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Nasdaq, Inc. (NASDAQ:NDAQ) today unveiled a series of enhancements to its market surveillance platform, having completed a pilot which successfully embedded advanced AI functionality at every stage of a market abuse investigation.

The platform is used by financial institutions globally, including 50 exchanges and 20 international regulators, providing advanced capabilities to investigate suspicious activity from anomaly detection through to regulatory enforcement.

“Manipulative actors are increasingly coordinating sophisticated schemes through indirect relationships that evade traditional detection methods, demanding equally sophisticated tools that can unmask hidden connections and advance at a faster rate than the threats we face,” said Edward Probst, Head of Regulatory Technology at Nasdaq. “As more marketplaces and participants adopt the added functionality, Nasdaq is uniquely positioned to draw on the collective strength of our client community to uphold the integrity of global capital markets.”

As market manipulation schemes have grown increasingly sophisticated across jurisdictions, traditional detection methods, which rely on manual processes, have become increasingly ineffective and labor-intensive. Nasdaq’s new AI detection capabilities leverage extensive industry and internal data sets to provide comprehensive activity assessments and predictive analytics to improve detection and reduce false positives. This allows market operators and participants to identify high-risk activity and instruments more effectively.

The added capabilities build on existing AI functionality integrated to the platform, which streamlines the triage and examination process involved in reviewing suspected abuse. Together, these capabilities can also be used by global regulators to accelerate enforcement of suspected market abuse.

Nasdaq intends to offer these enhancements to all market surveillance platform customers, starting in Q4 2025.

Through a strategic partnership with the Capital Markets Authority of Saudi Arabia, the pilot AI-powered anomaly detection tooling was used to identify periods of unusual activity associated with a pre-defined set of behaviors. The pilot identified 80% of pump and dump schemes in a historical sample set compared to traditional detection methods.

As part of Nasdaq’s broader commitment to fighting financial crime, Nasdaq Verafin recently announced an Agentic AI Workforce, a suite of digital workers designed to transform the efficiency and effectiveness of financial institutions’ anti-money laundering programs.

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