OpenAI has recruited over 100 former investment bankers from Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, and JPMorgan Chase to help train its artificial intelligence on how to build financial models, according to 0 goal is to replace the long, painful hours of manual modeling work done by junior analysts across Wall Street, and these bankers are part of a hush-hush internal project called ‘Mercury,’ which is paying them $150 per hour to feed the system real data, structure, and logic used in dealmaking; everything from IPOs to restructurings to leveraged 1 project gives these contractors early access to OpenAI’s finance-focused models designed to replicate the daily tasks analysts perform in Excel and PowerPoint.
It’s reportedly one of the startup’s biggest pushes yet into corporate workflows, part of a wider effort to make its tools practical for industries that depend on deep quantitative 2 with a $500 billion valuation, OpenAI has not yet turned a profit, so every experiment like this is meant to prove its commercial muscle. Weird? Project Mercury recruits ex-bankers for data and model training Inside Mercury, former dealmakers write prompts and build complete financial models, simulating how real analysts perform their jobs. They’re asked to produce one model every 3 submission goes through a reviewer who provides feedback before it’s accepted into the 4 contractors operate independently, and all payments and management are handled through third-party suppliers, OpenAI said in a 5 job doesn’t even start with a 6 go through a 20-minute interview with an AI chatbot that pulls questions directly from their résumés.
If they pass, they face a test on financial statements, and finally a live modeling challenge to prove they can build clean, professional 7 accepted, they follow detailed instructions: keep formatting consistent, italicize percentages, and maintain exact margin sizes like in actual bank models. A person involved said participants come from firms such as Brookfield, Mubadala Investment, Evercore, and KKR, with a few current Harvard and MIT MBA candidates joining the 8 model they create follows Wall Street standards so that OpenAI’s systems can learn not only the math but also the professional style bankers are expected to 9 company’s spokesperson said OpenAI collaborates with experts “to improve and evaluate the capability of our models across different domains,” emphasizing that all contributors are vetted 10 idea is to use real experience to teach the AI how to manage deal workflows without endless trial and 11 analysts at investment banks work 80 hours a week building Excel models and PowerPoint decks while handling last-minute change requests from their superiors—the same culture that inspired the “pls fix” meme on Wall 12 this project, those repetitive tasks could soon be handled by 13 seen where it 14 in Cryptopolitan Research and reach crypto’s sharpest investors and builders.
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