Agentic Artificial Intelligence in Financial Systems: Transforming Predictive Analytics, Market Stability, And Autonomous Financial Decision-Making
Abstract
The rapid integration of artificial intelligence into financial systems has fundamentally reshaped how financial institutions analyze risk, forecast market movements, detect fraud, and deliver customer services. Recent advances in machine learning, deep learning, and agentic artificial intelligence have accelerated the transition from rule-based decision frameworks toward autonomous, adaptive systems capable of learning from vast financial datasets. This study investigates the evolving role of artificial intelligence, particularly agentic AI, in financial decision-making, predictive analytics, and market stability. The research draws upon existing theoretical frameworks and empirical findings in financial machine learning, algorithmic trading, credit scoring, and financial regulation to examine how intelligent systems are transforming modern financial infrastructures.
The study employs a comprehensive literature-based analytical methodology synthesizing interdisciplinary research across finance, economics, artificial intelligence, and regulatory studies. The analysis explores the emergence of agentic systems capable of autonomous goal-oriented decision-making and their implications for financial markets, risk management, and institutional governance. Particular attention is given to machine learning-driven predictive analytics, deep reinforcement learning in algorithmic trading, AI-driven credit scoring, and fraud detection frameworks based on neural networks and graph-based architectures.
Findings indicate that artificial intelligence technologies significantly enhance predictive capabilities, operational efficiency, and customer engagement in financial institutions. However, the increasing autonomy of agentic AI introduces new systemic risks, including algorithmic bias, model opacity, and potential market instability arising from interacting autonomous agents. The research highlights the importance of trustworthy AI frameworks, regulatory innovation, and human oversight mechanisms to mitigate such risks while maximizing the benefits of AI-driven financial innovation.
This study contributes to the growing academic discourse on financial AI by integrating theoretical insights from economics and computational sciences with emerging developments in agentic artificial intelligence. It further identifies critical research gaps related to governance, ethical deployment, and long-term systemic implications of autonomous financial systems. The findings provide strategic insights for policymakers, financial institutions, and researchers seeking to navigate the rapidly evolving landscape of AI-driven financial transformation.
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