
The Bloomberg Terminal Is Getting an AI Makeover, Like It or Not
Joel Khalili Business Apr 28, 2026 4:30 AM The Bloomberg Terminal Is Getting an AI Makeover, Like It or Not WIRED spoke with Bloomberg’s chief technology officer about the big, chatbot-style changes coming to the iconic...
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A striking development has emerged in artificial intelligence. Joel Khalili Business Apr 28, 2026 4:30 AM The Bloomberg Terminal Is Getting an AI Makeover, Like It or Not WIRED spoke with Bloomberg’s chief technology officer about the big, chatbot-style changes coming to the iconic platform for traders. Photograph: Anatoliy Zhdanov/AP Images Comment Loader Save Story Save this story Comment Loader Save Story Save this story For its famous intractability, the Bloomberg Terminal has long inspired devotion, bordering on obsession . Among traders, the ability to chart a path through the software’s dizzying scrolls of numbers and text to isolate far-flung information is the mark of a seasoned professional.
But as a greater mass of data is fed into the Terminal—not only earnings and asset prices, but weather forecasts, shipping logs, factory locations, consumer spending patterns, private loans, and so on—valuable information is being lost. “It has become more and more untenable,” says Shawn Edwards, chief technology officer at Bloomberg. “You miss things, or it takes too long.
Technical Details
” To try to remedy the problem, Bloomberg is testing a chatbot-style interface for the Terminal, ASKB (pronounced ask-bee), built atop a basket of different language models. The broad idea is to help finance professionals to condense labor-intensive tasks, and make it possible to test abstract investment theses against the data through natural language prompts. As of publication, the ASKB beta is open to roughly a third of the software’s 375,000 users; Bloomberg has not specified a date for a full release.
WIRED spoke with Edwards at Bloomberg’s palatial London headquarters in early April. We discussed the impetus for revamping the Terminal, whether traditionalists might balk at the change, and Bloomberg’s attempts to iron out hallucinations. The following conversation has been edited for length and clarity.
WIRED: Shawn, tell me about the rationale for this overhaul of the Terminal. Shawn Edwards: For years, Bloomberg has kept adding to this comprehensive dataset that we have. Often, finding the right piece of data in the sea of information is the deciding factor in whether you’re successful or not.
Industry Implications
It has become more and more untenable: You miss things, or it takes too long. The primary problem we’re solving with generative AI is helping users to find key insights and synthesize a view of the world around a particular idea. The concept is that untapped alpha lurks somewhere in the data, and ASKB will help to surface it?
The user gets to ask the high-level question—the thesis that’s in their head—instead of asking for particular data points. “How is the war in Iran and a change in oil prices going to affect my portfolio? ” That’s a big, big question with so many dimensions.
Can we synthesize that answer in minutes? In a scenario where everybody is able to wade through the tangle of data, what will separate mediocre traders from the very best ones? These tools are not magical.
This advance offers important signals about the future of the sector, and the tech world is watching closely.





