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Python and SQL are among the most popular languages; C++ and Tableau are more specialized. Big Tech firms like Apple and Amazon have signaled a move away from the complicated coding language C++, but there's still a place for engineers who know the coding language on Wall Street. AdvertisementIn today's machine-to-machine world, having some experience with programming languages is a must. As it turns out, not all programming languages are made equal and some are more relevant to certain corners of Wall Street than others. Here are the programming languages to know:
Persons: there's, Apple, Swift, It's, Matt Stabile Organizations: Business, Big Tech, Apple, Stony Brook University, White, Citadel Securities, Microsoft, Virtu Financial, Hudson, Sigma, Susquehanna International Group, Wall
AdvertisementJPMorgan tech exec Teresa Heitsenrether talked about the bank's ongoing adoption of generative AI. And it certainly has helped with that," Heitsenrether, who is responsible for executing the bank's generative AI strategy, told a conference in New York on Thursday. AdvertisementDimon himself is a "tremendous user," she said, and is waiting for the ability to use the bank's tools on his phone. JPMorgan, America's largest bank, has now rolled out the LLM Suite, a generative AI assistant, to 200,000 of its employees. The wealth and asset management arm was the first division to use generative AI, piloting a generative AI "copilot" for its private bank this summer.
Persons: Teresa Heitsenrether, Heitsenrether, it's, Jamie Dimon, Dimon, He's, Keri Smith, What's, she'll, Sumitra Ganesh, Ganesh Organizations: JPMorgan, Accenture Locations: New York
McMillan encourages employees to pitch new AI solutions. AdvertisementAs part of his role, McMillan co-chairs an AI steering group formalized earlier this year, with Global Director of Research Katy Huberty. Related storiesInside the 8-step processAlthough pitching AI solutions is open to anyone at the firm, there is some leg work involved. AdvertisementThe AI steering group meets every other week to listen to the pitches, usually going through five or six proposals. Every other week, the AI steering committee meets to review the status of these projects.
Persons: Jeff McMillan, Morgan Stanley's, Morgan Stanley, McMillan, who's, he's, Research Katy Huberty, AskResearch, you've Organizations: ChatGPT, Global, Research, Workers
Citadel Securities hired Herb Sutter who spent 20 years at Microsoft. Sutter is an expert in C++, a coding language that underpins most of Citadel Securities' technology. Sign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. AdvertisementCitadel Securities just hired a 20-year Microsoft veteran who will be tasked with helping developers master a crucial but complex coding language to supercharge productivity. Sutter specializes in a programming language called C++, which underpins much of Citadel Securities technology, including its trading system that handles one in four stock trades in the US.
Persons: Herb Sutter, Sutter, He'll, , Ken Griffin's, Josh Woods, Herb, Woods, Michael Park, it's Organizations: Citadel Securities, Microsoft, Service, BI Locations: Canadian
AdvertisementWhen Morgan Stanley and OpenAI announced their blockbuster partnership at the beginning of 2023, it signaled a competitive advantage for the Wall Street bank. Morgan Stanley, since then, has co-developed a handful of generative AI tools with the AI powerhouse for its lucrative wealth-management business. Morgan Stanley is far from the only financial firm using OpenAI. In his new role, Manahan oversees the bank's innovation council, which launched at the beginning of the year. The council is dedicated to identifying the bank's technology focuses.
Persons: Sean Manahan, Morgan Stanley's, , Morgan Stanley, OpenAI, Andy Saperstein, Jeff McMillan, Manahan, Morgan Stanley execs Organizations: Service, York, Tech, Big Tech, Morgan Locations: Silicon Valley, Manhattan, Manahan, New York
Business Insider selected 25 young professionals 35 and under for its rising stars of Wall Street list. AdvertisementThere's no shortage of colorful characters depicting Wall Street. Two of those are fictional movie characters, and one was based on real person, but they have all shaped the public's perception of what working on Wall Street could be like. We asked up-and-comers on Wall Street about the shows, movies, or books that best represent their daily lives. Here are the shows, movies, or books that give a flavor of what it's like to work on Wall Street.
