Название | Artificial Intelligence for Asset Management and Investment |
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Автор произведения | Al Naqvi |
Жанр | Ценные бумаги, инвестиции |
Серия | |
Издательство | Ценные бумаги, инвестиции |
Год выпуска | 0 |
isbn | 9781119601845 |
WHAT ABOUT AI SUPPLIERS?
In all this chaos, suppliers of AI are not helping. AI software suppliers can be divided into six types of firms:
Newly launched AI platform companies: These firms claim to offer an AI platform. An AI platform, from their perspective, is a general-purpose solution that can be used to develop unlimited AI artifacts.
Tech giants platforms: Large and established tech firms have launched their own versions of AI platforms.
RPA firms: Robotic Process Automation is a rule-based software—which some argue is not AI—that has found significant adoption by many firms. It is simpler to understand for managers, and RPA vendors market it as the entry level solution to AI. Some even call it the gateway drug of AI. Some of the RPA players are blending their RPA (non-AI) offering with machine learning solutions to evolve as more integrated solutions.
Process automation firms: The legacy business process reengineering firms are also repositioning their systems as AI solutions.
Other packaged or off-the-shelf: Many firms offer packaged, or off-the-shelf, solutions that they claim to be AI solutions. Some of these suppliers have legitimate AI functionality; others have simply erased the B from their BI systems and replaced it with an A.
Function-specific AI firms: These firms market AI solutions by functional areas such as marketing or human resources. Typically, their software contains some AI functionality. Many of these firms are venture-financed start-ups.
AI implementation firms are composed of the following:
Management consulting firms: These are large management or strategy consulting firms.
Large systems integrators: These firms are found in the echelons of Washington, DC government contracting space.
Tech firms: Large tech firms such as Google and Amazon.
AI boutique firms: Many AI-centered boutique firms are launched by AI professors and AI experts.
Data management firms: Some of the basic data-centric support work is performed by data management firms.
Suppliers are equally confused about how to make sense of this technology. They tried to force-fit AI into compartments that they had built for digital transformations and which had worked reliably well for over four decades—but it all backfired. AI does not seem to fit the frames developed to implement ERP or CRM. Suppliers tried to explain to the clients that AI will transform their companies, but they could not explain how and why. They produced white papers and case studies but could not point to a single firm that had successfully transformed itself. Buried under decades of legacy, some even tried to repurpose the old molds of PowerPoints and business process reengineering era toolkits, but they did not impress the clients. They began recalibrating AI projects, only to discover that a great many were failing. After initial failure, some consulting firms had the audacity to advise the investment firms that they needed to go big and bet more, which essentially meant to have mega-sized center of excellence contracts with the consulting firms—but even for those who invested in those projects, the results did not improve much. Finally, the grandiose visions and promises of audacious transformations were tapered to on-the-ground realities. Suppliers of AI realized that the best way to sell to companies is to divide and conquer. Financial services firms were segmented into smaller pieces, and instead of selling visions of transformation, suppliers turned to selling small point solutions. Sales teams found entry paths leading into department heads, IT managers, and middle managers and began selling small point solution deals. The effect of such a sales strategy was catastrophic for clients. Investment firms turned into collectors of malfunctioning or substandard AI software, AI software proliferation ensued, and the process of death by the thousand papercuts started for many firms.
The strategy consulting firms are experiencing their own Darwin moment and are unsure how to function in the rapidly evolving AI-centered economy. The crisis unleashed by coronavirus has further shattered the AI management consulting industry. For the investment world, however, the pandemic has demonstrated the fragility of markets and made a strong case for the need for AI technology to help predict the emergent dynamics of the complex systems in which we operate in the modern era.
LISTENING WITHOUT JUDGING
ALI does not float like a butterfly or sting like a bee but most certainly was the only analyst in our institute who saw it coming. By mid-January of 2020, ALI was convinced that within the next 60 days, the US stock market would decline down to the 18,000 to 19,000 range. ALI became suspicious when a news report about some type of a viral outbreak in China caught ALI's attention. Many of us missed that little news segment as it stood too far away to make a dent in the rapidly shifting consciousness of the modern world. But not for ALI. ALI stands for Artificial Learning & Intelligence. ALI is an intelligent machine, and its story to predict the Covid-19-related crash of 2020 is as follows.
It was early January, and the world was focused on turmoil in the Middle East. A war was brewing, and geopolitical tensions were rising. Fear was in the air, but as we now know, for all the wrong reasons. ALI, who neither exhibits fears nor inhibits desires, was focused on something totally different. Ignoring all that was occupying our attention, it had picked up a trigger word related to a viral outbreak in China, and it was not ready to let go. Since viral outbreak could be the trigger words for ALI to identify a potentially serious risk, it was holding on to it as a dog holds on to a bone. Suddenly, the pattern-seeking mind of ALI went in hyper-stimulated mode when ALI began discovering words such as “SARS,” “pandemic,” “viral outbreak,” “panic,” and “human-to-human infection.” Like hammers pounding on ALI's consciousness, these word combinations made it go in a panic mode of its own. By the third week of January of 2020, ALI began screaming for attention. It was ignoring the highly publicized impeachment proceedings, the looming threat of violence in the Middle East, the tragic death of a legendary basketball player, the Oscars, and the Superbowl. All of these events attracted tremendous attention and occupied human attention. But it was as if ALI knew that all these attention-grabbing events would take a backseat in consciousness when compared to what was coming. ALI kept insisting to pay attention to what would eventually come to be known as Covid-19.
As ALI passed on the findings, we knew some type of threat assessment would be needed. Let us examine three pieces of information that were published in articles in major newspapers in January:
1 Coronavirus disease is transmitting from human to human;
2 Coronavirus is killing people as people do not have immunity against it; and
3 Coronavirus has no vaccine.
Logic dictates that the above information was enough to project that in a deeply interconnected world this virus would spread throughout the globe, that it would be devastating for people, and that it would lead to a catastrophic negative financial impact. Despite the logical inference, the world ignored the threat. The stories that appeared in the newspapers were written as if it were a problem unfolding on a distant planet. The authors and journalists covered the story as if they were some impassionate observers studying the phenomenon taking place in a lab experiment and far removed from the reach of the virus. It was in China—a distant land. The language of the articles suggested that we were standing on some high ground, protected, and shielded, while watching Wuhan wash away in a flood of obscurity. Our lack of empathy was on full display. A sheer deprivation of insight was widely observable not only in the political circles of many countries but also in the financial markets. The Dow Jones Industrial was leisurely strolling in record territories, carefree and exuberant. Oblivious that a train wreck was heading in our direction, we casually responded, probably enjoying the bliss that ignorance offers with undeniable consistency. DJI remained energized. Not until the third week of February 2020 investors finally recognized