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SMA Crown Confidential:
Our News and Updates


AI in Finance — Deployment Digest – Week 16 June 2026
Bank deployments Lloyds Banking Group — Deployed a customer-facing AI assistant across 21 million accounts — conversational spending analysis and savings and investment guidance in the mobile app — described as the group’s first large-scale deployment of agentic AI. Fraud agents run behind the scenes during customer calls; a Microsoft 365 E7 enterprise deal covers workforce-wide Copilot and “governed agentic AI.” Lloyds set a target of more than £100 million in value from gen


AI in Finance — Workforce Digest – Week of 15 June 2026
A lighter week, mostly at the institutional and regulatory layer. Two firm-level figures that circulated this week were set aside — one because it could not be reconciled with what had already been confirmed, one because it was a recirculation of older remarks rather than a new disclosure. The point of assembling news this way is to leave those out, not to print them with a caveat attached. Regulatory & Institutional Financial Conduct Authority — The FCA published its first E


SMA Crown Confidential Notebook - Note: Personalisation Gap
Occasion: Capgemini’s World Wealth Report shows the ultra-high-net-worth population growing faster than the wealth below it and capturing the largest share of recent gains — while only seventeen percent of HNWIs describe their advisory experience as “seamless and personalised,” despite widespread AI investment across the sector. The position occasioned: architectural origin — the difference between an instrument of depth and a platform of breadth. This week’s finance sector d


AI in the Art & Collectibles Market — News Digest – Week of 11 June 2026
This digest prepared by our AI Agent reports what was published this week on AI deployment in the art and collectibles sector. Items below distinguish what’s demonstrated from what’s asserted, and name the interested party where relevant. Authentication — fine art – Art Recognition presented a patch-by-patch probabilistic analysis of The Bath of Diana (c. 1635) at the Art Business Conference in Maastricht — 29 patches assessed, 10 rated above 80% authentic, 8 at 60–80%, 7


Judge for Yourselves: Doubt, Authority, and the Art Market
A portrait that might be Pushkin, an aristocratic family that had held it as his likeness, and one post from a respected historian — judge for yourselves, does it look like him or not. The painting did not change. Only the certainty around it did. On the authority to doubt, how cheap it has become to cast, and the one question a public verdict can never settle. Somewhere there is a collector who, until recently, owned a portrait of Alexander Pushkin. Not a copy, not a study a


The Honest Algorithm: AI, Authority, and the Art Market
When an AI read a disputed Rubens patch by patch, it did something the art market could not abide — it told the truth about how little it knew. The contest that followed was never really about the algorithm. It was about who gets to decide what the algorithm’s findings mean, and in whose interest. In the spring of 2026, at the Art Business Conference in Maastricht, a Swiss company called Art Recognition presented an analysis of a painting known as The Bath of Diana. Dated to


AI in Finance — Deployment Digest – Week 8 June 2026
This digest prepared by our AI Agent reports what was published this week on AI deployment across the finance sector. Each item carries a note on how well it is sourced — because the point of assembling news this way is to separate what is confirmed from what is merely circulating. Platform Access — Opening to External Agents Morgan Stanley — The firm’s MCP-based external-agent access to its ShareWorks and Equity Edge platforms ($1.2T in assets, 3,400 corporate clients) conti


AI in Finance — Workforce Digest –Week of 8 June 2026
This is the first weekly digest produced by our scheduled monitoring AI agent. Each item carries a note on how well it is sourced — because the point of assembling news this way is to separate what is confirmed from what is merely circulating. Communication & Strategy HSBC — CEO Georges Elhedery told staff not to fight AI, pledging to retrain the bank’s workforce and framing the shift as making people “more productive versions of themselves” (20 May 2026). Confirmed: the CEO’
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