Persons: , Mark Zhu, There's Organizations: Service, Blackstone
Reflexivity is a startup cofounded by two former hedge fund traders. AdvertisementA startup looking to transform how investors and traders use data just received funding from some of the biggest names in the hedge fund world. Reflexivity, formerly known as Toggle AI, just raised its $30 million Series B, the startup announced Monday. Interactive Brokers and Greycroft led the round, which included participation from billionaire investor Stanley Druckenmiller and Greg Coffey, the Australian founder of hedge fund Kirkoswald. AdvertisementIt has a valuation between $115 million and $150 million, Szilagyi said.
Persons: , Greycroft, Stanley Druckenmiller, Greg Coffey, Izzy Englander, Reflexivity, Jan Szilagyi, Szilagyi, George Soros, Giuseppe Sette, Howard, Wells, Szilyagyi, that's Organizations: Service, Interactive, Millennium, Catalyst, P, Business, Druckenmiller's Duquesne Capital Management, Fortress Investment Group, Millennium Management, Soros Fund, London Stock Exchange Group, Federal Reserve Locations: Australian, MUFG, Fargo, Wells Fargo
Finix is a startup that works with merchants so they can accept and manage payments. On Thursday, it raised a $75 million Series C that included Lightspeed Ventures and Acrew Capital. AdvertisementSome of the industry's biggest fintech investors just backed an up-and-coming payments startup challenging Stripe and Square. The San Francisco-based startup raised $75 million in a Series C funding round, the company announced Thursday. AdvertisementFinix processes billions of dollars every month for tens of thousands of merchants, Serna said.
Persons: , Richie Serna, Finix, Serna, " Serna Organizations: Lightspeed Ventures, Acrew, Service, Acrew Capital, Lightspeed Venture Partners Locations: San Francisco, Finix's, Serna
Ken Griffin's market maker, Citadel Securities, is revamping its core trading infrastructure. AdvertisementIn 2023, Citadel Securities COO of technology, Jeff Maurone, was meeting with senior leaders to discuss technology priorities for the year. I almost look at it as the stretching of business," Woods told Business Insider. Building Citadel Securities' trading infrastructure of the futureIn the last few years, Citadel Securities pushed into credit trading, expanded its rates franchise, and introduced an institutional options offering. Maurone's team supports Citadel Securities' technology organization, and he manages a team of 15 people.
Persons: Ken Griffin's, Josh Woods, Jeff Maurone, , Maurone, Woods, Matt Culek, Peng Zhao, Jim Esposito Organizations: Citadel Securities, Service, Securities, McKinsey, Deloitte, COOs, Citadel Securities Each Locations: Asia Pacific, EMEA, COOs —, New York, Jeff's
Wall Street is trying to make AI search sexy
  + stars: | 2024-10-18 | by ( Bianca Chan | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +8 min
Finance firms and fintech startups are trying to use generative AI to improve search capabilities. Perfecting search, down the line, could lead to more automation and more complex generative AI tools. It has already onboarded some-25 Wall Street firms onto its generative AI platform. AdvertisementMeanwhile, two Stanford grads came together to build Mako, a generative AI associate for the private-equity industry. The search tool is the bank's second such generative AI tool, the first being a generative AI developer co-pilot that helps software engineers code more efficiently.
Persons: Goldman Sachs, Blackstone, , Goldman hoovered, Neema Raphael, Raphael, it's, Morgan Stanley's, Keri Smith, Smith, Jeff McMillan, Gabe Stengel, Stanford grads, It's, Peter Anderson, Familiarizing, Goldman Organizations: Service, Bloomberg, Nasdaq, Goldman, Blackstone, Google, Bank of America's, Accenture, Stanford, Balyasny Asset Management Locations: Wall, OpenAI
Wall Street's top performers are hard workers who tend to work long, intense hours. Business Insider asked its 2024 class of Wall Street stars about how they stay mentally sharp. Here's what we learned about the hacks, habits, and routines that help top talent on Wall Street stay on their game. The routine helps him stay present with his home life as well as work, he added. But I think those two things help me to at least stay recharged and stay ready each day," he said.
