Singapore-based investment platform Nextvestment announced Wednesday a strategic collaboration to introduce POEMSGPT, an intelligent financial-guidance copilot integrated within Phillip Securities’ flagship POEMS trading platform.
The partnership marks a major step toward making artificial intelligence (AI)-powered investing accessible to everyday traders, Nextvestment said in a statement.
POEMSGPT demonstrates how established financial institutions and emerging AI innovators can collaborate to shape the future of investor engagement and reinforce Singapore’s position as a global hub for responsible financial-services innovation.
“Our collaboration with Nextvestment on POEMSGPT is an example of how innovation and customer-centricity can come successfully together to shape the future of investing,
“By integrating advanced AI capabilities into our POEMS platform, we enable users to access real-time, personalized insights — from company financials to stock-trade evaluations — all directly within their trading environment, empowering them to trade with confidence,” said Luke Lim, Managing Director of Phillip Securities.
He added this partnership reflects the firm’s continued commitment to customer-centric innovation and its vision of shaping the future of investing through smarter, data-driven experiences.
Powered by Nextvestment’s Financial Guidance Copilot, POEMSGPT uses generative AI and real-time reasoning to transform complex market data into clear, actionable insights.
Investors can ask questions, compare stocks, and interpret financials — all seamlessly within the POEMS ecosystem.
“Phillip Securities has long been a trusted name among Singapore’s investors,
“Together, we’re re-imagining what investor empowerment looks like in the age of AI — where financial data doesn’t just inform decisions, but explains them. POEMSGPT brings clarity, context, and confidence to every trade,” said Michael Davies, Founder of Nextvestment.
The partnership underscores how financial institutions are adopting AI to enhance investor experience and access to market intelligence — while upholding the standards of transparency and accountability expected in regulated finance, said the statement.

