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Walmart Joins Nasdaq as Amazon Competition Goes High-Tech and Agentic | PYMNTS.com

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When one thinks of retail competition, the battle between eCommerce and brick-and-mortar is typically what leaps to mind.

Traditionally, Amazon has been the eCommerce landscape’s leading representative, and Walmart the flag bearer for traditional physical shopping. But 25-plus years into the 21st century, that framing has come to feel almost quaint.

Walmart’s decision Tuesday (Dec. 9) to trade on Nasdaq and not the NYSE, exemplifies the retail landscape’s ongoing shift. The retailer wants the market to value it less like a grocer and more like the AI-laced eCommerce platform it is becoming.

“Nasdaq’s focus on technology and its support for companies driving digital transformation align perfectly with our strategic vision. This is an exciting next chapter as we continue building a frictionless future for our customers, members, associates, and shareholders,” Walmart CEO Doug McMillon said in a statement.

After all, retail competition today is becoming less about channel and more about compression: compressing the time it takes for shoppers to find what they want, to buy it and to have it show up at their doors.

Both retail giants, Amazon and Walmart, are trying to collapse those moments into something approaching zero friction. Increasingly, the battleground for these goals is artificial intelligence.

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Read more: Walmart Reinvents Its Footprint as Amazon Eyes Cutting Out USPS 

The Business Case for Shrinking Time

Amazon’s latest initiatives point toward an ambition to be everywhere all at once. Its same-day delivery network, which now reaches more than 2,300 cities and towns in the United States, has quietly become one of the most complex logistical matrices in the world.

The expansion is not simply about speed; it is about conditioning consumers to expect speed as the default. While the broader eCommerce industry still treats two-day shipping as a premium amenity, Amazon is defining a world where same-day shipping is standard.

After all, delivery speed often correlates directly with conversion. The psychological barrier of waiting days for an item, especially an impulse purchase, decreases dramatically when arrival is imminent.

At the same time, the company is signaling its next phase of global growth through a massive $35 billion investment commitment in India. The funds are earmarked for e-commerce, logistics, cloud computing, and what Amazon calls “AI infrastructure” — a phrase that captures everything from data centers and silicon to sovereign cloud capabilities that meet India’s evolving regulatory demands.

The scale of the commitment reflects not only India’s position as one of the most important growth markets in the world but also Amazon’s belief that its future depends as much on building the computational spine of global commerce as it does on selling things.

Walmart isn’t standing still, either. The retailer on Tuesday announced it is extending its holiday delivery deadline with one-hour Express delivery available on orders placed until 5 p.m. Christmas Eve, giving last-minute shoppers more flexibility.

Walmart now claims that it can deliver its products to 95% of U.S. households in under three hours, thanks to the retailer’s physical footprint of brick-and-mortar stores, which are fast becoming crucial micro-fulfilment nodes.

Read also: The Protocol Power Struggle Reshaping AI-Driven Commerce 

The Next Frontier of Agentic AI and Commerce

While Amazon and Walmart are competing fiercely, the more consequential battle may not be between them but between retail interfaces. AI agents threaten to abstract away where a customer shops. If a conversational assistant handles product selection and orders automatically, brand loyalty could shift from retailer to agent.

Both retailers recognize this. Amazon, for example, announced Tuesday that it is rolling out new shopping features for its artificial intelligence assistant Alexa+. The new offerings come amid, as PYMNTS wrote earlier this week, updates to Alexa+ which mark a “significant shift toward agentic AI,” going “beyond scripted commands and toward autonomous task execution.”

Data from the “Prompt Economy™: When Bots Are the Customer,” a collaboration between PYMNTS Intelligence and Visa, revealed how the rise of agentic AI is redefining the fundamentals of digital commerce. As bots from retailers like Amazon and Walmart become digital concierges, merchants must make their data and policies readable by machines, not just people.

Walmart’s version of this future looks different but is equally ambitious. The company is integrating generative AI into its mobile app and store experiences, providing personalized shopping lists, conversational recommendations, and contextual suggestions powered by its uniquely large dataset of in-person and online purchases. The company’s vast physical footprint also gives it something Amazon does not have: the ability to fuse artificial intelligence with in-store navigation, local pricing and real-time inventory visibility.

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Speed Raises $8 Million to Expand Bitcoin and Stablecoin Payment Solutions | PYMNTS.com

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The company will use the new funding to build capacity, expand to new regions, develop more merchant tools, enable cross-border and creator payouts, and maintain reliability and compliance, it said in a Tuesday (Dec. 16) blog post.

Speed’s offerings include a global payment layer called Speed Merchant that is designed for merchants, platforms and payment systems and enables them to accept both Bitcoin and stablecoins, according to the post.

The company also offers a Lightning wallet called Speed Wallet that serves individuals and businesses and enables Bitcoin and stablecoin transfers, supports global payouts, offers local on- and off-ramps, and powers USDT transactions, the post said.

“We’ve always believed that Bitcoin and stablecoins can power everyday payments,” Speed CEO Niraj Patel said in the post. “That requires real infrastructure—fast, compliant and scalable. This investment validates that belief and accelerates our mission.”