Persons: , Mark Zhu, Craig Kolwicz, Goldman Sachs, Corey White, Nina Gnedin, Blake Cecil, Chi Chen, Robert Sapolsky, Justin Elliott, Read, Palmer Osteen, KKR's, I've, That's, Daniela Cardona, America's White, Ben Carper, it's, there's, Matthew Eid, Holm, Reinhard Dirscherl, Melissa Ding, Wells, Annie Cheslin, she's, Margaret Williams, Morgan Stanley, Williams, Apollo's Austin Anton, Erica Wilson's, deadlifted, Harrison DiGia, Patrick Lenihan, barre, Elizabeth Stone Redding, Stone Redding, Matt Gilbert, Thoma, Gilbert, I'm, Dan, Feroz Khosla, isn't Organizations: Business, Service, Blackstone, Finance, Goldman, of America, Man Group, Productivity, Bridgewater Associates, Bank of America, Fidelity Investments, RBC, Bank, America's, Jefferies, Capital Advisory, Ares Management, Getty, BlackRock, Blue, General Atlantic, JPMorgan Asset Management, TPG, Thoma Bravo, Citadel Securities Locations: Blackstone, Chicago, San Francisco, Coast, Boston, Silicon Valley, New York, I'm, Maldives, he's, Thailand, Central Park
Business Insider asked 27 venture-capital investors to nominate the most promising fintechs. VCs highlighted startups that haven't raised beyond a Series C.Here are the 49 most promising fintechs. Sign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. Business Insider asked 27 top investors — including Index Ventures, QED Investors, and Bain Capital Ventures — to name some of those diamonds in the rough. Check out the 49 startups identified as most promising by 27 top investors.
Persons: , fintechs Organizations: Service, Business, Index Ventures, Bain Capital Ventures
Patrick Lenihan, 33, JPMorgan Asset ManagementJP Morgan Asset ManagementAt JPMorgan Asset Management, Lenihan manages $21 billion in 8,000 customizable portfolios that provide generous tax advantages for the firm's clients. The dual role of fund manager and product developer combines his interest in finance with his engineering background. Lenihan led the development of a product that required buy-in from across internal tech teams, third-party partners, and operations. Lenihan also launched a mentoring program that seeks to build connectivity among different teams at the asset manager. "I have learned firsthand about how successful you can be with those close partnerships when you work together, " he said.
Persons: Patrick Lenihan, Lenihan, Ted Dimig Organizations: JPMorgan Asset, Asset Management, JPMorgan Asset Management, JPMorgan, Chrysler, University of Michigan, CFA, Wharton
On Tuesday, Goldman and his cofounder, Shivaal Roy, launched Mako AI after building the startup for about a year. Before cofounding Mako with Goldman, Roy was an early engineering hire at Glean, an AI-enabled enterprise-search startup valued at $2.2 billion. So far, Mako has a handful of clients, including mid-market PE firms and growth-equity firms, including L.A.-based Shamrock Capital and San Francisco firm GroundForce Capital. Advertisement"The most important thing right now is getting this product from a first-year associate to a second-year associate," Goldman said. Here's the pitch deck Mako used to raise its $1.55 million seed round led by Khosla Ventures.
Persons: , Danny Goldman, Goldman, Shivaal Roy, Mako, hasn't, Blackstone, OpenAI's, Roy, cofounding Mako Organizations: Service, Bain, Co, Business, Khosla Ventures, KKR, Shamrock Capital, GroundForce, Mako Locations: San Francisco
As the incoming global head of technology engineering for Goldman Sachs' global banking and markets division, the ex-Googler will run the engineering team for Goldman's investment banking and sales and trading units. And lots of different challenges in the space given how much is being invested in this particular business," Goldman told Business Insider, referring to efforts to build systems that can handle the firm's anticipated growth in a compliant and resilient way. Goldman Sachs' core business of advising companies through mergers, acquisitions, and raising capital, has come under the spotlight recently as investment-banking activity continues to be slow. AdvertisementWith an anticipated decline in trading volumes across Wall Street, Goldman's sales and trading business will continue to lean on technology to win market share among institutional investors. During her first stint at Goldman, she managed various tech teams and was named managing director in 2008.
