: Where to Visit Filming Locations Around the World - Paradise
Mani Pedi Walk Ins Near Me
Wal-Mart 140 Supercenter Products
Lowe's Garden Fence Roll
Royal Cuts Kentlands
Curver wasmanden kopen? | Lage prijs
Hdmovie 2
Program Logistics and Property Manager - Baghdad, Iraq
Dtlr Duke St
Hdmovie2 Sbs
Hesburgh Library Catalog
Truvy Back Office Login
Temu Seat Covers
Free Tiktok Likes Compara Smm
Basil Martusevich
Ny Post Front Page Cover Today
USB C 3HDMI Dock UCN3278 (12 in 1)
Muziq Najm
Vivek Flowers Chantilly
159R Bus Schedule Pdf
Directions To The Closest Auto Parts Store
Craigslist Malone New York
Mychart Mercy Health Paducah
2Nd Corinthians 5 Nlt
Contico Tuff Box Replacement Locks
Ajpw Sugar Glider Worth
Latina Webcam Lesbian
Runescape Death Guard
Zadruga Elita 7 Live - Zadruga Elita 8 Uživo HD Emitirani Sat Putem Interneta
Hampton Inn Corbin Ky Bed Bugs
Bob Wright Yukon Accident
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Nathanial Hackett

Last Updated:

Views: 6055

Rating: 4.1 / 5 (52 voted)

Reviews: 83% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Nathanial Hackett

Birthday: 1997-10-09

Address: Apt. 935 264 Abshire Canyon, South Nerissachester, NM 01800

Phone: +9752624861224

Job: Forward Technology Assistant

Hobby: Listening to music, Shopping, Vacation, Baton twirling, Flower arranging, Blacksmithing, Do it yourself

Introduction: My name is Nathanial Hackett, I am a lovely, curious, smiling, lively, thoughtful, courageous, lively person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.