When decisions emerge from system behavior rather than human instruction, accountability becomes more complex — but no less critical. Portfolio managers remain accountable for outcomes, even as day-to-day decisions are embedded within agent logic rather than trade tickets. Risk leaders shift from retrospective reporting to forward-looking guardrail design, stress testing, and behavioral monitoring. The key question is no longer “What did the PM do yesterday?” but “What is the system permitted to do tomorrow?”
Investment committees move toward meta-decisions: determining where autonomy is acceptable, how it is controlled, and what evidence is required before expanding it. Model governance teams become fiduciary gatekeepers, responsible not only for validating models but also for validating entire decision systems — their objectives, constraints, failure modes, and change-control processes.
Consider a scenario where a portfolio gradually builds unintended concentration risk. No individual trade breaches limits, yet risk accumulates over time. Performance deteriorates, and questions arise: Who is accountable?
The CFA Institute Code of Ethics and Standards of Professional Conduct requires members to act with loyalty, prudence, and care, and to have a reasonable and adequate basis for investment actions. These obligations do not diminish when the initiating agent is a machine. But the locus of “reasonable basis” shifts — from trade rationale to system design rationale. In an agentic environment, accountability does not disappear. It becomes distributed across design, approval, and oversight.
