Persons: Melissa Goldman, Goldman Sachs, Goldman, she's, couldn't, You've, I'm, I've Organizations: Service, Goldman, Google, JPMorgan, Wall, Big, Bank of America Locations: Wall, Bermuda, Big Tech
As the incoming global head of technology engineering for Goldman Sachs' global banking and markets division, the ex-Googler will run the engineering team for Goldman's investment banking and sales and trading units. And lots of different challenges in the space given how much is being invested in this particular business," Goldman told Business Insider, referring to efforts to build systems that can handle the firm's anticipated growth in a compliant and resilient way. Goldman Sachs' core business of advising companies through mergers, acquisitions, and raising capital, has come under the spotlight recently as investment-banking activity continues to be slow. AdvertisementWith an anticipated decline in trading volumes across Wall Street, Goldman's sales and trading business will continue to lean on technology to win market share among institutional investors. During her first stint at Goldman, she managed various tech teams and was named managing director in 2008.
Persons: Melissa Goldman, Goldman Sachs, Goldman, she's, couldn't, You've, I'm, I've Organizations: Service, Goldman, Google, JPMorgan, Wall, Big, Bank of America Locations: Wall, Bermuda, Big Tech
download the appSign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. The new platform, called Condor, was initially designed to replace a cobbled-together patchwork of different systems — some built more than a decade ago — underpinning Man AHL, the firm's systematic-trading arm. Over time, Man built different systems to trade them all. With Condor, Fitzgerald wants to bring those together — the research, the trading, and the logging — into a single platform. But software engineers adding functionalities, risk teams managing exposure, and support teams ensuring trading systems are running will also be using Condor.
Persons: , Barry Fitzgerald, Fitzgerald, cohead, it'll, Condor Organizations: Service, Business, Condor, Man AHL, AHL
Built by the hedge fund's Applied AI team, Deep Research helps analysts and portfolio managers answer complex research questions. Mostly used by investment teams, Deep Research helps analysts and PMs research stocks before making a trade and gauge the impact of global market events on a portfolio or set of stocks. Those teams send their questions to the Applied AI team, which passes them on to the bot. The goal is to release the tool firmwide by the fourth quarter, with every team accessing the tool directly. In one recent example, a PM asked Deep Research to find companies whose supply chains were affected by tariffs.
Persons: Chen Fang, Fang Organizations: Balyasny, Management, Research
The AI team at Balyasny Asset Management has been vocal about its ambitions to build an AI equivalent of an analyst, and a recently developed tool called Deep Research is getting it one step closer to its goal. Built by the hedge fund's Applied AI team, Deep Research helps analysts and portfolio managers answer complex questions to research stocks before making a trade. In one recent example, a portfolio manager asked Deep Research to find companies whose supply chains are impacted by tariffs. The Applied AI team wants to continue to level up what the bots can do. Those teams experiment with Deep Research by sending research questions to the Applied AI team to process.
Persons: , Chen Fang, Fang, Balyasny, Peter Anderson, it's, Anderson Organizations: Service, Balyasny, Management, Research, Business, Deep Research, Microsoft, Google, SEC
"The most powerful part of the AI story thus far is the chief technology officer, chief information officer," Griffin said at the Milken Global Institute. At the most profitable hedge fund of all time, that person is Umesh Subramanian, Citadel's chief technology officer. But in the age of generative AI, the role of the CTO has evolved into something that reaches far beyond the back office. Nearly two years after OpenAI introduced ChatGPT, finance firms are still trying to figure out the best ways to leverage generative AI for their own businesses and workers. Related stories"The level of investment right now in AI, trickling down the whole value chain, is no longer only a technology investment," Argenti said.
Persons: , Ken Griffin, Griffin, They've, Subramanian, OpenAI, it's, Andrew Chin, AllianceBernstein, Goldman Sachs, Marco Argenti, Chin, Wells, Bridget Engle, Engle, Keri Smith, Argenti, Citadel's Subramanian, Wall, Accenture's Smith, AllianceBernstein's Chin, Goldman's Argenti Organizations: Service, Citadel, Milken Global Institute, Business, BNY Mellon, Goldman, Amazon Web Services, Management, Accenture, Tech, Wall Locations: Wall
In as soon as three years, there probably won't be an employee at Goldman Sachs who isn't touched by AI, predicted Goldman Sachs' chief information officer, Marco Argenti. The hypothesis (which Argenti conceded is "completely not scientific") goes to show the incredible momentum of generative AI on Wall Street. Goldman, like its peers up and down the Street, put generative AI tools in the hands of their software engineers to help them write and document code faster. Now, Argenti is looking ahead to "the next big wave" in Goldman's AI journey: front-office workers. What do you think will be different about how Goldman adopts generative AI versus your competition?
