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Insights

What sectors are well placed to enjoy real AI gains?

EMEA Credit Analysts team

As artificial intelligence investment surges across industries, real progress varies widely. Drawing on conversations with more than 50 European companies, we explore who is truly prepared for AI‑driven disruption and who risks being left behind.

“At every workshop you will see, in the backyard, a heap of old iron, a few wheels, a few levers, a few cranks, broken and eaten with rust. Twenty years ago, that was the pride of the city. People flocked in from the country to see the great invention; now it is superseded, its day is done. All the boasted science and philosophy of this day will soon be old”

Artificial intelligence (AI) is increasingly seen as an integral part of modern business strategy, capable of driving future efficiencies and productivity. But although investment in the technology itself is at unprecedented levels, what is industry uptake actually like?

Over the past six months the EMEA Credit Analysts team at Columbia Threadneedle Investments has conducted an AI engagement exercise. Our objective is to assess how well companies and industries might be able to adapt to an upcoming period of AI-driven change.

Methodology

Technologies come and go. In this instance, however, we are interested in the human behavior behind the technology. Why is a company deploying this technology? What’s management’s track record with technological change? Is the governance around it appropriate? What is the benefit to customers? How will it impact competition or barriers to entry?

To find out, we talked to more than 50 European companies under our coverage across communications, utilities, consumer, insurance, transportation, banking and real estate sectors. Staff representation was from management, investor relations, chief data officers and heads of AI adoption.

We asked a list of tailored questions – written in collaboration with our internal AI experts (see appendix) – designed to assess how well our companies are likely to be able to handle and adapt to change. We think engagement is crucial to understanding a business. We want to sit down face to face with leaders and challenge their thinking. Businesses will publicly say good things about what they are doing, but are they aware of what they don’t know, and would they really say anything negative about the issues they are facing? We only find out by asking the difficult questions.

Once we had spoken to the companies, we collated all the information from the exercise and used our own AI tools to help us spot the trends. This exercise is a great example of how we integrate company engagement into our investment process, showcasing our research intensity and collaboration, as well as our deep understanding of technology from a fundamental and investment perspective.

Our findings:  leaders, laggards, followers

Leaders: early adopters

The information services sector stands head and shoulders above the rest in terms of AI use, and the reason is simple: they have been doing this for more than a decade. Look at a business such as analytics firm Relx or data firm Experian1, and you will find something remarkable – AI isn’t a buzzword or a pilot program; it’s already making money. These companies have been working with AI and large language models for 10-plus years, which has given them a massive head start. They are now using agentic AI to enhance product offerings that can simplify complex decision making, be it in a court room or an emergency room. These products are already adding to revenues. This is the difference between talking about AI and monetising it.

What makes these companies truly formidable is their proprietary data. Relx and Experian sit on treasure troves of trusted, high-quality information that make their AI output genuinely better than their competitors. Having good proprietary data means the answers generated by the large language models, or LLMs, are better. It is a moat that is nearly impossible to replicate.

Elsewhere, telecoms and utility companies are “quiet winners”. AI tools mean grids and networks can be analysed in real time, helping to reduce both fault resolution times and manual labour costs. Customer service becomes better and cheaper as AI-powered agents handle customer enquiries. All of which means these companies will be able to run more efficiently with better margins. Management at Swisscom, for example, says AI is the biggest transformation in their history.

As a result of this adoption, we expect these headcount-heavy industries to cut jobs. Here we are looking for companies to upskill their remaining employees and create a culture of commerciality around the technology. A strong management team is essential to long-term planning and value creation. A good sign that this is happening is if AI investment is structurally separated from cost-optimisation mandates, or if it comes under a fully accountable strategy overseen by the CEO. If not, it generally means AI initiatives are reported through operations, meaning they are all about cost. Although AI experimentation requires tolerance for failure (we applaud the approach at United Utilities where management empowers talented individuals to be creative), companies need to deploy AI safely to avoid reputational or financial damage.

