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Can I use AI to research client investments and stay compliant?

Yes — if the AI cites its sources and the work is retained as a record. The compliance risk isn't AI itself; it's using a tool that can't show its sources or keep a books-and-records trail.

AAdvisorIQ
·2 min read·ai

Short answer: Yes. Nothing in the Investment Advisers Act prohibits using AI for research. What the rules care about is whether you can (1) verify the basis for a recommendation and (2) retain a record of it. A general chatbot fails both; a sourced, logged research tool passes both.

Why the tool matters more than the technology

An RIA's obligations don't change because the input came from a model. Under the Advisers Act books-and-records rule, SEC Rule 204-2, advisers must retain records that form the basis of advice given to clients. If AI-assisted reasoning informs a recommendation, "it was in my chat history" is not a record you can reliably produce on exam.

So the question isn't "is AI allowed?" — it's "can this tool show its work and keep the receipt?"

The two-part test

Before AI output reaches a client, ask: (1) Can I trace every factual claim to a verifiable source? (2) Is this interaction retained in a system I could produce for a regulator? If either answer is no, don't stand behind the output.

What "compliant AI research" looks like in practice

  • Citations on every claim. A figure from a 10-K should link to that filing, not appear as an unverifiable assertion.
  • A retained trail. The query, the sources retrieved, and the answer are logged for SEC/FINRA retention — automatically, not by screenshotting a chat.
  • Sources you'd actually cite. SEC EDGAR filings, economic data, market data, and your own firm documents — not the open web's best guess.

Where consumer chatbots fall down

They don't cite, they don't keep a compliant record, and they state wrong facts as fluently as right ones. That's fine for drafting an email; it's a problem the moment the output informs what you tell a client.

AdvisorIQ does research with citations on every claim and a full audit trail — built for the recordkeeping rules, not retrofitted to them.

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General information, not legal or compliance advice. Confirm specifics with your own compliance counsel.

Does the SEC ban AI for investment research?
No. There is no rule prohibiting AI-assisted research. The applicable obligations — recordkeeping under Rule 204-2 and the duty of care — are technology-neutral and apply to the advice regardless of how it was produced.
What makes AI research non-compliant?
Using output you can't trace to a source, or that isn't retained as a record. An uncited claim that informs a recommendation, with no books-and-records trail, is the core risk.
Is my ChatGPT history a compliant record?
A consumer chat account is not a books-and-records system. If AI reasoning is part of a recommendation, you need it retained in a system you can produce on exam.

See a cited answer on your own questions.

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