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AI in Capital Markets Handbook 2026: From Experimentation to Governed Execution

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Capital markets firms are under pressure to convert AI experimentation into sustainable business value. The challenge is not simply finding use cases but demonstrating that AI can support regulated workflows through approved data, accountable ownership, measurable outcomes and defensible evidence.

A-Team Group’s AI in Capital Markets Handbook 2026 examines that shift across the trade lifecycle. It looks at how artificial intelligence is being applied in front-office research, execution support, risk analytics, surveillance, financial crime, regulatory reporting, post-trade operations and client workflows. The handbook’s central focus is the move from standalone prompting toward governed workflow deployment, where models, data sources, tools, review points and escalation paths sit within defined operating processes.

For capital markets firms, the opportunities lie in better use of information, faster exception handling, stronger monitoring and more consistent support for knowledge-heavy work. The constraint is the operating environment in which those tools must run. AI outputs used in regulated processes need grounding, review evidence, source attribution, access controls, model monitoring and clear accountability.

The handbook explores how firms are transitioning from broad experimentation to adoption, with success measured through productivity gains, control improvement and cycle-time reduction. It also considers the infrastructure questions now shaping deployment, including cloud architecture, inference cost, specialist hardware, event-driven design, real-time data access and AI-ready data platforms.

For governance, risk and compliance practitioners, the handbook provides a practical view of the control issues now surrounding AI adoption in capital markets. As AI moves into regulated workflows, firms need to evidence which use cases have been approved, what data is being used, how outputs are reviewed, who owns the outcome and where escalation or intervention can occur:

Model Risk and AI Governance: Model risk and AI governance teams will find coverage of testing, drift, data poisoning, retrieval layers, model-change records and human oversight. The handbook recognises that large language models (LLMs), reasoning systems and agentic AI do not fit neatly into traditional model-risk frameworks. It focuses on the controls firms need around live monitoring, output testing, prompt and tool configuration, retrieval evidence, version control and post-release review.

Operational Resilience and Third-Party Risk: Operational resilience and third-party risk teams will find context on concentration risk, recoverability, hard stops and dependency mapping. The handbook explores how firms should think about substitutability, service-provider concentration, workflow interruption, recovery playbooks and the ability to stop or isolate AI-supported processes when control thresholds are breached.

Data Governance and Chief Data Office: Data governance teams will find a clear explanation of why metadata, lineage, entitlement checks, retention and approved source data have become core AI-readiness requirements. The handbook explains how AI value depends on whether data can be accessed, linked, governed and traced back to reliable sources. For chief data officers and data stewards, it reinforces the case for data ownership, quality thresholds, permissioning, version control and retrieval records as foundations for scalable AI deployment.

Legal, Risk and Senior Management: Legal, risk and senior management functions will also find value in the handbook’s treatment of accountability. Regulatory expectations are converging around the need for firms to show how AI is used, controlled, tested and overseen. That makes AI governance a board, senior management and control-function issue, particularly where AI outputs influence client interaction, trading activity, reporting, investigations or operational resilience.

The 2026 edition also examines the technologies shaping the next phase of capital markets AI adoption. This covers agentic AI, multi-agent systems, task-specific models and AI-enabled data platforms. The handbook examines these developments through an operating-model lens.  Realised value will depend on how well firms design workflows, govern data, integrate systems, oversee vendors and preserve evidence as AI-enabled processes expand across business, technology and control functions.

Download the AI in Capital Markets Handbook 2026 for a grounded view of how AI is being deployed across capital markets, and what firms need to build around it before adoption can scale with confidence.

If you’re in London on June 17, don’t miss A-Team Group’s AI in Capital Markets Summit for a full day of deep-dive panel discussions and networking with industry peers featuring the leading voices in capital markets AI adoption. Check out the agenda HERE.

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