A CEO Outlook on Banking in 2026
Banks are entering a cycle where the math no longer works without AI.
Ozkan Erener
CEO, VeriPark
As 2026 begins, banking leaders are confronting a simple reality: complexity is outpacing human capacity.
Bankers are as capable as ever. But the environment now moves faster than any traditional model can keep up with.
Operating costs continue to rise faster than revenues. Major industry analyses show that banks’ cost-to-income ratios have risen since the pandemic, and remain elevated in many markets. In regional comparisons of banks, median cost-to-income ratio ranges from the low-40s to 60%. Put simply, many large banks are spending around half of every revenue dollar just to run the business.
At the same time, the scale of financial crime remains enormous: The 2024 Global Financial Crime Report found that global fraud losses exceeded $485 billion, while an estimated $800 billion to $2 trillion is laundered annually worldwide.
Compliance adds a compounding load: a Forrester study estimates $61 billion/year in financial crime compliance costs across the US and Canada alone, with labor (42%) and technology (32%) as the largest cost drivers.
And as customer expectations move at digital speed, delivery friction becomes revenue friction. In large organizations, deployment delays can push release timelines back by an average of 3.8 months.
Put simply: the math no longer works without AI.
What we are witnessing is not another technology cycle. It is a structural shift in how banks operate. AI is no longer an innovation layer or a productivity experiment; it is becoming the operating system of viable financial institutions.
In 2026, AI steps in where human limits are reached. Banks will rely on it to manage thousands of small, continuous decisions that collectively define trust, profitability, risk, and loyalty. Not to replace people, but to protect them from the impossible pace and scale of modern banking.
The most important change next year will not be technological. It will be a mindset shift.
Executives will stop asking, “Can we use AI here?”
And start asking, “How are we still doing this without AI?”
This shift will be quiet, but decisive. AI moves from experimentation to expectation.
Yet leadership in 2026 will not be defined by who deploys the most AI but by how it is used.
The banks that lead will be those that use AI to extend their humanity, not reduce it. They will listen better, respond faster, and act with greater clarity. They will not automate their way out of responsibility, but use AI to create space for better judgment, stronger relationships, and more meaningful outcomes.
At VeriPark, we see this moment as both a responsibility and an opportunity.
Our role is not to push AI everywhere, but to help banks bring purpose to their AI ambitions.
AI where it truly matters.
In the conversations that build trust.
In the journeys that shape loyalty.
And in the decisions that define financial wellbeing.
2026 will be the year banks rediscover something fundamental: AI is not here to make banking less human.
It is here so banks can remain human, while serving far more customers, complexity, and expectations than ever before.
That is the future we are building toward.