The Agentic Commerce Frontier 📅 | June 2 - June 8 2026
Thanks for reading Agentic Commerce Frontier. This week, Mastercard, Worldline, and ING executed a live European agentic payment; Gopuff launched a predictive shopping assistant with SpaceXAI and fraud researchers documented how generative AI is reshaping refund-abuse evidence.
Money2020 took place in Amsterdam, and I prepared a roundup of everything Agentic Commerce. We speak a lot about the wars between protocols, the wars between scheme network, but Money2020 hinted and brought to the surface another signal. It showed why every payment rail wants Agentic Commerce.
Next week, I will be updating the Agentic Commerce Ecosystem Map, with dozens of new players under the radar. Given how crowded is starting to be, I’ll be testing a new format which I hope you will find valuable.
Thanks for reading!
🔥 TL;DR
Mastercard, Worldline, and ING completed a live end-to-end European agentic payment in production, showing that merchant-side AI agents can initiate authenticated payments over existing card infrastructure
My takeaway: The near-term winning architecture is likely agent-initiated, human-approved, bank-authenticated payment rather than fully autonomous purchasing
Gopuff and SpaceXAI launched Go, an AI shopping assistant designed to predict carts and place instant-delivery orders using Gopuff’s fulfillment data and SpaceXAI models
My takeaway: Look for Grok where you least expect it … Quick commerce is a natural proving ground because the SKU universe is constrained, intent is frequent, and delivery latency is measurable
A June 2 arXiv paper detailed generative AI-enabled refund fraud in Chinese e-commerce, including fabricated defect evidence and adversarial merchant verification practices
My takeaway: The line between reality and fake is increasingly being blurred, but when it starts hitting the pockets of shareholders, I guarantee you that we will magically find a solution
Amazon added an AI image generator to shopping search, letting users describe products, generate visual options, and shop similar apparel and home goods. Retail Dive
My takeaway: This is fascinating. And unexpectedly reinforces the need for having a very developed vocabulary to describe things as close as you can imagine them
Findustry AI launched an AI chargeback agent that collects dispute evidence, maps it to card-network rules, drafts representment letters, and lets merchants set autonomy thresholds. Digital Transactions
My takeaway: Post-purchase agentic commerce will not stop at support; dispute handling is becoming an AI-governed payments workflow
🤖 Agentic Commerce Primer: Money20/20 Showed Why Every Payment Rail Wants Agentic Commerce
Card networks want defense.
Open banking wants scale.
Stablecoins want proof that programmable money matters.
Money20/20 Europe 2026 did not show a mass-market consumer shift into Agentic Commerce. It showed something more useful: Agentic Commerce may be the problem every payment rail was waiting for.
Card networks see a new transaction context they need to absorb before someone else defines it. Their answer is to extend the trust model they already run: tokenization, issuer authentication, passkeys, transaction metadata, network rules, and verifiable intent.
Open banking sees the scaled commercial use case it has been missing. Its answer is not another “pay by bank” button, but delegated permissions: consent, revocation, account-to-account mandates, and commercial variable recurring payments.
Stablecoin infrastructure players see a chance to prove that programmable money solves a real commerce problem. Their answer is not necessarily consumer crypto checkout, but wallet interoperability, merchant acceptance, cross-border settlement, local-currency payout, and machine-speed treasury.
Agentic Commerce is becoming a rail contest. Everyone broadly agrees that delegated buying creates a new transaction layer. What Money20/20 exposed is that each rail believes it should control it.
What happened in Amsterdam
Money20/20 Europe made Agentic Commerce a first-class topic. “AI and the Agentic Age” sat alongside the core content pillars, and agentic payments, checkout, trust, digital currencies, autonomous buyers and AI-curated visibility shared the main stages. For three days, the agenda treated agentic experiences as a structural theme, not a speculative sideshow.
On June 2, PayPal, Hey Savi and Debenhams Group announced what they described as the UK’s first Agentic Commerce platform with native in-app checkout. Hey Savi lets users search by image, screenshot or text across more than 10,000 brands, then routes high-intent demand into embedded PayPal flows. PayPal’s agentic commerce services handle pricing, availability and checkout behind the scenes, while Debenhams came in as the first named retail adopter.
