Many Americans are turning to artificial intelligence for financial advice.
But getting good or bad advice depends a lot on how well users write their instructions — or prompts — to AI platforms.
“I think that there’s a real art and science to prompt engineering,” Andrew Lo, director of MIT’s Laboratory for Financial Engineering and principal investigator at its Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Lab, said in a recent web presentation for Harvard University’s Griffin Graduate School of Arts and Sciences.
Learn how to write a good AI prompt for personal finance: cnb.cx/4mULKb6
As grocery chains face mounting pressure from inflation-weary shoppers and growing competition, some in the industry are starting to rely on artificial intelligence to protect margins without losing customers.
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Something interesting is happening in the options market.
The S&P 500 touched record highs Thursday morning, but the Cboe Volatility Index (VIX) remained stuck near 20 and is up from five days ago, when the S&P traded about 100 points lower.
In other words, stocks went up and so did the market’s so-called fear gauge.
More details: cnb.cx/4d4XtjG
DOJ dropping Powell probe allows the Fed to focus more on monetary policy, Fifth Third's Jeff Korzenik (@JeffKorzenik) says. cc:@KellyCNBCcnb.cx/4mOlf6V