GeneralJune 24, 2026 · 1:42 PM2 min read

    86% of <u></u>high-net-worth Indians now use AI for investing, highest in the world: HSBC research

    Indian investors are adopting AI for money matters faster than anyone else in the world. Yet when the moment comes to actually commit, they still want a human in the room.That's the takeaway from new HSBC research, conducted by Ipsos, surveying nearly 10,000 affluent and high-net-worth individuals a

    By Toi Tech Desk

    86% of <u></u>high-net-worth Indians now use AI for investing, highest in the world: HSBC research

    Indian investors are adopting AI for money matters faster than anyone else in the world.

    Yet when the moment comes to actually commit, they still want a human in the room.That's the takeaway from new HSBC research, conducted by Ipsos, surveying nearly 10,000 affluent and high-net-worth individuals across 10 markets.

    India's slice—1,115 respondents—stood out.

    A striking 86% said they use AI specifically for finance and investing, the highest of any market surveyed and well above the 73% global average.Why Indian investors trust AI for research but not the final callThe appeal is mostly about legwork.

    Indians lean on AI for analysis and research (80%), strategy support (70%), and to sense-check their own thinking (32%).

    The payoff shows up in confidence: 36% feel steadier walking into a conversation with their financial adviser.But adoption isn't the same as authority.

    Financial professionals remain the top source of investment ideas (67%) and the single biggest influence on final decisions (31%)—more than double AI's 15%.

    Investors value advisers for things a model can't fake, namely emotional reassurance (89%) and strategic expertise (78%).The hybrid model shaping the future of wealth managementMost see the two working side by side.

    Over half (51%) prefer a hybrid setup: use AI to explore, then bring in a human to validate before acting.The confidence boost has a behavioural edge too.

    Indian investors are the boldest globally, with 64% saying AI makes them more willing to take calculated risks, against a 49% global average."AI isn't replacing professional advice—it's raising the quality of decision-making," said Sandeep Batra, Head of International Wealth and Premier Banking at HSBC India.

    He framed the future as a partnership where AI speeds up analysis and advisers bring judgement and accountability when it counts.Get the latest technology news and updates.

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    Source: Times Of India · General
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