Citi has launched an always-on, AI-powered member of its Wealth team that can engage in conversation, respond in real time, and surface insights instantly.
If AI becomes the front door to wealth management, banks don’t just face a UX problem; they face a structural one as well. How do you keep advice personal under regulatory constraint, and what happens to the human advisor when the interface is no longer human-mediated?
Citi is testing that question with Citi Sky, built with Google Cloud and Google DeepMind.
Citi Sky lets clients talk to it at any time. It delivers real-time market, portfolio, and opportunity insights, shifting wealth management away from scheduled interaction and toward continuous availability. Voice and multimodal interfaces, powered by DeepMind models, push it further into a conversational experience rather than a static dashboard.
But the guardrails are clear. Citi Sky does not execute trades. It interprets, explains, and prepares, while human advisors remain the final point of control.
Underneath that product positioning sits a harder engineering problem.
For Google DeepMind, the challenge is not building intelligence, but controlling it. Generative AI systems are inherently non-deterministic – the same input can produce different outputs, which makes consistency difficult in regulated financial environments.
JP Suh, Product Manager at Google DeepMind, says the fix lies in system design, which includes strict routing, Citi-specific tool use, and tightly bound context to ensure the agent operates within defined limits inside Citi’s environment.
Personalization is deliberately kept separate from model reasoning. Instead of being embedded in training, it is applied at runtime through controlled data access, a structure meant to preserve relevance while reducing hallucinations and keeping compliance intact.
Citi Sky signals that wealth management is moving from a pull model to a presence model.
Advice is no longer something clients ‘go to’ on a schedule. It becomes present in the background and is always available, always responding.
That compresses advisors’ surface area and changes their rhythm in the relationship. Routine interaction fades, replaced by fewer but higher-stakes moments where judgment, context, and trust actually matter.
Wealth management is slowly shifting toward a model where intelligence is continuous and human involvement becomes more selective, intentional, and contextual.