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Banking: AI, automation, and the rise of digital-first scale

  • From AI agents at Goldman to automation at Truist and lean growth at Nubank, the contours of a modern banking model are emerging.
  • Banks are rethinking human-machine cooperative roles and new ways to scale.
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Banking: AI, automation, and the rise of digital-first scale

    The new battleground in banking is intelligent operations and scalable execution.


    In 2026, banking is about moving money smarter, faster, and with fewer humans in the middle. Across corporate finance and global retail operations, banks are experimenting with technology and operational design in ways that challenge long-held assumptions about scale, speed, and control. 

    Three recent developments exemplify what’s happening in money movement: Goldman Sachs deploying AI agents, Truist automating corporate receivables, and Nubank expanding abroad with a lean digital model. All demonstrate how the modern banking playbook is evolving.

    Case Analysis 1: Goldman Sachs’ AI agents as “digital colleagues”

    Goldman Sachs is testing a new frontier in operational finance: it’s deploying autonomous AI agents built on Anthropic’s Claude mode to enhance internal productivity and streamline workflows. These agents are undergoing trials for rule-based tasks such as transaction reconciliation, trade accounting, and client onboarding; roles that have resisted automation for decades because of high regulatory and operational complexity.


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