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Financial advisory bots a long way off

THE HYPE about autonomous systems serving people in a variety of ways doesn’t quite extend to personal finance

Published on: Jul 11, 2016 07:27 AM IST
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THE HYPE about autonomous systems serving people in a variety of ways doesn’t quite extend to personal finance

HT Image
HT Image

A couple of days back, I read a most interesting article called Silicon Valley-driven Hype for Self-driving Cars on the New York Times website. The article argues — quite convincingly I thought— that completely autonomous self-driving cars will be a long time coming and their imminent arrival is just a lot of competitive hype.

Assisting drivers with ‘autopilots’ is one thing, but not needing a driver at all is something very different. Google is the only one who is trying for the latter, and it has recently pushed the target date from the end of this decade to 30 years away. In this context, 30 years sounds like a way of saying ‘We have no clue and it could be never’.

In the last couple of years, there has been a lot of talk about am any types of jobs being eventually taken over by autonomous intelligent system. From drivers to agricultural labour to surgeons to legal workers and perhaps even cricket umpires, are on their way to being replaced by automated systems. The future will be robo-everything. Perhaps it will.

Which is all very good. However, the only problem is that a lot of financial advice-giving is about managing investors’ psychology, whether in a good way or a bad way. People have different kinds of needs, hopes, doubts and fears. You can either provide a solution or you can exploit these. Either way, it’s hard to do it with an algorithm.

 
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