Speed co-founder Jayneel Patel said in the post that the company aims to “solve real problems with technology.”

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“Speed started as a merchant solution and has grown into a global payment network,” Jayneel Patel said, adding the company is “ready to take the next leap.”

Stablecoin issuer Tether and venture fund ego death capital co-led the funding round, per the post.

Tether said in a Tuesday press release that its investment supports its strategy to support Bitcoin-aligned financial infrastructure and expand the utility of its USDT stablecoin in real-world payment environments.

“We support teams building practical infrastructure that reduces friction in payments and expands access to reliable settlement rails,” Tether CEO Paolo Ardoino said in the release.

Tether’s USDT stablecoin is the most traded cryptocurrency by volume around the world.

Adam Gebner, associate at ego death capital, said in a Tuesday blog post that Speed processed over $1.5 billion in payment volume over the past 12 months and serves more than 1.2 million users.

“By bridging Lightning and stablecoins in a single, compliant platform, Speed is positioning itself as foundational infrastructure for the Bitcoin and stablecoin economy, serving merchants, platforms and users across both developed and emerging markets,” Gebner said in the post.

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Databricks Targets $134 Billion Valuation in New Funding Round | PYMNTS.com

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Data analytics/artificial intelligence (AI) firm Databricks is reportedly raising $4 billion in a new funding round.

This Series L round would value the company at $134 billion, up 34% from its last session of funding during the summer, the Wall Street Journal (WSJ) reported Tuesday (Dec. 16).

Ali Ghodsi, Databricks’ co-founder and CEO, told the WSJ the company plans to use the new funding to invest in its core data-analytics products and AI software, while also letting its workers engage in secondary share sales.

The company, among the most valuable private firms in Silicon Valley, also plans to hire around 600 fresh college graduates in 2026, the CEO added, in addition to adding thousands of new jobs worldwide in Asia, Latin America and Europe. It also plans to hire AI researchers, who are typically paid top salaries, the WSJ added.

The report noted that Databricks has benefited from the AI boom, which relies partially on private corporate data to customize AI models. Databricks told the WSJ that its data-warehousing product, which can serve as an underlying data platform for AI services, surpassed a $1 billion revenue run rate at the end of October.

This year has seen Databricks ink deals with OpenAI and Anthropic to help sell AI services to business customers. Each of these partnerships are designed to push clients to develop AI agents, or independent bots that can carry out tasks on behalf of humans.

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The company’s new funding round comes three months after Databricks’ Series K round, which valued it more than $100 billion, up from $62 billion at the start of the year.

In other AI news, PYMNTS wrote earlier this week about The General Intelligence Company of New York, a start up developing agent-based systems designed to take over large portions of company operations.

“The company’s name deliberately evokes Gilded Age ambition, and founder Andrew Pignanelli told PYMNTS that the reference was intentional,” that report said. “He said he views AI as foundational infrastructure for the next era of company-building, much as railroads and industrial capital reshaped the United States economy more than a century ago.”

The company started by working backward from “the one-person billion-dollar business,” as Pignanelli termed it.

“We started at the end, the actual one-person billion-dollar company, and worked our way back and we were like, ‘What can we do today?’” he said.

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Apple App Store Fees Face Pressure From EU Developers | PYMNTS.com

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A collection of app developers and consumer groups want Europe to enforce laws against Apple.

The Coalition of App Fairness (CAF) on Monday (Dec. 15) issued an open letter to the European Commission (EC) accusing the tech giant of “persistent” non-compliance with Europe’s Digital Markets Act (DMA).

The letter follows findings from the EC that Apple had violated the DMA by keeping developers from directing users to alternative payment methods, fining the tech giant $588 million.

Apple in turn revised its terms for its app store to impose fees that ranged from from 13% for smaller businesses to up to 20% for App Store purchases. However, the CAF says Apple has not addressed what it calls a core issue: the company’s fees are preventing fair competition.

“The law says that gatekeepers like Apple must allow developers to offer and conduct transactions outside of the App Store free of charge,” the letter said. “However, Apple is now charging developers commission, fees of up to 20% for such transactions. This is a blatant disregard for the law with the potential to vanquish years of meaningful work by the Commission.”

The CAF also notes that Apple plans to introduce new terms and conditions for the App Store next month, and says it suspects the new terms will include fees that violate the DMA.

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“Apple cannot be permitted to exploit its gatekeeper position by holding the entire industry hostage,” the letter added.

PYMNTS has contacted Apple for comment but has not yet gotten a reply. The company had in September called on the commission to rethink the DMA, which was created to prevent market abuse by tech giants doing business in Europe.

“Over that time, it’s become clear that the DMA is leading to a worse experience for Apple users in the EU,” Apple wrote in a blog post. “It’s exposing them to new risks, and disrupting the simple, seamless way their Apple products work together. And as new technologies come out, our European users’ Apple products will only fall further behind.”

In its blog post, Apple argued the DMA requirements for allowing other app marketplaces and alternative payment systems don’t take into account the privacy and security standards of the App Store, putting customers at risk for being overcharged or scammed.

“The DMA also lets other companies request access to user data and core technologies of Apple products,” the company wrote. “Apple is required to meet almost every request, even if they create serious risks for our users.”

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