Laggards: investment yet to feed through

Banks are at the start of the AI investment cycle and are spending large sums in a bid to capitalise on AI. CaixaBank, for example, has committed €5 billion through its Cosmos Plan and BBVA has deployed ChatGPT to 11,000 employees globally with an impressive 90% adoption rate (and employee time savings of two to three hours a week).

For most banks there is a pause between initial investment and tangible financial targets and subsequent results that impact profitability. Santander, however, stands out in this regard. It  expects AI to contribute to pre-tax profitability, citing €1 billion per annum by 2028, focussed 70% on costs and 30% on revenues. It is targetting transformational cost-efficiency improvements, a good part of which will be driven by AI, and has already reported tangible progress in 2026. 

However, the banking sector’s Achilles heel is universal: data infrastructure. AI capabilities depend on accessible, clean, well-governed data. Every bank we talked to raised the issue of legacy systems, data fragmentation and poor data quality constraining AI deployment. What is more, many banks are heavily dependent on the same vendors: Microsoft, Google and OpenAI. If all these institutions rely on the same technology for vital processes, could it increase systemic risk, and would that raise eyebrows at the regulators? One major bank identifies “operational and third-party dependency” and vendor lock-in as key risks.

The winners here have invested in data platform investments and cloud migration and have a chief data officer role within the reporting structure. Standard Chartered and Barclays are also on the right track here.

Followers

Real estate and mining bring up the rear, albeit for different reasons.

Real estate companies are adopting a measured, infrastructure-first approach to AI. Many possess extensive proprietary datasets on their assets and tenants, some of which already support in-house analytics capabilities. While mainstream AI tools have been adopted across various functions – including leasing, valuation, tenant engagement and asset acquisition – the real estate outlook varies by subsector. For office landlords, AI presents a potential threat if widespread white-collar job losses materialise. This particularly affects tenants with substantial backoffice operations vulnerable to automation. Conversely, datacentre operators view AI as an opportunity that could drive incremental leasing demand. Meanwhile, shopping centre owners see limited threat given the inherently physical nature of retail experiences, especially in a landscape where e-commerce is already well established.

Importantly, real estate companies are fundamentally asset-intensive rather than labour-intensive, resulting in already-high operating margins. Consequently, the urgency to capture benefits from headcount reduction or productivity enhancement is less pronounced than in more labour-dependent sectors.

Mining faces even steeper barriers. The physical nature of these operations require extensive safety trials before any large-scale deployment of AI. Vale stands as the exception, with more than 1,000 AI models deployed in areas such as autonomous haulage and drilling since 2017. It also plans to have 90 autonomous trucks by 2028, which are set to deliver 15% productivity gains.

Efficiencies not transformation

Perhaps the most telling discovery across all the sectors is the “no headcount reduction paradox”. Despite claims of improved efficiency, the majority of companies are not cutting jobs. Most banks we spoke to said it was too soon for such a move, but the cost base of a bank is 60% people – so there is plenty of room. Real estate firms emphasised the need for staff reallocation, while mining businesses said cutting staff was not their main objective. Even tech companies expressed concerns about job destruction.

This suggests three things: either a genuine commitment to human-centric transformation; organisational resistance to change; or an overstating of efficiency gains. When companies suggest employees are saving several hours a week but don’t adjust their staffing, where has that productivity gone? Our sense is that headcount reductions are coming but concrete plans are still a few quarters away.

Investment outcomes

For investors, the message is clear: look to the companies with management strength that are embracing AI and can make money from the technology, not those still figuring out how to use it. Certain players within information services and the telecoms and utility sectors have the maturity, data advantages and revenue traction to which banks can only aspire.

Within banks, Santander and BBVA lead the pack with genuine ambition and scale. The real test comes next year when the massive investments reveal to what extent they will provide competitive differentiation and the level of return on investment.

