Retail investors may soon rely on generative AI tools for financial investment advice

Will these new AI-enabled advisory capabilities fuel growth or be disruptive? That could depend on where you sit—and what you do—within the financial services industry.

Dan Simmonds

United States

Roland Waz

United States

Doug Dannemiller

United States

Financial institutions and professional financial advisers often compete for the opportunity to provide advice to retail investors. That competition could start to experience evolutionary change with the advent of generative AI, a revolutionary technology.

Deloitte Center for Financial Services predicts that gen AI-enabled applications will likely become the leader in advice mind-space for retail investors, growing from its current nascent stage to 78% usage in 2028, and could become the leading source of retail investment advice in 2027.

The rise of gen AI-enabled financial advice

The growth of generative AI marks the first time a technological revolution of this magnitude has been so widely accessible, so quickly.1 Gen AI tools are available to anyone with an internet connection.

Some financial firms are in the process of bringing gen AI capabilities to life for internal and customer-facing services, including financial institutions offering advice and guidance on investment opportunities. In addition, new entrants with a technology pedigree could venture into offering investment advice based on their technical AI prowess. As the gen AI marketplace grows, it is expected that investors will be increasingly offered gen AI-enabled investment summaries, risk management tools, and investment guidance or advice.2

Over the next several years, generative AI tools will likely change the mix of advice individual investors receive. As these tools become specialized in offering financial advice and are generally more widely used, the current vectors for investor advice will likely be affected to varying degrees.

Gen AI capabilities expected to change the mix of sources for trusted financial advice

As of 2023, about 47% of investors turned to friends and family for financial advice, making it the leading source.3 Just over a third (35%) of investors sought advice from a financial adviser, while 28% used a financial website.4 These three sources total more than 100% because in 2023, the average investor relied on 2.1 sources of advice to inform their investment decisions.5

Gen AI is expected to be added to the mix of advice sources starting in 2024 (figure 1). Investors could use both broad-based gen AI applications and gen AI applications tailored for investment advice to help make their decisions. Investment advice through gen AI could be easily accessible to investors in the next few years as financial institutions roll out revamped advice engines powered by gen AI. It is likely that investors will start to expect gen AI-powered investment tools.

Some advice sources may be affected to a greater degree than others. The stickiness of a source for advice could depend on several factors, such as the value of the advice delivered, the ease of its accessibility, and the cost of the advice.

Friends and family will likely hold steady, projected to drop 1% over the next five years and yield little share of mind-space for advice to gen AI. This resiliency may be due to the constant availability of friends and family and, of course, a price point that can’t be beaten. Even though the value of this advice might be objectively low, it isn’t likely to be displaced by gen AI capabilities.

For financial services firms, the high levels of expected change present an opportunity to reshape the online advice landscape. Early gen AI advice engines have an opportunity to capture share of investment advice mind-space. But financial websites that don’t add gen AI capabilities could fall behind. In 2023, 28% of investors used financial websites for advice.6 However, this was the case before the rise of generative AI. Deloitte predicts that just 9% of investors will use financial websites that don’t have gen AI capabilities by 2028.7 Two factors are expected to drive this change: Investors will likely seek out sites with gen AI capabilities that are able to tailor content to their individual needs, and financial institutions will likely enhance their online advice engines with gen AI capabilities, leaving fewer sites without gen AI. Investors could soon begin to see these capabilities in many of their financial interactions and will likely expect it to continue.

Limited-scope advice is expected to largely be supplanted by gen AI-enabled tools

Gen AI’s impact on financial advisers will likely reshape investment industry distribution strategies. The model used here predicts the percentage of retail investors using advisers will drop from 35% to 31%, even as the number of advice sources is expected to increase by about 20% and advisers themselves will likely be armed with gen AI capabilities. This drop in mind-space may be concentrated among advisers who provide more limited advice, such as Series 6 registered representatives. They can offer mutual funds and variable annuities, but not exchange-traded funds (ETFs) or common stock. Gen AI-enabled applications may be able to compete more favorably against the limited and transactional offerings from Series 6 reps than against the relationship-based comprehensive offerings from more sophisticated financial advisers. Additionally, retail investors are increasingly investing in common stock and ETFs, along with alternative investments, such as private equity, and each of these asset classes are out of the reach of Series 6 reps.8 Investment managers with financial adviser-driven distribution strategies are expected to retune their approaches as gen AI-capable applications compete in new ways with financial adviser-based distribution.

Investors sought investment advice through social media as the third-most-cited source with 30% having used it in 2023.9 As gen AI technology matures, investment-focused social media channels that lack gen AI augmentation will likely decline. But overall, social media investment guidance could continue to grow by embracing gen AI and showcasing how to use it. For example, some financial firms could begin to build gen AI financial advice applications that support a social media influencer’s user profile with its associated unique features. These influencer-friendly applications may include features such as recording screen navigation video and an integrated video interface so influencers can provide commentary. With capabilities such as these and integrated editing and publishing features, financial institutions may be able to influence the influencers. Financial advice with gen AI tools delivered through social media may emerge as a distribution channel, but this potential gen AI advice variant is currently included in the overall gen AI advice category in this analysis.

Other avenues for advice, such as books and newspapers, are expected to be part of the advice mosaic in a different way. While investors may be less likely to use these sources directly, this content can be integrated into financially focused gen AI applications. Investors may ask gen AI-enabled tools questions like, “Considering my financial situation, risk tolerance, time horizon, and the news about ‘hypothetical security,’ does it make sense for me to continue to hold it at this level?” The responses could be fueled by investment and strategy books, news articles, and personal investment characteristics.

Gen AI-enabled applications will likely become a new leader in advice mind-space to retail investors in just three years. Overall, incumbents in the retail investor advice mind-space should expect to face share risk. The leaders in this future landscape will likely have a strong mix of comprehensive investment solutions, gen AI capabilities that offer specialized investment advice, and the direct and intermediary user profiles accessing those capabilities.

About this prediction

The Deloitte Center for Financial Services investment management research team developed this rapid growth estimate by modeling generative AI adoption, the development of investment advice-specific gen AI capabilities, and the ability of each advice source to be replaced by gen AI.

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By

Dan Simmonds

United States

Roland Waz

United States

Doug Dannemiller

United States

Endnotes

  1. Nicole Scoble-Williams et al., Generative AI and the Future of Work, Deloitte, 2023. 

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  2. Beena Ammanath et al., The Generative AI Dossier, Deloitte, 2023. 

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  3. James Royal, “Here’s the top place Americans get financial advice – even young Americans,” Bankrate, December 21, 2023.

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  4. Ibid.

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  5. Deloitte Center for Financial Services analysis.

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  6. Royal, “Here’s the top place Americans get financial advice – even young Americans.” 

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  7. Deloitte Center for Financial Services analysis.

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  8. James Alexander, “Private markets: Retail demand and the opportunity at stake,” Deloitte, February 2, 2023; Danesh Ramuthi, "How ETFs are Changing the Game for Retail Investors," markets.com, March 25, 2024; Michelle Singletary, "More Americans own stocks. This is great for their financial future.," The Washington Post, June 6, 2023.

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  9. Royal, “Here’s the top place Americans get financial advice – even young Americans.”

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Acknowledgments

The authors wish to thank the following Deloitte Center for Financial Services colleagues for their insights and contributions: Sean CollinsNeerav Shah, and Seth Raskin.

Cover image by: Natalie Pfaff