Headline risk
39%
High RiskTreasury Analyst
AI displacement pressure score based on US employment data, wages, and demand signals. Built from 3 related occupations weighted by relevance.
Why this score
89% of tasks overlap with current AI
31% human advantage from judgment & presence
81% demand buffer from the local labour market
These factors interact with each other — the final score is not a simple sum of these bars.
Share of tasks AI can handle today
Work that requires human presence or coordination
How strong local hiring demand is for this role
How complete the underlying data is
Workflow profile
How this role's daily work breaks down across different dimensions.
Workflow dimensions (0 = low, 1 = high)
US employment data
Employment overview
Share of job tasks AI can currently perform
Annual median wage
Projected employment change 2024–2034
Education and training typically needed
Key metrics
Job zone
4The occupation usually needs substantial preparation and experience.
Median wage
USD 101,350USD 78,300 to USD 132,050
Openings
25.1K5.7% projected change
Median age
40.2422K employed
What this job involves
Conduct quantitative analyses of information involving investment programs or financial data of public or private institutions, including valuation of businesses.
Entry requirements: Moderate preparation
The occupation usually needs substantial preparation and experience.
Wage context
Median annual
USD 101,350
Mean annual
USD 116,490
10th percentile: USD 62,410
25th percentile: USD 78,300
75th percentile: USD 132,050
90th percentile: USD 180,550
Hourly median: USD 49
Employment: 340,580 workers
Demand outlook
Current employment
368.5K
Projected employment
389.6K
Openings: 25.1K
Projected change: 5.7%
Education: Bachelor's degree
Work experience: None
On-the-job training: None
Median wage: USD 101,350
Overall employment of financial analysts is projected to grow 6 percent from 2024 to 2034, faster than the average for all occupations.
Workforce profile
Based on a survey of workers currently in this occupation.
Protects from AI displacement
- Can telework 78.3% of workers
- License required <5% of workers
Typical background
- No education requirement <5% of workers
- High school diploma <5% of workers
- Master's degree <40% of workers
- Bachelor's degree 82.1% of workers
- On-the-job training 53.1% of workers
- Prior work experience 76.5% of workers
Day-to-day work
Financial analysts guide businesses and individuals in decisions about expending money to attain profit.
Financial analysts work in offices. Most work full time, and some work more than 40 hours per week.
Financial analysts typically need a bachelor’s degree to enter the occupation.
Key tasks
No task data available.
Tools commonly used
Work environment
No work environment data available.
Who does this work
Median age: 40.2
422K employed · Under 25: 9% · 25–54: 74% · 55+: 18%
Data sources: O*NET 30.2 / OEWS 2024 / ORS 2025 / OOH 2025-08-28 / Projections 2024-34 / CPS 2025 / Anthropic task penetration
Component occupations
How this score works
The score measures how much this role's tasks overlap with current AI capabilities, adjusted for human-only requirements and local job market demand. This is a structural pressure estimate, not a prediction of job losses. Learn how scores work →