Goldman Sachs’s stock gains
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"There is no sign of a significant impact on most labor market outcomes," chief economist Jan Hatzius writes. But the shift is real.
Goldman Sachs is hiring an AI engineer to work at its organization, and no, it isn’t an engineer with AI expertise, but an engineer who is AI.
Goldman Sachs tests AI agent Devin to automate coding tasks, marking a shift toward a hybrid workforce strategy centered on human-AI collaboration.
AI natives’ instincts, creativity, and adaptability will determine how successfully we integrate AI into our organizations.
Goldman Sachs is set to revolutionize its software development by integrating Devin, an AI software engineer, aiming to enhance productivity and autom
Goldman Sachs seems to be the only major bank implementing a start-to-finish AI-coding tool like Devin, but its competitors likely aren’t far behind. AI assistants and chatbots are used widely on Wall Street already, as big banks look for a competitive edge and pour investment into AI-related hires and technology.
Goldman is ushering in a “hybrid workforce” era in which humans and AI coexist. Its newest autonomous employee, Devin, joins the nearly 12,000 existing software engineers at the company.
Devin won’t replace humans at the bank. Argenti advocates for a “hybrid” workforce, so instances of it will be supervised by a human and, he hopes, improve their productivity.
David Solomon struck an upbeat note in Goldman's earnings call. Here are 4 reasons he's optimistic, from the return of big deals to AI.
The arrival of agentic AI at Goldman Sachs, in which programs don’t just help with tasks but execute complex jobs, signals a shift on Wall Street.
Goldman Sachs just made a move that might raise a few eyebrows on Wall Street, they’ve brought an AI on board as a software engineer. It seems to be calculated step toward rethinking how tech fits into the daily grind of high finance.
The Kraft Heinz Company (NASDAQ:KHC) ranks among the top consumer staples stocks according to hedge funds. On June 25, Goldman Sachs raised its rating of The Kraft Heinz Company (NASDAQ:KHC) from Sell to Neutral,