Oracle Financial Services announced at the Financial Services Summit in London on April 14 a suite of pre-built AI agents for corporate banking, extending its agentic AI platform into treasury, trade finance, credit, and lending workflows. The agents are embedded directly into Oracle’s banking platform and operate within a governance framework that keeps bankers in a “human-in-the-loop” oversight role, according to the official announcement and PRNewswire.

“Corporate banking runs on precision, resiliency, and trust,” said Sovan Shatpathy, senior vice president of product management and development at Oracle Financial Services, in the PRNewswire release. “Our AI-powered platform embeds intelligence directly into mission-critical processes, accelerating decisions and strengthening governance so banks can serve clients with greater speed and confidence.”

The Agent Lineup

The corporate credit agents target the specific bottleneck of processing lengthy, highly customized corporate loan contracts. The Loan Data Extraction Agent extracts and standardizes key data from contracts that can run to hundreds of pages into machine-readable formats. The Financial Data Extraction Agent pulls metrics from internal statements and structures them into consistent templates for cross-period comparison. A Loan Data Validation Agent cross-checks extracted data against source documents and flags anomalies. A Documents Data Extraction Agent monitors external financial news for borrower, industry, and macro signals. And a Narrative Generation Agent drafts the credit memo from validated inputs, producing what Oracle describes as a “banker-ready first draft” for review and approval.

On the trade finance side, the Application Validator Agent ingests Bank Guarantee application packages, checks completeness, detects non-standard clauses, and delivers a pass/fail recommendation. The SCF Program Creation Agent analyzes sales contracts and tailors supply chain finance program structures to match commercial terms.

These agents are described as a sampling, with hundreds more due in the coming months, according to PYMNTS.

Context: Banking’s Agentic Infrastructure Week

Oracle Financial Services’ London announcement on April 14 arrived one day before Broadcom’s Tanzu Platform Agent Foundations launch at the AI in Finance Summit in New York on April 15. Two enterprise infrastructure vendors, two financial services summits, same week, same message: regulated financial institutions are deploying agentic AI and the infrastructure providers are racing to own that stack.

The distinction from Oracle’s Primavera AI agents (announced April 15 for construction and capital projects) is important. Oracle Financial Services serves a fundamentally different customer base with different compliance requirements, processing banking workflows where regulatory auditability and human oversight are non-negotiable.