403
Sorry!!
Error! We're sorry, but the page you were looking for doesn't exist.
Study: Only 11% Of Banks Have Cracked The Code On Trustworthy AI
(MENAFN- Mid-East Info) Even as AI spending surges, few banks have established the necessary governance and guardrails – and nearly half misjudge their own AI readiness
Dubai, United Arab Emirates, April 2026 – In banking, trust isn't optional – it's everything. Yet, even as banks accelerate AI investment faster than other sectors, most are deploying AI without the oversight and infrastructure needed to earn that trust. That's the central tension revealed in new banking insights from SAS' Data and AI Impact Report: The Trust Imperative, with research insights by IDC. Among the four sectors examined in the study, banking outpaces government, insurance and life sciences both in AI spending and adoption of trustworthy AI practices. In fact, about one-quarter (23%) of banks operate at the highest level of IDC's Trustworthy AI Index. But even with these advantages, most banking institutions fall far short of the report's“ideal state,” which combines high trust with high trustworthiness. According to the report:
Dubai, United Arab Emirates, April 2026 – In banking, trust isn't optional – it's everything. Yet, even as banks accelerate AI investment faster than other sectors, most are deploying AI without the oversight and infrastructure needed to earn that trust. That's the central tension revealed in new banking insights from SAS' Data and AI Impact Report: The Trust Imperative, with research insights by IDC. Among the four sectors examined in the study, banking outpaces government, insurance and life sciences both in AI spending and adoption of trustworthy AI practices. In fact, about one-quarter (23%) of banks operate at the highest level of IDC's Trustworthy AI Index. But even with these advantages, most banking institutions fall far short of the report's“ideal state,” which combines high trust with high trustworthiness. According to the report:
-
Only 11% of banks have achieved both high internal confidence in AI and AI systems that are demonstrably trustworthy.
Nearly half (47%) fall into what IDC calls the“trust dilemma” – either underusing reliable AI because they don't sufficiently trust it or overrelying on AI systems that haven't been adequately validated.
-
Data silos. Nearly one in five banks (19%) still operate with a siloed data infrastructure – the worst rate among the study's focus industries.
Insufficient data foundations. A significant portion of banks lack effective data governance (45%) and/or a centralized or optimized data infrastructure (41%).
Talent gaps. Many banks (42%) also face shortages of specialized AI skills.
Legal Disclaimer:
MENAFN provides the
information “as is” without warranty of any kind. We do not accept
any responsibility or liability for the accuracy, content, images,
videos, licenses, completeness, legality, or reliability of the information
contained in this article. If you have any complaints or copyright
issues related to this article, kindly contact the provider above.

Comments
No comment