Goldman Sachs Deploys AI Agents to Boost Productivity Amid Job Displacement Concerns

AinvestFriday, Jul 11, 2025 8:56 am ET
1min read

Goldman Sachs is testing AI software engineer Devin to boost developer productivity and create a "hybrid workforce" where humans and AI work together. Devin, developed by Cognition Labs, can handle routine engineering tasks, freeing human developers to focus on higher-value projects. This move underscores Wall Street's adoption of agentic AI tools and follows Alibaba, Salesforce, and Microsoft's expectations for AI to reshape the modern workplace by handling repetitive tasks and boosting human productivity.

Goldman Sachs is pioneering the integration of AI software engineer Devin, developed by Cognition Labs, to enhance developer productivity and create a "hybrid workforce." The initiative involves deploying hundreds and eventually thousands of Devin AI agents to handle routine engineering tasks, such as updating internal codebases [1].

This move by Goldman Sachs, the first major bank to pilot Devin, underscores the accelerating adoption of agentic AI tools on Wall Street. Devin can perform tasks such as coding, debugging, documenting, and even submitting pull requests, freeing human developers to focus on higher-value projects. Marco Argenti, the firm's tech chief, described the initiative as a step toward a "hybrid workforce" where humans and AI collaborate [1].

This shift follows similar expectations from other major tech companies. Alibaba Group expects AI-powered digital colleagues to become common within five years, allowing employees to focus on strategic and creative work. Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff noted that AI completes up to 50% of tasks in areas such as engineering and support, while Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella sees AI agents freeing people to focus on high-value activities [1].

While AI adoption brings concerns about job displacement, Goldman Sachs' approach leverages AI to offload repetitive tasks, potentially reducing the risk of significant job cuts. According to Bloomberg's research unit, banks may cut up to 200,000 jobs in the next 3–5 years due to AI automation [1].

The integration of Devin at Goldman Sachs signals a broader trend in the financial sector, where AI is being used to modernize infrastructure and handle complex tasks. This shift is part of a larger movement across industries, from customer service to healthcare, where AI agents are transforming workflows and boosting productivity.

References:
[1] https://www.benzinga.com/markets/tech/25/07/46365117/goldman-bets-on-ai-developer-to-boost-productivity-could-this-be-the-future-of-wall-street-jobs
[2] https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/rise-ai-agents-what-you-need-know-future-automation-aayush-tripathi-4sj6f
[3] https://www.business-standard.com/technology/tech-news/perplexity-s-ai-powered-web-browser-comet-with-agentic-search-launched-125071000540_1.html

Goldman Sachs Deploys AI Agents to Boost Productivity Amid Job Displacement Concerns

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