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    Home » Agentic AI Bidding Hits Amazon, Walmart, and Target This Quarter
    Industry Trends

    Agentic AI Bidding Hits Amazon, Walmart, and Target This Quarter

    Samantha GreeneBy Samantha Greene11/07/20269 Mins Read
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    Retail media networks just crossed a line that most marketers haven’t clocked yet. Agentic AI bidding — autonomous systems that set bids, shift budgets, and launch campaigns without a human clicking “approve” — is no longer a pilot feature. It’s the default setting Amazon, Walmart, and Target are pushing this quarter. If your team is still manually adjusting bids in Amazon Ads console, you’re already behind.

    Why This Quarter Matters

    Retail media spend in the US is projected to top $60 billion this year, according to eMarketer’s retail media forecasts, and the three biggest networks are racing to prove their AI can spend that money better than your trading desk can. This isn’t incremental automation. It’s a structural shift in who — or what — controls the bid.

    Agentic AI differs from the “smart bidding” most performance marketers have used for years. Traditional automated bidding optimizes toward a fixed goal you set: target ROAS, target CPA, a budget cap. Agentic systems go further. They can reallocate budget across campaigns, adjust creative rotation, negotiate placement mix, and make sequential decisions based on real-time signals, all without a human in the loop for each action. Think less “autopilot” and more “co-pilot that occasionally takes the wheel and doesn’t ask permission first.”

    The shift from rule-based automation to agentic bidding means brands are handing over not just execution, but strategic judgment calls — budget pacing, channel mix, even audience prioritization — to a system that learns and acts faster than any human trader could.

    Amazon’s Push: Autonomous Campaign Agents

    Amazon Ads has been layering AI into Sponsored Products and Sponsored Brands for a while, but this quarter’s rollout expands its agentic capabilities across DSP inventory too. The headline feature: campaign agents that can independently test bid strategies across a portfolio of ASINs, shift spend toward SKUs showing inventory velocity, and pause underperformers mid-flight — all reporting back through a conversational interface rather than a dashboard full of levers.

    For brand teams managing hundreds of SKUs, this is a genuine operational relief. Nobody wants to manually rebalance bids across a 400-product catalog every morning. But it also means less granular visibility into why a bid moved. Amazon’s system optimizes toward outcomes you specify, yet the path it takes to get there is increasingly a black box.

    Retail media buyers should treat this the way they’d treat any new automation layer in the stack: verify before you trust. Run agentic campaigns in parallel with manually managed control groups for at least one full sales cycle before ceding full budget control. This mirrors the caution many teams are already applying to martech consolidation decisions — new efficiency claims need a stress test, not blind faith.

    Walmart Connect Bets on Predictive Reallocation

    Walmart Connect’s quarterly rollout leans into what it’s calling predictive budget reallocation — an agentic layer that forecasts which campaigns will underperform in the next 48 to 72 hours and shifts spend preemptively, rather than reacting after the fact. That’s a meaningful difference from Amazon’s more reactive optimization model.

    Walmart’s pitch to brands is speed. In-store and online inventory signals feed the bidding engine in near real time, so a spike in local demand for a product can trigger bid increases in specific DMAs within minutes, not the next day. For CPG and grocery brands running always-on programs, this closes a gap that’s cost advertisers real money for years: the lag between demand signal and bid response.

    The catch? Predictive models are only as good as the historical data feeding them, and new product launches or promotional spikes without clean historical comps can confuse the system. Brands launching new SKUs this quarter should expect a learning period where agentic bidding underperforms simple rule-based campaigns, and should budget accordingly.

    Target Roundel Takes the Slow Road, Deliberately

    Target’s retail media arm, Roundel, has been more conservative in its agentic rollout, and that’s arguably the smarter play. Rather than full autonomous budget control, Roundel’s quarterly update introduces “supervised agentic bidding” — the AI proposes bid and budget shifts, but requires human sign-off above a configurable spend threshold.

    This hybrid model addresses a concern that’s been quietly building across the industry: accountability. When an autonomous system overspends or misallocates budget, who owns that mistake? Roundel’s approach keeps a human in the approval chain for high-stakes decisions while still automating the tedious, low-risk optimizations that used to eat up a media buyer’s Tuesday afternoon.

    It’s a smaller leap than Amazon or Walmart are taking, but it’s also lower risk, and for brands still building internal governance around AI-driven spend, that matters more than raw automation speed.

    What This Means for Your Media Buying Team

    Here’s the uncomfortable truth: agentic bidding is going to compress the role of the traditional retail media buyer, the same way it’s already reshaping other marketing functions. Teams that once spent their week in bid management tools will spend it instead on agent oversight, exception handling, and prompt-level strategy setting. That’s a different skill set, and it’s in short supply.

