Which Stocks Win When Google AI Powers Walmart’s Checkout?

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By Trey Thoelcke Published

Quick Read

  • Alphabet (GOOGL) runs Walmart's Gemini shopping experience while Mastercard (MA) settles every agent transaction, posting a 61% adjusted operating margin.

  • Affirm (AFRM) delivered its tenth straight quarter of 30%+ GMV growth and swung to GAAP net income of $103 million.

  • PayPal (PYPL) ranks last among the five, with shares down 22% year to date and Q2 EPS guided to fall 9% YoY.

  • Act now: the analyst who called NVIDIA in 2010 just named his top 10 AI stocks — and Google didn't make the cut. Grab the names FREE today.

Which Stocks Win When Google AI Powers Walmart’s Checkout?

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The Walmart (NYSE:WMT | WMT Price Prediction) partnership with Google to build a Gemini-powered agentic shopping experience reshapes who captures value when artificial intelligence handles browsing, recommending, and buying. The retailer supplies the catalog and customer base, but the stack underneath (the model, card network, checkout financing, discovery layer) is where public-market investors own a piece of the shift. Ranking beneficiaries by execution, growth, and centrality to agentic commerce infrastructure reveals a clear top five of winners.

5. PayPal: The Rail That Needs a Reboot

PayPal (NASDAQ:PYPL) is the checkout button agentic shoppers already recognize. New CEO Enrique Lores delivered a Q1 FY26 beat with shares at $45.47 after non-GAAP EPS of $1.34 vs. $1.27 expected on revenue of $8.35 billion, up 7.2% year over year, with total payment volume of $463.95 billion. Branded checkout underperformed, GAAP operating margin contracted 182 basis points to 17.8%, and management guided Q2 non-GAAP EPS to decline roughly 9% year over year. Prediction markets peg odds of a full Stripe takeover in 2026 at just 11.5%. The stock is down 22.1% year to date. Relevant, but the weakest execution in this group.

PYPL analyst ratings
PYPL price target

4. Wayfair: Agentic Discovery for a Giant Catalog

Wayfair (NYSE:W) is the natural laboratory for AI-assisted shopping. Millions of home goods SKUs are exactly what a Gemini agent needs to excel. CEO Niraj Shah’s Q1 FY26 showed revenue of $2.93 billion, up 7.4% year over year, active customers of 21.4 million, AOV of $312, and the best Q1 adjusted EBITDA margin in five years at 5.2%. Shares trade near $94.50, up 67.4% over the past year, with analyst target at $93.54. Wayfair carries a $2.8 billion stockholders’ deficit and $2.9 billion in long-term debt, so leverage remains a meaningful overhang. It wins if AI agents turn browsing paralysis into completed carts.

W analyst ratings
W price target

3. Affirm: BNPL Along for the Ride

Affirm (NASDAQ:AFRM) is the financing layer that an agentic checkout presents when a cart reaches a certain size. Q3 FY26 revenue rose 32.6% year over year to $1.04 billion, gross merchandise volume (GMV) hit $11.60 billion (the 10th consecutive quarter above 30% growth), Affirm Card GMV jumped 146% to $2.10 billion, and cardholders doubled to 4.4 million. Cost of funds fell to 5.8%, its lowest in three and a half years. Management called it “genuine product market fit.” Shares trade at $84.58, up 19.1% over the past month, with forward P/E of 42x. Concentration risk: top five partners drive 42% to 46% of GMV.

AFRM analyst ratings
AFRM price target

2. Mastercard: Every Agentic Swipe Settles Here

Mastercard (NYSE:MA) is the pipe every agent-initiated purchase rides. CEO Michael Miebach is explicitly building for this future with Mastercard Agent Pay and a planned acquisition of BVNK for stablecoin settlement. Q1 FY26 delivered adjusted EPS of $4.60 vs. $4.41 expected, revenue of $8.40 billion up 15.8% year over year, cross-border volume up 13%, value-added services up 22%, and adjusted operating margin of 60.8%. The company returned $4.0 billion via buybacks. Shares at $539.39 rallied 12.9% over the past month, though the stock is still down 5.5% year to date. It is boring, essential, and quietly reworking its rails for the agent era.

MA analyst ratings
MA price target

1. Alphabet: The Engine That Does the Shopping

Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOGL) is the deal. Walmart’s agentic shopping surface runs on Gemini, scaling faster than any other Alphabet asset. Q1 FY26 revenue hit $109.90 billion, up 21.8% year over year, EPS came in at $5.11 vs. $2.63 expected, Google Cloud grew 63% to $20.03 billion with backlog above $460 billion, and Gemini API usage reached more than 16 billion tokens per minute, up 60% sequentially. Sundar Pichai said, “Our AI investments and full stack approach are lighting up every part of the business.” 2026 capital expenditure is guided to $180 billion to $190 billion.

GOOGL earnings quotes

Shares at $359.91 are up 101.5% over the past year and 15.0% year to date, with forward P/E near 25x and analyst target of $432.65. Prediction markets see a 76.8% chance the next Gemini Pro ships within weeks. If Walmart proves the model, every big-box retailer will call Mountain View next.

GOOGL analyst ratings
GOOGL price target

The Bottom Line

Alphabet owns the model doing the work; Mastercard, Affirm, Wayfair, and PayPal each capture a slice of what happens after the agent decides. Agentic commerce is early and unproven. Consumers may resist letting software authorize purchases, and regulators are watching buy-now-pay-later and AI-mediated transactions closely. Alphabet is the cleanest way for investors to own the pick-and-shovel of AI-driven retail, backed by $402.8 billion in annual revenue and a cloud business compounding at triple-digit rates on a large base.

 

Contact [email protected] for any questions or corrections.

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About the Author Trey Thoelcke →

Trey has been an editor and author at 24/7 Wall St. for more than a decade, where he has published thousands of articles analyzing corporate earnings, dividend stocks, short interest, insider buying, private equity, and market trends. His comprehensive coverage spans the full spectrum of financial markets, from blue-chip stalwarts to emerging growth companies.

Beyond 24/7 Wall St., Trey has created and edited financial content for Benzinga and AOL's BloggingStocks, contributing additional hundreds of articles to the investment community. He previously oversaw the 24/7 Climate Insights site, managing editorial operations and content strategy, and currently oversees and creates content for My Investing News.

Trey's editorial expertise extends across multiple publishing environments. He served as production editor at Dearborn Financial Publishing and development editor at Kaplan, where he helped shape financial education materials. Earlier in his career, he worked as a writer-producer at SVE. His freelance editing portfolio includes work for prestigious clients such as Sage Publications, Rand McNally, the Institute for Supply Management, the American Library Association, Eggplant Literary Productions, and Spiegel.

Outside of financial journalism, Trey writes fiction and has been an active member of the writing community for years, overseeing a long-running critique group and moderating workshop sessions at regional conventions. He lives with his family in an old house in the Midwest.

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