LONDON, July 12 (Reuters) - Applying artificial intelligence (AI) to financial services must go hand-in-hand with better fraud prevention and resilience to hacking and outages, Britain's Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) was expected to say on Wednesday.
AI's use can benefit markets, such as cutting prices for consumers, but also cause imbalances if "unleashed unfettered", Rathi will say.
"This means that as AI is further adopted, the investment in fraud prevention and operational and cyber resilience will have to accelerate simultaneously," Rathi will say.
We will remain super vigilant on how firms mitigate cyber-risks and fraud given the likelihood that these will rise."
The watchdog has already observed how volatility during the trading day has doubled and amplified compared to during the 2008 global financial crisis.
Persons:
Nikhil Rathi, Rathi, Huw Jones, Mark Potter
Organizations:
Authority, Wednesday, Big Tech, Thomson