That launch gave the industry a concrete shopping-agent story: discovery, merchant participation, in-app checkout, real brands, real rails.
The more strategically important move, however, came from Worldline, ING and Mastercard. They announced what they called Europe’s first live end-to-end agentic card payment in production, completed between an ING cardholder and a Dutch merchant on Mastercard’s network. The flow reused existing issuer authentication and network controls, required explicit consumer approval, and embedded identifiers showing the agentic nature of the transaction.
“In production” mattered. Agentic Commerce has been easy to dismiss because so many demos look like better search wrapped in a chatbot. A live, issuer-authenticated payment running across a global card network and a major European processor moves the story from interface to rails.
Beyond cards, the UK Payments Initiative and commercial variable recurring payments framed the open-banking angle. Regulators and industry groups in the UK have positioned commercial Variable Recurring Payments (VRP) as a major step in giving consumers more flexible recurring payments directly from bank accounts, under explicit consent frameworks. Those mechanics line up almost perfectly with delegated, rules-based commerce.
Stablecoin infrastructure players used the same week to push their rails forward. Checkout.com and Coinbase highlighted stablecoin acceptance for eligible enterprise merchants, Fireblocks launched Flow as a stablecoin acceptance layer for PSPs and fintechs, while RedotPay and Triple-A emphasized stablecoin-based settlement and multicurrency accounts with access to stablecoin rails. The story there was less “crypto checkout” and more “how do we wire programmable settlement into real merchants?”
Taken together, Amsterdam produced three clear signals: at least one shopping-agent experience in the wild, a live agentic payment across card rails, and credible paths for open banking and stablecoins to host delegated payments at scale.
Cards, banks, stablecoins
Cards: defend and extend
For card networks and their ecosystems, Agentic Commerce is not a threat to the existence of card rails. It is a threat to their position as the authoritative trust and orchestration layer. If software intermediates more of the shopping journey, networks cannot afford to become dumb settlement utilities.
The card answer is to make agentic transactions look like a special class of e-commerce, not a new payment type. Mastercard’s positioning around Verifiable Intent ties Agentic Commerce to tokenization, passkeys, issuer visibility, onboarding standards and rules-based governance. The Worldline–ING–Mastercard flow makes that concrete: an agentic payment that still runs through familiar issuer authentication, network controls and acquirer processing, but with explicit agent markers and consumer approval.
The pattern is clear:
Keep transactions on card rails
Make the agent legible to issuers and networks
Use tokens, passkeys and enriched metadata as the control points
If agentic transactions run through enhanced card rails, issuers stay visible, PSPs stay connected, merchants avoid rebuilding their stacks, and consumers keep the same core payment behavior, just with more delegation behind the scenes.
Strategically, this is both offense and defense. Offense, because agentic payments create new volumes, richer data, and more opportunities for authentication and rule-setting. Defense, because it blocks agents and wallets from quietly shifting flows onto alternative rails without networks noticing.
Open banking: finally a scale use case
Open banking has always had the pieces for delegated commerce: consent, revocation, account access, but not the story that made those pieces feel like mainstream payments. Account aggregation and data access changed financial services, not everyday commerce. “Pay by bank” scratched at card volumes, but often lost on convenience, protection and rewards.
Commercial variable recurring payments are built around permissioned, flexible, recurring payments initiated under predefined rules—a near-perfect fit for agentic use cases.
Think about the instructions people actually want to give to software:
Manage my subscriptions
Renew only below this price
Switch provider when my contract ends
Top up when the balance falls below a threshold
Buy household essentials within this budget
Those all need a standing mandate, revocation, constraints and account access. That is exactly what commercial VRPs are designed to support, even if they are not marketed as AI features.
If the card-network architecture is about making agentic transactions look like trusted e-commerce, the open-banking architecture is about making them look like consented bank-account mandates. In that world, the center of gravity shifts: banks, account-to-account schemes, consent frameworks and open-banking providers sit closer to the control point.
Agentic Commerce could end up making open banking more commercially relevant than several years of “pay by bank” campaigns managed to do. Delegated payments are a better fit for bank permissions than for one-off checkout buttons.
