Every fund conference now has an AI panel; almost none of it tells you what
anyone has actually deployed. This page tracks adoption, not announcements:
AI put into production by fund managers, administrators and asset servicers — who deployed
what, for which operational job, and why it matters to someone who runs or services funds.
The bar for an item here is deliberately high: real adoption by the industry itself.
Model-vendor news — a new frontier model, a benchmark, a funding round — never appears,
however loud the week. When a period produces nothing that clears the bar, the page says so
rather than padding. Alongside the news items, a use-case library will grow
here over time: one entry per operational pain point — what the AI does, what it can't do,
and the order of effort to stand it up.
As at 2026-07-12 · Source: the trade-press link on each item (dated per item) ·
Limitations: coverage is what crosses the trade press — private deployments that are never
announced are, by definition, not captured.
AI adoption in the fund industry
An honest note: the past ten days produced no significant new adoption announcements
from managers or administrators — the two items below are the most recent that clear
this desk's bar (real deployment by the industry, not model news), both slightly older
than this edition's window.
Janus Henderson is developing two AI-native tools with Anthropic and General
Catalyst-backed Percepta: Prism, a client-intelligence platform for distribution teams,
and Libros, a research manager that joins proprietary research, external research and
market data for analysts — alongside firm-wide deployment of Claude Code and Cowork.
The notable part is the build-with-a-partner model on top of a frontier lab's stack,
rather than buying a vendor point solution: the manager keeps the data foundation,
which is where the durable advantage sits.
Mercer's survey of global asset managers found 55% have integrated AI into at least
one investment process and another 27% are running pilots — but, in the words of
Mercer's global manager research lead, the technology remains "a partner rather than a
decision-maker". That framing matters for governance: a partner produces inputs a human
signs off, which is a very different model-risk and accountability profile from
delegated decisions. Expect due-diligence questionnaires to start asking which of the
two you actually run.
Changelog
2026-07-12 — page created; AI-adoption coverage moved from the Industry Desk.