watch now Wall Street isn't immune from the plot line that has generative AI resulting in wholesale knowledge worker replacement. A new tool from AlphaSense, called Deep Research, won't provide any comfort. The generative AI agent functions like a team of analysts operating at what AlphaSense calls "superhuman speed," generating research and market insights, and building investment-grade briefings. But Jack Kokko, AlphaSense CEO and a former Morgan Stanley analyst and Wharton School MBA, isn't worried about the job outlook for Wall Street professionals. "It's a popular narrative," Kokko told CNBC of the job replacement fears during an interview on "The Exchange" on Tuesday after AlphaSense ranked No. 8 on the 2025 CNBC Disruptor 50 list. "But I would not be so sure," he said. What Deep Research does is tap into the AlphaSense universe of more than 500 million business and financial documents, which includes filings, press releases, content about public and private companies, and expert insights based on call transcripts. Last year, the company spent nearly $1 billion to buy Tegus and its library of a quarter-million business-focused interviews. "There are a hundred on a single company, and no human can read it all, but Deep Research will read it all and ask questions," Kokko said. It will answer questions too, ones that Wall Street analysts are often paid to field, within minutes. The company, which dates back to 2011, already offers rapid summaries of equity research and real-time customizable reports. And it already has a tool called Generative Search designed to think like an analyst, ask natural language questions and receive precise insights sourced from AlphaSense's content, which covers 37 languages. Any of of its enterprise intelligence customers in equities research, corporate development and finance, on or off Wall Street, will be able to plug their internal document libraries into Deep Research, which will then be able to take both pro and con positions, and offer internal and external perspectives, in a report generated in record time. "It would have taken a human analyst days or weeks," Kokko said. "I was an analyst," he added. Timothy A. Clary | Afp | Getty Images