Stablecoins: programmable plumbing looking for a problem
Stablecoin infrastructure sits in a different place. It is not trying to win the front-end shopping journey. It is trying to prove that programmable money solves real-world commerce problems: cross-border settlement, FX, treasury, and multi-rail acceptance. Crypto bros won’t like this, but many argue that crypto is a solution looking for a problem. That problem may just be Agentic Commerce.
Agents will not care about payment brands the way humans do. A human might prefer a card for familiarity, chargeback rights or rewards. A software buyer optimizes for cost, speed, reliability, authorization success, settlement certainty, FX, geographic coverage and policy constraints.
The strong stablecoin thesis is not that consumers will pay with crypto through shopping agents. It is that autonomous commerce will benefit from programmable, always-on settlement rails that can interoperate across wallets, currencies and geographies. The Money20/20 launches reflected that: Checkout.com and Coinbase focused on enterprise acceptance, Fireblocks Flow targeted PSPs and fintechs, and RedotPay and Triple-A emphasized merchant settlement and multicurrency accounts with direct access to stablecoin rails.
This is crypto as payment plumbing, not ideology.
It is also the most speculative of the three architectures. Stablecoins face regulatory, UX, trust, accounting and treasury questions that cards and bank payments do not face in the same way. But the ambition is straightforward: if Agentic Commerce normalizes machine-to-machine and cross-border flows, stablecoin rails want to be where that programmable money moves.
The missing layers
For all the activity around rails, the thinnest part of the Money20/20 evidence was identity. Everyone talked about trust, but fewer concrete answers appeared around binding humans, agents and payments together.
Agentic Commerce is an identity problem before it is a payment problem. The ecosystem needs to identify the human, identify the agent, bind the two, understand the scope of authorization, preserve evidence of intent, distinguish good bots from bad bots, and give merchants, banks and PSPs levers over which agents they trust and on what terms. If you’re interested, David G.W. Birch writes extensively about this, check him out.
Mastercard’s Verifiable Intent framing hints at one model: tokens and passkeys backed by clear, provable authorization flows. Fraud and risk vendors talked about explainability, accountability and new patterns of abuse when AI systems buy at scale. But there is not yet a common reference architecture for agent identity and liability across rails.
At the risk of sounding like a broken record, merchant readiness is the other missing piece. Most merchants have modern websites, apps, product feeds, APIs, payment providers, personalization engines and fraud tools. That does not automatically make them ready for a world where AI agents compare, negotiate and purchase on behalf of customers.
If agents become a meaningful discovery layer, merchants will need to treat agent legibility as infrastructure. They will need to decide which product data agents see, which prices they get, whether agents can access loyalty benefits, whether they can complete checkout without sending customers back to the site, and how to prevent scraping while enabling trusted agent access.
This is not just a checkout shift. It is a merchandising and distribution shift. SEO will be joined by agent optimization: making content, pricing, reviews, availability, returns, sustainability and loyalty machine-readable in ways that influence ranking and recommendation.
Until identity and merchant readiness catch up, Agentic Commerce will remain uneven: sophisticated rails under experiments that depend on brittle assumptions.
The open questions
If Money20/20 settled anything, it is that Agentic Commerce is now on the serious strategic agenda for networks, banks, PSPs, merchants, wallets and infrastructure providers. The harder questions are still open.
Which rail wins which use case: cards, open banking, stablecoins, wallets, or orchestration across all of them?
Who owns agent identity, and what becomes the standard for verifiable intent?
How will merchants decide which agents to trust, and on what access terms: open, permissioned, paid, ranked, throttled, negotiated?
How will liability work when an agent makes a commercially reasonable but personally disappointing decision?
Can consent remain meaningful when agents act continuously, contextually and probabilistically?
Will banks become trust anchors, wallets agent controllers, PSPs orchestration layers, or networks the rulebooks?
How will brands defend margin and loyalty when agents compare more efficiently than humans?
Will regulators treat agentic purchasing as a new consumer-protection category rather than just another channel?