    This isn’t unique to retail media. The broader market is seeing the same talent crunch play out, as covered in our look at how the agentic marketing talent gap is driving steep salary premiums. Retail media specialists who understand both the platform mechanics and the AI governance layer are becoming disproportionately valuable, and retailers know it: expect certification programs from all three networks by next quarter.

    The retail media buyer of tomorrow won’t be setting bids. They’ll be auditing the agent’s decisions, catching edge cases, and knowing when to pull the plug.

    Risk, Compliance, and the Questions Nobody’s Answering Yet

    Agentic bidding raises real compliance questions that retailers haven’t fully addressed publicly. If an autonomous agent overspends a monthly budget cap due to a bug, who’s liable? What audit trail exists for a bid decision made by an AI system reallocating funds across a hundred campaigns in an hour? Brands operating in regulated categories (pharma, financial services, alcohol) should be pushing their retail media reps for detailed answers before opting into full autonomy.

    There’s also a data governance angle. Agentic systems often need broader access to first-party sales data, inventory feeds, and sometimes competitor pricing signals to make smarter calls. Legal and privacy teams should be looped in early, not after the rollout, particularly given how much scrutiny AI-driven ad systems are already facing from regulators. The FTC’s ongoing guidance on AI and advertising practices is worth monitoring closely as agentic bidding scales across retail media, and brands operating in the EU should keep an eye on parallel obligations, similar to what we’ve tracked in our coverage of how the Digital Services Act is rewriting platform accountability more broadly.

    Measurement is another open question. If an agent is making dozens of micro-decisions per hour, traditional weekly or even daily reporting cadences don’t capture what actually happened. Brands need to push their retail media partners for decision-level logs, not just outcome dashboards. This echoes a broader shift the industry is already navigating, detailed in our piece on how brand measurement is shifting to decision intelligence rather than static reporting.

    Practical Steps for This Quarter

    • Audit your current bidding setup across Amazon, Walmart, and Target before opting into any new agentic features. Know your baseline performance so you can measure the AI’s actual lift.
    • Set hard guardrails — spend caps, category exclusions, brand safety rules — before enabling autonomous budget reallocation, not after.
    • Run parallel tests comparing agentic campaigns against manually managed control groups for at least one full quarter.
    • Request decision-level audit logs from each platform, not just performance summaries. If a retailer can’t provide them, that’s a red flag.
    • Train your team on agent oversight rather than manual bid management. The skill shift is already underway, and waiting will only widen the gap.

    Many brands are also rethinking whether external agencies can keep pace with this speed of change, which is part of why we’re seeing more teams building capability in-house, a trend explored in why brands are ditching agencies for internal AI expertise. Retail media, with its high transaction volume and thin margins for error, may be the category where that shift matters most.

    The Bottom Line

    Agentic AI bidding isn’t optional anymore, not if your competitors are already running it on Amazon, Walmart, and Target this quarter. The brands that win won’t be the ones who adopt fastest or slowest — they’ll be the ones who build governance and measurement discipline around the automation before scaling it. Start with a controlled pilot, demand transparency from your retail media partners, and treat the agent as a junior team member who needs supervision, not a black box you can ignore.

    FAQs

    What is agentic AI bidding in retail media?

    Agentic AI bidding refers to autonomous systems that make sequential, real-time decisions about ad spend — adjusting bids, reallocating budgets, and pausing campaigns — without requiring human approval for each action, unlike traditional rule-based automated bidding.

    How is Amazon’s agentic AI bidding different from Walmart’s?

    Amazon’s approach focuses on autonomous campaign agents that optimize bids across large product portfolios reactively, while Walmart Connect emphasizes predictive budget reallocation that shifts spend ahead of anticipated performance dips based on real-time inventory and demand signals.

    Does Target use fully autonomous AI bidding?

    No. Target’s Roundel platform uses a supervised model where AI proposes bid and budget changes, but requires human sign-off above a set spend threshold, prioritizing accountability over full automation speed.

    What risks should brands consider before adopting agentic bidding?

    Key risks include unclear liability for overspending, limited audit trails for individual bid decisions, data governance concerns around first-party data access, and measurement gaps since traditional reporting cadences may not capture rapid micro-decisions made by the AI.

    How should marketing teams prepare for agentic AI bidding rollouts?

    Teams should audit current performance baselines, set hard spend and category guardrails, run parallel tests against manually managed campaigns, request decision-level audit logs from platforms, and train staff on agent oversight rather than manual bid management.


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    Samantha Greene
    Samantha Greene

    Samantha is a Chicago-based market researcher with a knack for spotting the next big shift in digital culture before it hits mainstream. She’s contributed to major marketing publications, swears by sticky notes and never writes with anything but blue ink. Believes pineapple does belong on pizza.

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