Goldman Sachs has hired Daniel Marcu from Amazon.com as its global head of artificial intelligence engineering and science to help develop and refine artificial intelligence platforms and products, according to a memo seen by Reuters.
The ways AI is changing the work of bankers and analysts just got clearer at the Wall Street bank.
DeepSeek is triggering a correction, not a bear market
Hedge funds were already waiting to see if a U.S.-fostered, home-grown artificial intelligence boom would continue as China's new AI model was emerging to challenge U.S. dominance in the sector, a Goldman Sachs note said.
Goldman Sachs is rolling out a generative AI assistant to its bankers, traders and asset managers, the first stage in the evolution of a program that will eventually take on the traits of a seasoned Goldman employee,
By streamlining the diagnostic process and reducing human error, AI-powered medical imaging can help healthcare professionals make quicker, more accurate decisions, ultimately improving patient outcomes and saving lives.
Initially, market analysts had predicted an increase in interest around growth options for 2024 due to easing inflation and potential rate cuts. However, AI has taken this expected interest and amplified it into an economy-wide wave of optimism.
Peter Oppenheimer, the chief of global equity strategy and the head of macro research for Goldman Sachs in Europe, opined that the rise of tech stocks due to the AI boom was not
Chinese AI firm DeepSeek has emerged as a potential challenger to U.S. AI companies, demonstrating breakthrough models that claim to offer performance Chinese firm's efficient AI model raises questions about Big Tech's massive infrastructure spending plans.
This pharma stock has made strong gains over the past 12 months thanks to its strong earnings. Now it is testing a fresh buy point.
We recently published a list of Coatue’s 35 Most Important AI Stocks. In this article, we are going to take a look at where Alphabet Inc.
Between you-only-live-once retail traders, big corporates buying back their stock and retirement allocation demand, the bears never stood a chance, says a Goldman Sachs strategist.