If there is one prediction to make, it is that no single rail will own Agentic Commerce end-to-end. The control point is more likely to sit with whoever can orchestrate identity, consent and routing across cards, accounts and programmable money without breaking merchant economics or consumer trust.
🚀 Major Announcements & Funding News
Worldline, ING, and Mastercard execute live European agentic payment: The companies completed a production transaction between an ING cardholder and a merchant in the Netherlands, with the payment running over Mastercard’s network and using secure authentication and authorization mechanisms across the existing payment stack (Mastercard)
Mastercard frames Europe-wide issuer readiness for Agent Pay: Mastercard said its European issuer base has been enabled at the network level for Agent Pay, with banks completing controlled live transactions and agentic checkout flows using passkeys, tokenization, consent, traceability, and bank authentication (Mastercard)
Gopuff and SpaceXAI launch Go for predictive instant commerce: Go is positioned as a personal shopping assistant inside Gopuff, combining SpaceXAI models, Gopuff’s purchase and fulfillment data, real-time contextual signals, and its micro-fulfillment network. The product pushes agentic commerce toward replenishment, snacks, grocery, and convenience categories where the assistant can predict baskets and deliver quickly (Gopuff)
Stripe and Deel move stablecoin wallets into contractor payments: Deel is using Stripe to let contractors in more than 150 countries hold, earn, and spend from a USD-backed balance, with Bridge converting funds into DLUSD, Privy providing embedded wallets, Tempo supporting near-instant settlement, and Stripe handling direct debit collection and fraud screening. The launch points to agent-ready payment infrastructure where payroll, wallets, card spend, and compliance sit behind embedded APIs (Stripe)
Plaid and Fin partner on AI account-linking support: Plaid and Fin announced an open beta that lets fintechs and financial institutions support users who need to connect or reconnect accounts through Fin Messenger, combining Plaid Link with Fin’s AI customer-service agent. The practical significance is reduced friction in a high-failure step for payments, underwriting, and money-movement onboarding (PYMNTS)
Amazon expands robotics and ultra-fast delivery infrastructure in Europe: Amazon announced more than €10 billion for European fulfillment modernization, including next-generation Proteus robotics, broader robotics deployment, 25,000 additional jobs, and international expansion of Amazon Now ultra-fast delivery. For agentic commerce, fulfillment density and robotic execution are the physical constraints beneath automated demand generation (Amazon)
Tilt raises $26 million for AI-powered live shopping auctions: Tilt raised $26 million in a round led by TQ Ventures, with reporting describing AI features for listing generation, seller assistance, agentic buyer search, and clip creation around live auctions. The company is attacking resale and live commerce with tooling that reduces seller labor while making discovery less dependent on fixed catalog search (Business Insider)
NIQ extends Product Intelligence into GDSN-backed agentic commerce data infrastructure: NIQ added Global Data Synchronization Network capability to Product Intelligence, giving brands and retailers a single workflow to synchronize, validate, and distribute governed product records across supply chains, retailer networks, digital shelves, and agentic-commerce environments. The announcement puts product identity, attribute quality, and trusted distribution at the center of AI-mediated discovery and purchase execution (Business Wire)
Amazon adds generative visual search to the shopping app: Amazon integrated an AI image generator into the Amazon Shopping app, allowing shoppers to describe a product, generate images based on pattern, color, texture, and other criteria, then select an image to shop similar products. The feature begins with apparel and home goods and sits alongside Amazon’s Shop by Style collages, Lens Live, and Alexa for Shopping (Retail Dive)