The bottom line

The AI revolution is real and happening right now. The winners are the ones who started running years before everyone else even heard the starting gun.

Over the long term it is always the human behavior behind the technology that drives the performance of the company. We are looking for companies with mature data infrastructure and governance, with AI-literate management teams encouraging upskilling and innovation over pure cost cutting. Based on our engagement, those companies are starting to edge ahead.

As ever, the tools will continue to change, but the disciplines of initially adoption and secondly adaptation, remain constant. The companies that recognise this – and more importantly act on it – won’t just survive the next wave of innovation but define it.

Appendix

Our AI questions:

Governance

  • Who has overall responsibility for AI within the company. Is it at C-suite or lower level? 
  • Who has overall responsibility for the governance process around AI? How do you balance governance with pursuing opportunities?
  • How are senior managers incentivised to embrace AI?
  • Which part of the organisation is driving the change? Is it at the user level or centralised with IT?
  • How are you ensuring that you have the right talent mix at all levels of the company to ensure that you can grow the use of AI while managing the key risks?

Opportunities

  • How are you making sure you don’t fall behind peers? Are you building a differentiator or are you just trying to catch up?
  • Can you provide specific examples of doing things more efficiently (faster and/or cheaper) or better? (Are you doing tasks which otherwise would not have been possible?)
  • Have you been able to reduce headcount as a direct result of AI adoption?
  • Are you changing your operational business model or your business strategy due to AI? Could you please provide specific examples?
  • How do you prioritise AI use cases? Is it driven by users, or by executing a big picture plan driven by management? How do you promote shared learning within the organisation?

Competition

  • Which AI startups/products should investors be aware of, and what do startups need to do to gain market share?  How much of a threat are they to your business?

Data

  • From a workflow perspective, getting data available to easily load into the AI is very important. It determines whether automation is possible or not. What challenges have you faced around data?

Risks

  • What do you see as the key risks to the business AI poses?

Key topics

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1 Mention of specific companies is not a recommendation to buy or sell.

 

Important information

For use by professional clients and/or equivalent investor types in your jurisdiction (not to be used with or passed on to retail clients). For marketing purposes.

This document is intended for informational purposes only and should not be considered representative of any particular investment. This should not be considered an offer or solicitation to buy or sell any securities or other financial instruments, or to provide investment advice or services. Investing involves risk including the risk of loss of principal. Your capital is at risk.  Market risk may affect a single issuer, sector of the economy, industry or the market as a whole. The value of investments is not guaranteed, and therefore an investor may not get back the amount invested. International investing involves certain risks and volatility due to potential political, economic or currency fluctuations and different financial and accounting standards. The securities included herein are for illustrative purposes only, subject to change and should not be construed as a recommendation to buy or sell. Securities discussed may or may not prove profitable. The views expressed are as of the date given, may change as market or other conditions change and may differ from views expressed by other Columbia Threadneedle Investments (Columbia Threadneedle) associates or affiliates. Actual investments or investment decisions made by Columbia Threadneedle and its affiliates, whether for its own account or on behalf of clients, may not necessarily reflect the views expressed. This information is not intended to provide investment advice and does not take into consideration individual investor circumstances. Investment decisions should always be made based on an investor’s specific financial needs, objectives, goals, time horizon and risk tolerance. Asset classes described may not be suitable for all investors. Past performance does not guarantee future results, and no forecast should be considered a guarantee either. Information and opinions provided by third parties have been obtained from sources believed to be reliable, but accuracy and completeness cannot be guaranteed. This document and its contents have not been reviewed by any regulatory authority.

In Australia: Issued by Threadneedle Investments Singapore (Pte.) Limited [“TIS”], ARBN 600 027 414.  TIS is exempt from the requirement to hold an Australian financial services licence under the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) and relies on Class Order 03/1102 in respect of the financial services it provides to wholesale clients in Australia. This document should only be distributed in Australia to “wholesale clients” as defined in Section 761G of the Corporations Act.  TIS is regulated in Singapore (Registration number: 201101559W) by the Monetary Authority of Singapore under the Securities and Futures Act (Chapter 289), which differ from Australian laws.

