Acuity Trading has entered a partnership with Agentic AI platform WNSTN to integrate market intelligence with AI-driven engagement tools for brokers and trading platforms. The collaboration aims to improve how traders access and interact with market data within a single environment.
Integration of Intelligence and AI
The partnership combines Acuity’s trade, market, and event intelligence with WNSTN’s conversational AI technology. The integrated solution is expected to offer real-time interaction, data visualization, and personalized user engagement directly within trading platforms.
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Acuity’s tools focus on explaining market movements and highlighting key events. WNSTN adds an AI layer that enables users to interact with this data in real time. The companies said this approach will help brokers deliver more relevant and timely information to clients.
WNSTN stated that the integration will provide “real-time, powerful insights” alongside “personalized in-platform experiences” to support trader decision-making.
Focus on Usability and Compliance
The companies emphasized that the solution is designed for regulated environments. WNSTN’s engagement tools include compliance-focused features that support secure communication between platforms and users. Together, the firms aim to reduce fragmentation by bringing analysis and interaction into one system.
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The partnership targets brokers looking to improve user experience without adding separate tools. Instead, the combined offering embeds intelligence and engagement directly into the trading workflow.
Agentic AI in trading and investing usually refers to AI “agents” that can not only analyze data but also take or orchestrate actions on a user’s behalf.
In the payment space, Mastercard and Banco Santander have already shown that AI “agents” can securely initiate, authorize, and complete consumer transactions end to end within a regulated banking environment. These encompasses predefined permissions such as spending limits, explicit rules, and strong authentication while being treated as distinct, cryptographically identifiable actors in the payment flow.
“Agentic payments represent a profound shift in how commerce is initiated and executed. With Mastercard Agent Pay, we are applying the same principles that have defined our network for decades, security, trust, interoperability and global scale, to a new era of AI-enabled commerce,” said Kelly Devine, the President, Europe at Mastercard.
Meanwhile, AI is also shaping how firms think about the humans who keep trading operations running. In institutional prop shops, managers are using automation to squeeze more productivity out of existing desks and justify every incremental hire. But they are stopping short of mass layoffs.
Instead of ripping out headcount, they are quietly recalibrating: slowing the pace of recruitment, demanding more specialized skills, and asking harder questions about where human judgment still adds edge. At the same time, the story in retail-facing businesses is more openly tied to cost-cutting.
Some brokers now cite automation and “agentic AI” when announcing layoffs, framing technology as a route to leaner operations and sharper strategic focus. That raises an uncomfortable question for the industry: is AI primarily a tool to augment traders and engineers, or is it becoming a convenient narrative to rationalize job cuts that would have happened anyway?