Mastercard reports further progress toward token-first European checkout: Mastercard said three in five European ecommerce transactions on its network are now tokenized, with merchant tokenization live in 45 European countries and territories, Click to Pay available in 32 markets, and payment passkeys expanding alongside frictionless Identity Check. The relevance to agentic commerce is operational: delegated purchasing depends on tokenized credentials, strong authentication, and low-friction approval flows rather than stored static card data (The Paypers)
🛡️ Security & Fraud
Generative AI refund fraud gets a field study: A June 2 arXiv paper based on interviews with Chinese e-commerce merchants and platform workers documents how generative AI can fabricate convincing defect evidence, pressure dispute workflows, and force merchants toward adversarial verification such as multi-angle videos and AI screening. The key risk is that dispute systems historically designed around photos, text, and logistics traces now face synthetic evidence at consumer scale (arXiv)
Cloudflare bot-traffic signal raises agent-governance stakes: Tom’s Hardware reported Cloudflare CEO Matthew Prince’s observation that automated traffic had overtaken human HTTP requests, with agentic traffic arriving faster than expected. Even with the caveat that HTTP requests are not the same as consumer engagement, the signal matters for retailers preparing product pages, pricing systems, inventory checks, and checkout flows for non-human visitors (Tom’s Hardware)
Findustry AI launches Chargeback Agent for automated dispute workflows: Findustry AI’s Chargeback Agent collects merchant evidence, applies card-network dispute rules by reason code, drafts response letters, and lets merchants approve, edit, or delegate responses based on value thresholds such as sub-$300 disputes. The product is a concrete example of agentic automation moving into post-transaction risk, where merchants need both speed and rule-specific evidence discipline (Digital Transactions)
Automated chargeback processing becomes a merchant-scale fraud-control category: Chargeflow published a June 7 analysis arguing that manual chargeback management creates missed deadlines, inconsistent evidence quality, and linear headcount pressure as order volume grows, while automated systems detect disputes, enrich data, build evidence packages, and submit card-scheme-compliant responses (Chargeflow)
📈 Consumer & Market Insights
Amazon moves Prime Day into a four-day June event with Alexa for Shopping: Amazon said Prime Day 2026 will run June 23-26 and is encouraging members to use Alexa for Shopping for personalized deal guides, deal alerts, price alerts, and auto-buy. The event will test whether AI shopping assistance can change promotion discovery and conversion behavior during a compressed retail moment (Retail Dive)
Costco’s recommendation carousels show personalization’s revenue ceiling is still rising: Costco’s personalized product recommendation carousels contributed just under $500 million in digital sales and produced conversion rates three times higher than typical conversion, according to CFO Gary Millerchip’s comments reported by Retail Dive (Retail Dive).
Luxury and beauty leaders sharpen AI-shopping expectations: Vogue Business covered a New York discussion among fashion, beauty, and luxury executives about AI’s role in recommendations, fit prediction, personalization, and shopping experience design. High-consideration commerce will need agents that understand taste, context, and brand constraints rather than merely optimize for conversion (Vogue Business)
Retail payments executives focus on stack readiness for agentic AI shopping: FF News published an Adyen segment from Retail Technology Show 2026 arguing that retailers are actively evaluating how autonomous agents will enter the customer journey but often lack an operational execution plan. The practical gap sits in unified commerce architecture: identity, inventory, payments, loyalty, and customer service have to resolve in one flow (FF News)
Riverty and Adyen frame Europe’s agentic-commerce choice around trust and protocols: The Paypers covered Riverty and Adyen’s Fintech 2040 paper, which argues that ecommerce advantage is shifting from clicks, rankings, and conversion rates toward a trust-and-protocol layer spanning machine readability, payment authority, trusted execution, and AI interoperability. A referenced consumer survey found that 93% of respondents want the ability to review or stop AI purchasing decisions at any time, underscoring that consumer control is a deployment constraint, not a UX afterthought (The Paypers).