In Singapore: Issued by Threadneedle Investments Singapore (Pte.) Limited, 3 Killiney Road, #07-07, Winsland House 1, Singapore 239519, which is regulated in Singapore by the Monetary Authority of Singapore under the Securities and Futures Act (Chapter 289). Registration number: 201101559W. This advertisement has not been reviewed by the Monetary Authority of Singapore.

In Hong Kong: Issued by Threadneedle Portfolio Services Hong Kong Limited 天利投資管理香港有限公司. Unit 3004, Two Exchange Square, 8 Connaught Place, Hong Kong, which is licensed by the Securities and Futures Commission (“SFC”) to conduct Type 1 regulated activities (CE:AQA779). Registered in Hong Kong under the Companies Ordinance (Chapter 622), No. 1173058.

In Japan: Issued by Columbia Threadneedle Investments Japan Co., Ltd. Financial Instruments Business Operator, The Director-General of Kanto Local Finance Bureau (FIBO) No.3281, and a member of Japan Investment Advisers Association and Type II Financial Instruments Firms Association.

In the UK: Issued by Threadneedle Asset Management Limited, No. 573204 and/or Columbia Threadneedle Management Limited, No. 517895, both registered in England and Wales and authorised and regulated in the UK by the Financial Conduct Authority.

In the EEA: Issued by Threadneedle Management Luxembourg S.A., registered with the Registre de Commerce et des Sociétés (Luxembourg), No. B 110242 and/or Columbia Threadneedle Netherlands B.V., regulated by the Dutch Authority for the Financial Markets (AFM), registered No. 08068841.

In Switzerland: Issued by Threadneedle Portfolio Services AG, Registered address: Claridenstrasse 41, 8002 Zurich, Switzerland.

In the Middle East: This document is distributed by Columbia Threadneedle Investments (ME) Limited, which is regulated by the Dubai Financial Services Authority (DFSA).  For Distributors: This document is intended to provide distributors with information about Group products and services and is not for further distribution. For Institutional Clients: The information in this document is not intended as financial advice and is only intended for persons with appropriate investment knowledge and who meet the regulatory criteria to be classified as a Professional Client or Market Counterparties and no other Person should act upon it.

This document may be made available to you by an affiliated company which is part of the Columbia Threadneedle Investments group of companies: Columbia Threadneedle Management Limited in the UK; Columbia Threadneedle Netherlands B.V., regulated by the Dutch Authority for the Financial Markets (AFM), registered No. 08068841.

Columbia Threadneedle Investments is the global brand name of the Columbia and Threadneedle group of companies. © 2026 Columbia Threadneedle. All rights reserved. columbiathreadneedle.com                                                                                                 

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Important information

For use by professional clients and/or equivalent investor types in your jurisdiction (not to be used with or passed on to retail clients). For marketing purposes.

This document is intended for informational purposes only and should not be considered representative of any particular investment. This should not be considered an offer or solicitation to buy or sell any securities or other financial instruments, or to provide investment advice or services. Investing involves risk including the risk of loss of principal. Your capital is at risk.  Market risk may affect a single issuer, sector of the economy, industry or the market as a whole. The value of investments is not guaranteed, and therefore an investor may not get back the amount invested. International investing involves certain risks and volatility due to potential political, economic or currency fluctuations and different financial and accounting standards. The securities included herein are for illustrative purposes only, subject to change and should not be construed as a recommendation to buy or sell. Securities discussed may or may not prove profitable. The views expressed are as of the date given, may change as market or other conditions change and may differ from views expressed by other Columbia Threadneedle Investments (Columbia Threadneedle) associates or affiliates. Actual investments or investment decisions made by Columbia Threadneedle and its affiliates, whether for its own account or on behalf of clients, may not necessarily reflect the views expressed. This information is not intended to provide investment advice and does not take into consideration individual investor circumstances. Investment decisions should always be made based on an investor’s specific financial needs, objectives, goals, time horizon and risk tolerance. Asset classes described may not be suitable for all investors. Past performance does not guarantee future results, and no forecast should be considered a guarantee either. Information and opinions provided by third parties have been obtained from sources believed to be reliable, but accuracy and completeness cannot be guaranteed. This document and its contents have not been reviewed by any regulatory authority.

