By Phoebe Seers
LONDON, April 21 (Reuters) – Lloyds Banking Group has become the first UK lender to introduce an artificial intelligence tool to help customers make investment decisions, even as AI’s impact on the โtightly regulated financial advice industry comes under scrutiny.
The British bank told Reuters it was piloting the AIโpowered โtool with a small group of customers through its Scottish Widows pensions and investments arm, offering what it describes as investment โguidanceโ rather than advice. โThe product is expected to be widened later this year.
The move to harness AI is the latest initiative in efforts by British lenders to compete against specialist wealth managers that dominate the financial advice market.
HSBC, Barclays and Lloyds have all increased investment in this sector, looking to win market share and expand their fee-based business as lending income is hit โby low interest rates.
Scottish Widows Chief Executive โ Chira Barua said the tool would act โlike a satnav for investmentsโ, helping customers to navigate options without making decisions for them.
The distinction matters. Guidance is broad and generic while financial โ advice must be tailored to an individual and is subject to far stricter regulatory requirements.
Experts say the use of AI to provide advice is not without risk and raises concerns that algorithms could amplify mistakes, misโsell products and leave companies unable โto explain โadvice to customers or supervisors. The Bank of England is โalso closely watching how AI technology is rolled โout.
Separately, the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) said on Tuesday that Lloyds was among eight institutions, including Barclays, UBS and Experian, that will live test AI applications with it. As part of that, Lloyds, via Scottish Widows, will test AI-enabled “targeted support”.
Targeted support is a newly created regulated activity that offers a deliberately lighter touch than full advice and is central to the regulatorโs efforts to close an advice gap in which a growing number of people are unable to โafford or access personalised financial advice.
Lloyds is not the only big โBritish bank exploring the potential of such tools.
HSBC told Reuters it โis also studying the potential for AI applications โwithin wealth management under the FCAโs new framework.
“This could be very effective for customers with, โsay, ยฃ20,000 to ยฃ50,000 in liquid assets, nudging them to โput their savings to work โthrough, for example, topping up ISAs,” said Jose Carvalho, head of retail banking and wealth at HSBC UK.