
Getty Images; Jenny Chang-Rodriguez/BI
Last summer, Goldman Sachs’ tech chief, Marco Argenti, shared a “completely not scientific” prediction with Business Insider that, in about three years, almost “100%” of Goldman’s global workforce would interact with artificial intelligence while doing their jobs.
“It’s going to be just like email at the end of the day,” Argenti, the bank’s chief information officer, said about AI in the 2024 interview, calling it “something that in some form is going to touch everyone.” About a year later, the firm appears to be well on the way toward its goal.
Argenti came to Wall Street in 2019 by way of Amazon’s gigantic cloud business, and now finds himself at the nexus of the bank’s accelerating AI strategy. With his help, the firm has rolled out multiple AI-powered tools for about 10,000 members of its more than 46,000-person worldwide workforce. It’s planning to expand some — like its AI Assistant chatbot — to all employees by the year’s end.
On the firm’s most recent earnings call, CEO David Solomon told shareholders he was expecting big things from AI — like his belief that it will “transform our engineering capabilities” and “modernize our technology stack.”

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Top executives report witnessing some of the benefits Solomon was pointing to. Melissa Goldman, a partner and global head of engineering in the banking and markets division, told BI that software engineers using the developer copilot had seen efficiency gains of up to 20%.
Goldman’s growing suite of tools so far aims to boost employees’ productivity. The firm is creating copilots designed to remove some of the drudgery from bankers’ lives, for instance, like assembling presentations and prepping for client meetings; and AI polyglots fluent in several languages, saving research-distribution teams days burned doing manual translations.
All the tools were built on the bank’s proprietary GS AI Platform, which debuted in 2024. It’s equipped with access to some of the most prominent large language models, like ChatGPT or Google’s Gemini, but a protective layer was added to insulate the firm’s sensitive data from outsiders.
Over the past year, BI has talked to multiple Goldman executives, including Argenti and Goldman, about their AI strategy. Through interviews and a review of the firm’s public comments, we compiled intel about five of Goldman’s AI tools, including what they do and whom they were made for. Details about each one tell a story about where the bank stands today on its AI journey.
Here’s everything we know.
GS AI Assistant
What it does: Goldman Sachs’ in-house version of ChatGPT
Think of the GS AI Assistant as a sidekick for Goldman employees.
It uses a chat interface, similar to that of ChatGPT, but can pull its responses from the bank’s confidential data repository. Right now, it’s available to about 10,000 workers; the firm is intending to get it in the hands of the rest of the bank’s workforce of over 46,000 by the end of the year.
It can perform a variety of functions, helping executives draft presentations and plan off-site meetings, or serving as a “personal tutor” for quant strategists. What’s more, this system is a backbone of Goldman’s AI offerings — a wellspring from which several other tools, like Translate AI, described below, have emerged.
As seven Goldman employees ranging from analyst to partner recently told BI, the GS AI Assistant is becoming part of daily life at the firm. These regular users spoke about use cases ranging from learning about printing call options and authoring original lines of code to preparing notes to guide intense strategic discussions.
“I use it every day for getting a head start on traditionally time-consuming tasks,” said one engineering associate about how he leverages the tech. It’s been “saving me hours every week,” the associate, Konstantin Kuchenmeister, added.
Banker Copilot
What it does: Streamlines some aspects of investment bankers’ jobs
Members of Goldman’s investment banking division are also set to get an AI boost with the bank’s so-called banker copilot, which makes access to high-level, protected data about matters like deal-making available to eligible users. Only a small group numbering in the dozens has access to it right now since it’s in the early stages of development.
But the promise of what the AI assistant could represent for the banking business is hard to deny. Solomon himself has acknowledged the potential for AI to automate large chunks of tedious processes, like drafting S-1 regulatory disclosures for initial public offerings, for instance.
The banker copilot is expected to help users in several ways: among them, compiling data on clients and deals, analyzing corporate filings for hard-to-find cues that bankers would want to know about, drafting lengthy documents, or summarizing notes. It will have access to special subsets of data only to those authorized to see it.
Legend AI Query
What it does: A search tool that uses AI to navigate the bank’s vast repository of data
Goldman uses a system called Legend, an open-source data management and governance platform. Accessing Goldman’s vast vault of knowledge used to require users to know what they were looking for — as well as where they were looking — ahead of time, using a tool called “Legend Query.” Think of this process as being like perusing dozens of stacks in a library, but without a librarian to help.
Enter Legend AI Query, a query tool that saves time by tapping artificial intelligence to serve as that librarian. Legend AI Query, which is in early stages of its rollout, is the firm’s digital research assistant for accessing data using natural language descriptions. Neema Raphael, Goldman’s chief data officer, told BI that this interface, combined with the bank’s data, amounted to an “information superintelligence to help the human build a better mental model faster and quicker.”
Here’s how it works: To access files that could be deep within the bowels of Legend, all a user has to do is enter a query into the system in plain English and AI will do the rest. Examples of requests could look like:
- Show me all swap trades with financial institution Y in Americas by the rates desk on May 1, 2025
- Give me a list of commercial loan facilities that are maturing today.
- Can I get the last price for April 25 crude oil futures with ticker XYZ?
Legend Copilot
What it does: A fast-tracked way to upload data onto Legend, and keep the system organized
Legend Copilot, which launched in October, is a tool primarily designed for use by data engineers to maintain Legend’s infrastructure, and keep its information streams organized for others to access.
Legend draws on data that originates in other databases, but still needs to be routed into the centralized Legend system. The AI-powered assistant enables Goldman’s engineers to generate end-to-end data models or APIs in minutes, though it used to be a much lengthier process when they did it manually.
The copilot also gives engineers templates on which they can create new reports, models, or APIs, streamlining the whole process.
Translate AI
What it does: In-house language translation to and from English
As a global bank, Goldman Sachs has clients worldwide. Sometimes, those clients have a preferred language that’s not English.
To reach clients in their non-English speaking language, the bank would historically outsource some of this translation work, but turnaround times could stretch into days. That’s why Goldman built Translate AI, an in-house and generative AI-powered solution that can translate text in seconds or minutes, on top of its GS AI Assistant platform.
Teams within groups like asset and wealth management or global investment research are using Translate AI, which translates to and from English. Kerry Blum, a partner and global head of the equity structuring group who manages assets of high-net-worth individuals, told BI that members of her team were using the tool to translate writing in nine different languages so far.
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