In Australia: Issued by Threadneedle Investments Singapore (Pte.) Limited [“TIS”], ARBN 600 027 414.  TIS is exempt from the requirement to hold an Australian financial services licence under the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) and relies on Class Order 03/1102 in respect of the financial services it provides to wholesale clients in Australia. This document should only be distributed in Australia to “wholesale clients” as defined in Section 761G of the Corporations Act.  TIS is regulated in Singapore (Registration number: 201101559W) by the Monetary Authority of Singapore under the Securities and Futures Act (Chapter 289), which differ from Australian laws.

In Singapore: Issued by Threadneedle Investments Singapore (Pte.) Limited, 3 Killiney Road, #07-07, Winsland House 1, Singapore 239519, which is regulated in Singapore by the Monetary Authority of Singapore under the Securities and Futures Act (Chapter 289). Registration number: 201101559W. This advertisement has not been reviewed by the Monetary Authority of Singapore.

In Hong Kong: Issued by Threadneedle Portfolio Services Hong Kong Limited 天利投資管理香港有限公司. Unit 3004, Two Exchange Square, 8 Connaught Place, Hong Kong, which is licensed by the Securities and Futures Commission (“SFC”) to conduct Type 1 regulated activities (CE:AQA779). Registered in Hong Kong under the Companies Ordinance (Chapter 622), No. 1173058.

In Japan: Issued by Columbia Threadneedle Investments Japan Co., Ltd. Financial Instruments Business Operator, The Director-General of Kanto Local Finance Bureau (FIBO) No.3281, and a member of Japan Investment Advisers Association and Type II Financial Instruments Firms Association.

In the UK: Issued by Threadneedle Asset Management Limited, No. 573204 and/or Columbia Threadneedle Management Limited, No. 517895, both registered in England and Wales and authorised and regulated in the UK by the Financial Conduct Authority.

In the EEA: Issued by Threadneedle Management Luxembourg S.A., registered with the Registre de Commerce et des Sociétés (Luxembourg), No. B 110242 and/or Columbia Threadneedle Netherlands B.V., regulated by the Dutch Authority for the Financial Markets (AFM), registered No. 08068841.

In Switzerland: Issued by Threadneedle Portfolio Services AG, Registered address: Claridenstrasse 41, 8002 Zurich, Switzerland.

In the Middle East: This document is distributed by Columbia Threadneedle Investments (ME) Limited, which is regulated by the Dubai Financial Services Authority (DFSA).  For Distributors: This document is intended to provide distributors with information about Group products and services and is not for further distribution. For Institutional Clients: The information in this document is not intended as financial advice and is only intended for persons with appropriate investment knowledge and who meet the regulatory criteria to be classified as a Professional Client or Market Counterparties and no other Person should act upon it.

This document may be made available to you by an affiliated company which is part of the Columbia Threadneedle Investments group of companies: Columbia Threadneedle Management Limited in the UK; Columbia Threadneedle Netherlands B.V., regulated by the Dutch Authority for the Financial Markets (AFM), registered No. 08068841.

Columbia Threadneedle Investments is the global brand name of the Columbia and Threadneedle group of companies. © 2026 Columbia Threadneedle. All rights reserved. columbiathreadneedle.com                                                                                                 

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