Skip to content
Briefings are running a touch slower this week while we rebuild the foundations.See roadmap
Iran Conflict 2026
30MAR

BoE flags agentic AI systemic risk

3 min read
08:00UTC

The Bank of England Financial Policy Committee asked the BoE and the Financial Conduct Authority for further work on agentic AI in payments and financial markets, noting that three-quarters of UK financial firms now deploy AI.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

UK regulators classified agentic AI risk as systemic; US equivalents convened informally with no published follow-up.

The Bank of England's Financial Policy Committee (FPC), in the record of its April 2026 meeting published on 10 April, directed the Bank of England and the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) to undertake further work on agentic AI use in payments and financial markets. The FPC noted that 75% of UK financial firms now deploy AI and assessed that the systemic risk from agentic deployment is "likely to increase rapidly". The HM Treasury Committee has separately called for AI-specific stress tests and clearer FCA guidance by end of 2026.

Agentic AI is the class of system able to take sustained autonomous action across multiple steps, the operational profile AISI separately evaluated on Mythos. The FPC's directive treats that capability as a financial stability concern rather than a product feature, and requires the FCA to develop supervisory tools calibrated to it. The OBR had already modelled a worst-case scenario of additional UK unemployment from AI displacement, with the Bank of England committed to stress-test an AI shock ; the FPC's April record moves the work from modelled worst case to formal supervisory mandate.

The directive sits alongside the Bessent-Powell emergency convening of 8 April as evidence that AI capability risk has entered financial-stability frameworks on both sides of the Atlantic. The UK is proceeding through institutional channels with a published record and a dated follow-up deliverable; the US convening was ad hoc, with no published readout and no scheduled agency response. Whether Mythos or its successors appear on the formal agenda of the next Financial Stability Oversight Council meeting is the nearest-term test of whether the US is running the same process informally.

For UK financial firms, the likely near-term consequence is a formal data request from the FCA, covering which agentic AI systems are in production, what oversight is in place, and how model failures propagate through payments flows. That supervisory layer does not exist in the US, where the agencies best-placed to build it are the same ones the Hawley-Warner coalition has spent six weeks asking to count AI displacement.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

The Bank of England's Financial Policy Committee (the body that monitors risks to the UK's financial system) has told the Bank and the financial regulator to do more work on the risks of AI acting autonomously in payments and financial markets. Three-quarters of UK financial firms now use AI in some form. The concern is that if these systems all behave similarly in a crisis, they could amplify a market shock faster than regulators or humans can respond.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Three-quarters of UK financial firms deploying AI reflects a deployment pattern driven by cost rather than oversight: AI tools reduce operational headcount in compliance, document processing and customer service without requiring material new regulatory approval.

The FPC's concern is that this incremental adoption has created aggregate systemic exposure that no individual firm's risk framework captures, because each firm's AI deployment looks small relative to its total operations while the aggregate across 75% of the sector represents a correlated failure mode.

The systemic risk from agentic deployment 'likely to increase rapidly' reflects the shift from narrow AI tools to systems capable of executing multi-step decisions in payments and market-making; exactly the capability profile AISI confirmed in Mythos (event index 4). Once agentic systems move from document processing to settlement and execution, the speed at which correlated failures can propagate exceeds any existing circuit-breaker mechanism calibrated for human decision timescales.

First Reported In

Update #6 · Three federal surveys, one 34-to-1 gap

US Treasury· 16 Apr 2026
Read original
Causes and effects
This Event
BoE flags agentic AI systemic risk
The UK has placed AI capability risk inside a formal financial stability framework. The US equivalent, Bessent and Powell's 8 April convening, remains ad hoc with no published follow-up.
Different Perspectives
Gulf shipping and insurance markets
Gulf shipping and insurance markets
With Hormuz and Bab el-Mandeb both hostile at once, war-risk underwriters face their first dual-chokepoint pricing problem; the rerouting hedge that absorbed one closure is gone for Israeli-linked hulls. Any deal that reopens Hormuz without a Houthi stand-down clause delivers only partial shipping relief.
Russia and China
Russia and China
Russia and China met IAEA chief Grossi jointly in Geneva on 5 June to coordinate an advance blocking position against Washington's censure resolution, the first documented instance of proactive pre-session obstruction rather than reactive post-vote dissent. Beijing's move came four days after OFAC designated Shanghai Qianye Energy under Iran energy sanctions.
Saudi Arabia
Saudi Arabia
Saudi Arabia was left out of the emergency $4.01 billion Patriot waiver Qatar received on 2 May as its own PAC-3 stocks ran near-empty from intercepting Iranian salvoes over Aramco facilities. Riyadh is on a standard 18-month FMS queue behind a production line booked through 2030, with no equivalent priority to Qatar's Al Udeid basing role.
Houthis (Ansar Allah)
Houthis (Ansar Allah)
The Houthis declared a complete ban on Israeli Red Sea navigation on 8 June and struck Jaffa, their first attack on Israeli territory since April, seven days after the Tasnim authorisation to activate other fronts including Bab el-Mandeb. The declaration put both chokepoints under hostile authority simultaneously.
Iran
Iran
Iran agreed the 9 June mutual halt after the Mahshahr exchange and coordinated with Russia and China to block Washington's IAEA censure resolution, using the Board as a second front while the bilateral pause held on the military one. Tehran's acceptance of the Lebanon carve-out contradicts the linkage position it stated on 1 June.
Benjamin Netanyahu and the IDF
Benjamin Netanyahu and the IDF
Israel struck the Karun Petrochemical plant at Mahshahr on 8 June over Trump's explicit objection, then agreed a halt with Iran the following day scoped on Israeli terms with Lebanon carved out. Netanyahu's posture is that the IDF will not accept Iranian missile factories as off-limits regardless of US diplomatic timelines.