Partnering with generative artificial intelligence in the finance function

Generative artificial intelligence can take on routine finance tasks, freeing chief financial officers to focus on strategic advising. Adoption is under way but results and forecasting challenges mean finance leaders must experiment deliberately.

Generative artificial intelligence has the potential to reshape the finance function by automating routine, time-consuming work and freeing capacity for higher-value strategic tasks. The article cites common applications such as generating quarterly reports, drafting communications with investors, and producing strategic summaries. Andrew W. Lo, Charles E. and Susan T. Harris professor and director of the Laboratory for Financial Engineering at the MIT Sloan School of Management, is quoted saying that large language models can provide first drafts that summarize key issues and outline priorities while stopping short of replacing the chief financial officer.

Industry analysis and surveys show early but growing uptake. Deloitte’s analysis of its 2024 State of Generative AI in the Enterprise survey found that 19% of finance organizations have adopted generative artificial intelligence in the finance function. Deloitte also reports that return on generative artificial intelligence investments in finance has been 8 points below expectations so far for surveyed organizations. Despite that shortfall, Deloitte’s fourth-quarter 2024 North American CFO Signals survey found 46% of responding CFOs expect deployment or spend on generative artificial intelligence in finance to increase in the next 12 months. The article notes promise in treasury use cases—cash, revenue, and liquidity forecasting and management—as well as contract automation and investment analysis, but it cautions that mathematical limitations of large language models remain a barrier to reliable forecasting.

The piece argues that finance organizations risk falling behind if CFOs wait to see how the technology evolves. Robyn Peters, principal in finance transformation at Deloitte Consulting LLP, emphasizes that finance has lagged other customer-facing functions and that artificial intelligence can help modernize document workflows and internal experiences. The article recommends reimagining the finance role in collaboration with generative artificial intelligence and notes that future finance professionals are already growing up using these tools. The content was produced by Insights, the custom content arm of MIT Technology Review, and was not written by MIT Technology Review’s editorial staff.

70

Impact Score

How Intel became central to America’s Artificial Intelligence strategy

The Trump administration took a 10 percent stake in Intel in exchange for early CHIPS Act funding, positioning the struggling chipmaker at the core of U.S. Artificial Intelligence ambitions. The high-stakes bet could reshape domestic manufacturing while raising questions about government overreach.

NextSilicon unveils processor chip to challenge Intel and AMD

Israeli startup NextSilicon is developing a RISC-V central processor to complement its Maverick-2 chip for precision scientific computing, positioning it against Intel and AMD and in competition with Nvidia’s systems. Sandia National Laboratories has been evaluating the technology as the company claims faster, lower power performance without code changes on some workloads.

Contact Us

Got questions? Use the form to contact us.

Contact Form

Clicking next sends a verification code to your email. After verifying, you can enter your message.