Persons: Goldman Sachs, Marco Argenti, Argenti, Goldman, copilot, We're, We've Organizations: Service, Business, Wall
AdvertisementSpeed and ease — that's how generative AI is changing the game for finance professionals. In a survey of 780 banking and capital-markets employees by Accenture Research, 62% of respondents expect generative AI to increase people's stress and burnout. "Employees with AI skills will replace people without AI skills," Andrew Chin, the chief AI officer at the $759 billion money manager AllianceBernstein, told BI. AdvertisementA data scientist at a midsize hedge fund told BI that generative AI models are a "superpower for coders." The firm's ultimate aim is to use generative AI to replicate the success of its best bankers for all advisors.
Persons: Christina Melas, Rowe Price's Sébastien, Eric Burl, Alyssa Powell, Thomas H, Lee, Keri Smith, Smith, Ken Griffin, They've, Goldman Sachs, Marco Argenti, Argenti, It's, I've, drudge, Andrew Chin, AllianceBernstein, Lisa Donahue, Donahue, Jobs, who's, He's, he'd, ChatGPT, Accenture's Smith Organizations: Bain Capital Ventures, Management, Business, Bain Capital, Man Group, Accenture Research, Finance, Wall Street, Blackstone, Sigma, Citadel, Milken Institute Global Conference, Excel, Accenture, Northern Trust, Citibank, Citi, JPMorgan Locations: New York City, New York
New York-based Hudson River Trading is best known for its market-making capabilities. Hudson River Trading winning any trade over its competitors, like Citadel Securities, Virtu, and Jane Street, comes down to its pricing engine. To help it get there, Hudson River Trading turned to Google Cloud, where its quants have been conducting their research for several months without the constraints of an on-premise environment. "Google Cloud allows us to do that without limits to computing power." Advertisement"In other words, what I'm saying is that we need to predict the future of the stock market," Dunning said.
Persons: , Jane Street, Iain Dunning, Kevin Lee, Dunning, Ken Griffin's, Italo Brito, Brito Organizations: Service, Hudson, Hudson River Trading, Citadel Securities, Virtu, Business, Trading, Google, Nvidia, HRT, Sigma Locations: New York, Hudson
It's a juicy prize for winning a generative AI coding competition hosted by Inriver's owners, private equity firm Thomas H. Lee. It's one way the Boston-based buyout firm has been able to implement generative AI coding assistants among its portfolio of middle-market companies. The goal is to accelerate software development so that portfolio companies can do more work with the same amount of resources. He also persists that deploying generative AI coding assistants is not a cost exercise, but a means to productivity. Now, the key for the SRG is educating portfolio companies on what problems AI can fix and which it can't.
Persons: Thomas H, Lee, Mark Benaquista, Benaquista, THL, Github, Alex Sabel, Sabel, Jagjit Singh, He's, Singh, it's Organizations: Service, THL's Strategic Resources Group, Engineering, THL, Boston, Apple Watch, Apple Locations: Philippine, Boston, genAI, India, Netherlands, Philippines
Max Levchin, Affirm's CEO and a PayPal alum, shares advice for founders considering going public. As a buy-now, pay-later company, Affirm's business model was built on the promise of repayment as it enabled consumers to finance their online purchases. As the pipeline of IPOs starts to build up again, including the anticipated debut of Affirm's buy-now, pay-later rival Klarna, Business Insider spoke with Levchin about Affirm's IPO. It's not uncommon to see startups hiring executives such as a president or CFO in anticipation of going public. Since Affirm's CFO and chief legal officer largely spearheaded the IPO process, Levchin said he was left to focus on the company's short- and long-term plans for the capital.
Persons: Max Levchin, , Levchin, Affirm's, he'd, PayPal, It's Organizations: Nasdaq, PayPal, Service, Business, underwriters
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