As financial institutions face increasing compliance pressures, Nasdaq Verafin has introduced a platform that applies agentic artificial intelligence to assist with certain anti-money laundering (AML) processes.
Verafin, known for its cloud-based financial crime management solutions, recently unveiled its Agentic AI Workforce platform. The platform leverages AI agents to automate common compliance tasks with minimal human oversight. Two key focus areas are sanctions screening and enhanced due diligence (EDD) reviews.
Verafin’s Digital Sanctions Analyst is designed to help financial institutions manage false positive alerts—a persistent challenge in traditional fraud detection systems that often overwhelm compliance teams with manual checks.
The platform also addresses another resource-intensive area: periodic EDD reviews. Its AI agents are built to assess and close low-risk cases automatically, allowing compliance staff to concentrate on higher-risk accounts.
Significant Tech Resources
Technology-based solutions for fraud mitigation and compliance have become essential, as bad actors now have significant tech resources at their disposal.
For example, security firm Okta found that cybercriminals have exploited Vercel’s v0 generative AI tool to create full-scale phishing websites from simple prompts. It has been used to create convincing clones of sign-in pages for brands like Microsoft 365—sites that can be created in seconds.
Cybercriminals have also begun deploying AI agents. Symantec recently reported how OpenAI’s Operator agent could be used to carry out a phishing attack from start to finish.
A Double-Edged Sword
While AI can be a powerful tool for bad actors, it can be just as powerful in the hands of organizations.
A recent study from the Bank for International Settlements (BIS) and the Bank of England found that AI models are highly effective for fraud detection—particularly in identifying novel patterns of financial crime. BIS reported that AI outperformed traditional fraud defenses by roughly 26% in detecting suspicious activity.
Although AI’s potential applications come with inherent risks, financial institutions often see it as a double-edged sword. Still, with rising fraud and compliance pressures, increased AI investment seems all but inevitable.








