Addressing a curated group of business and engineering students at AIM, AI-driven investment strategist Joseph Plazo called for a recalibration of priorities in the financial technology race.
In the heart of Southeast Asia’s financial education hub — Plazo offered a rare critique from within the AI investing world:
“Before entrusting portfolios to machines, ensure they reflect more than just return targets—they must respect the investor’s values.”
???? **A Founder Who Built the System—And Now Seeks to Regulate It**
His warning carries weight: he built what others are now adopting.
His firm’s AI-driven systems boast a 99% win rate across diversified assets and are trusted by institutional clients across Asia and Europe.
“AI is exceptional at optimization,” he said. “But if not properly oriented, it can scale mistakes faster than ever before.”
He cited a 2020 scenario where one of his bots advised shorting gold—mere hours before a Federal Reserve intervention reversed market sentiment.
“We halted the trade. It understood volatility, but not intent.”
???? **Why Human Friction Still Matters in Finance**
Plazo addressed a trend increasingly seen in Asia’s financial centers: a growing dependence on data-driven execution at the cost of reflection.
“Friction is often seen as a problem,” he noted. “But it creates space for leadership.”
He introduced a framework his firm uses, called **Conviction Calculus**, structured around three key questions:
- Will this move preserve the firm’s reputation if it fails?
- What does experience say, not just the screen?
- If this fails, who takes responsibility—the model or the leadership team?
???? **Tech Is Moving Fast. Are Ethical Systems Keeping Up?**
Nations like Singapore, South Korea, and the Philippines are becoming hubs for algorithmic innovation.
Plazo noted:
“You can scale capital faster than culture—and that’s a risk.”
He referenced two hedge fund collapses in Hong Kong during 2024, driven by AI systems that misread geopolitical shifts.
“These were not the result of poor modeling—but of narrow inputs.”
???? **Narrative-Driven Models May Define the Next Generation of Tools**
Despite the warnings, Plazo remains committed to AI—when deployed responsibly.
His firm is developing what he terms **“narrative-integrated AI”**—systems that process not only market data but also intent, public tone, policy climate, and geopolitical direction.
“Our tools must understand timing, not just trendlines.”
At a private dinner following the event, several institutional investors from Tokyo and Jakarta expressed interest in co-developing these ethical frameworks.
One executive called the model:
“Exactly the kind of Joseph Rinoza Plazo discipline Asian capital markets need now.”
???? **The Risk Isn’t Emotion—It’s Automation Without Accountability**
Plazo ended with a quiet but forceful reflection:
“The next crisis won’t begin with fear,” he said. “It will begin with flawless execution—by machines, in microseconds, with no one saying ‘wait.’”
It wasn’t a rejection of innovation—but a recalibration.