AI-pilled graduates are not a big hit for finance jobs with their shallow ideas
Artificial intelligence may be transforming the financial industry, but some firms are beginning to push back against a growing trend: graduates who rely too heavily on AI tools without demonstrating deeper analytical thinking.
According to a report by The Financial Times, the issue recently surfaced through experiences shared by senior finance professionals, including one New York financier who described his company’s 2025 interns as the first group of “true AI natives.” These students had grown up using both digital platforms and generative AI systems, and initially appeared highly capable during recruitment.
However, according to the financier quoted in the report, problems emerged once senior executives began testing their ideas more closely. While presentations and outputs looked polished, many responses reportedly lacked depth, originality, and independent reasoning. The result was a reduction in return offers and a shift in hiring priorities toward candidates with stronger critical thinking skills, including those from humanities backgrounds.
Finance firms want more than AI fluency
The broader finance industry continues to invest aggressively in AI. Major firms such as JPMorgan and Visa increasingly describe themselves as technology-driven businesses, while Nvidia recently reported that most finance executives believe AI is becoming critical to future growth.
But despite the enthusiasm, real-world results remain mixed. A recent survey by Cambridge Judge Business School found that although more than 80 percent of financial firms now use AI, most deployments remain focused on back-office tasks rather than core strategic functions.

The same survey also showed that many companies are struggling to measure AI’s actual business impact. Only a minority reported meaningful profit gains, while a large percentage said AI had produced little noticeable financial change so far.
This disconnect is beginning to influence hiring and workplace expectations. Instead of simply looking for candidates who can use AI tools effectively, employers increasingly want people who can challenge AI-generated outputs, identify weaknesses, and apply independent judgment.
Why this matters beyond finance
The trend reflects a broader shift happening across industries. AI skills are becoming common, but companies are starting to differentiate between people who rely on AI for answers and those who can think critically alongside it.
For students and young professionals, this could reshape what employers value most. Technical knowledge and AI familiarity remain important, but they are no longer enough on their own. Communication skills, reasoning, adaptability, and deeper subject understanding are becoming equally important in an AI-driven workplace.
At the same time, regulators are also becoming more cautious about AI’s role in finance. Concerns around AI hallucinations, cyber risks, and automated decision-making are pushing financial authorities to develop safer testing frameworks and oversight mechanisms.
The bigger challenge ahead
The growing consensus within finance appears to be that AI is most effective as an enhancement tool rather than a replacement for human thinking. As adoption accelerates, the firms likely to benefit most may not be those using the most AI, but those combining automation with employees capable of strong judgment and original analysis.
That shift could redefine hiring trends over the next few years – and may explain why some finance firms are no longer fully sold on the “AI-pilled” graduate.
