As artificial intelligence evolves from predictive and generative models into autonomous, goal-driven agents, financial regulators are beginning to develop new governance frameworks. The Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS), together with a consortium of financial institutions and fintech companies, has launched an initiative to establish governance standards for the use of AI agents in financial services.

A Blueprint for Future Regulation

Rather than focusing solely on pre-deployment testing or post-event audits, the Safeguards for Agentic Finance at Runtime (SAFR) framework introduces the concept of real-time governance, monitoring and validating AI decisions at the point of execution.

Although the whitepaper is not a binding regulation, it provides a clear indication of the direction regulators are taking. For the trading industry, where automated decision-making and high-speed execution are standard practice, SAFR offers an early blueprint for the governance of autonomous AI systems.

Why Agentic AI Requires New Rules

Traditional automation relies on predefined rules created by software developers. Agentic AI operates differently. Instead of following fixed instructions, an AI agent is assigned an objective, such as managing liquidity, processing claims, or executing trades, and independently determines the steps required to achieve that goal. This creates entirely new governance challenges that existing compliance frameworks were not designed to address.

Real-Time Oversight Instead of Post-Trade Controls

To address these challenges, the SAFR framework introduces a runtime governance layer positioned between the AI agent and the institution’s execution systems. Rather than allowing an agent to act without supervision, every proposed action is evaluated and validated before execution.

The framework defines four possible outcomes:

Implications for Retail Brokers

For retail brokers handling large volumes of automated client activity, the framework reinforces an important principle: firms remain fully responsible for the actions of their AI systems. Responsibility cannot be delegated to third-party AI vendors. The regulated entity remains accountable for ensuring that automated systems operate within appropriate risk limits.

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This article was written by Sylwester Majewski at www.financemagnates.com.RegulationRead More

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