Morph forecasts $500 billion in AI-agent-influenced commerce by 2028: Morph’s Agentic Economy report projects that AI-agent-influenced commerce will exceed $500 billion in global GMV by 2028, with AI agents independently discovering products, comparing prices, negotiating terms, and executing payments. The report also links agentic commerce to stablecoin infrastructure, forecasting that AI agents could overtake humans in commercial stablecoin payments over the same horizon (The Paypers)
🎯 Strategic Hiring Highlights
Product / platform / architecture leadership
Gap Inc. — Principal – Architecture, AI, Unified Commerce — San Francisco, CA — $209,700–$272,600/yr — Gap Inc. Careers
American Express — Senior Manager, Agentic Commerce – Product Management — New York, NY (hybrid) — Salary not listed — American Express Careers
Citi — Senior Vice President, Product Development – Wallets & Agentic Commerce | Citi US Consumer Cards — New York, NY (hybrid) — $176,720–$265,080/yr — Citi Careers
Amazon — Principal PM, Agentic AI Shopping, RBS — Bengaluru, India — Salary not listed — Amazon Jobs
Instacart — Principal Product Manager, Agentic Commerce — Remote (Canada: ON, AB, BC, NS) — $223,000–$235,500 CAD/yr — Instacart Careers
Instacart — Principal Product Manager, Agentic Commerce — Remote (US/Canada) — $242,000–$307,000 USD/yr — Instacart Remote
Accenture — Agentic Commerce Manager | Comms, Media, & Technology — Multiple locations — Salary not listed — Accenture Careers
Accenture — Agentic Commerce Consultant | Consumer Goods & Retail — Multiple locations — Salary not listed — Accenture Careers
Accenture — Agentic Commerce Transformation Manager — Walnut Creek, CA; Cleveland, OH (consulting locations surfaced in June postings) — Salary not listed — Accenture (via June postings)
Novartis — Product Manager, Agentic AI Solutions — Basel, Switzerland (or other Novartis hubs, hybrid) — Salary not listed — Novartis Careers
1Password — Developer, Billing and Payments — Remote (United States | Canada) — Salary not disclosed — 1Password (Ashby)
Tabs — Software Engineer, Billing & Payments — Remote (location not specified) — Salary not disclosed — Tabs (Ashby)
Nium — Senior Product Manager, Card Processing — Global / Remote (location not specified) — Salary not disclosed — Nium Careers
Engineering / agentic platforms & infra
Nordstrom — Principal Engineer: AI Agentic Platform — Seattle, WA (hybrid) — $191,000–$297,000/yr — Nordstrom Careers
Amazon — Software Development Engineer, Agentic Commerce Experiences — Singapore — Salary not listed — Amazon Jobs
Accenture — Agentic Data Engineer — Prague, Czech Republic — Salary not listed — Accenture Careers
Accenture — Technical Commerce & AI Manager | Agentic Commerce & AI — Multiple US locations — Salary not listed — Accenture Careers
Hexion — Lead Agentic AI Engineer — US Remote (Columbus, OH hub) — Salary not disclosed — Hexion Careers
The Trade Desk — Staff Software Engineer – Agentic AI — London, UK — Salary not disclosed — The Trade Desk Careers
Shape Security (F5) — Sr. Software Engineer – Agentic AI — Bengaluru, India — Salary not disclosed — Shape Security Careers
Duffel — AI Engineer, Backend — Remote (location not specified) — Salary not disclosed — Duffel (Ashby)
Zillow — Distinguished Scientist – Agentic Systems — Remote, US — Salary not disclosed — Zillow Careers
Trust, payouts & safety for AI‑mediated commerce
Handshake — Senior Software Engineer, Pay & Safety — San Francisco, CA — $225,000–$250,000/yr — Handshake (Ashby)
Bread Financial — Senior Product Owner – Agentic AI — Columbus, OH (hybrid) — Salary not disclosed — Bread Financial Careers
📖 Articles Worth Reading
AI can now shop for you, if you let it: ING explains the consumer flow behind its work with Worldline and Mastercard, emphasizing that AI can support product selection and payment initiation while the customer remains in control. Useful for operators thinking about how to communicate consent and approval in agentic checkout (ING)
Are agentic payments set to flourish in Europe after debut pilot?: PaymentExpert frames the Mastercard, ING, and Worldline transaction as a scaling question: production proof is valuable, but regional adoption will depend on trust, interoperability, consumer authentication, and regulatory comfort (PaymentExpert)
Adyen: Unified Commerce and Navigating the Shift to Agentic AI Shopping: FF News’ Retail Technology Show segment is worth reading for its focus on retail infrastructure readiness rather than consumer-facing demos. The useful lens is whether unified commerce stacks can expose inventory, pricing, payments, and loyalty safely to autonomous agents (FF News)
Axios AI+NY Summit takeaways: Axios captures enterprise AI concerns around adoption, cost allocation, regulation, and public trust. It is not commerce-specific, but the themes map directly onto agentic commerce deployment: companies need clearer ownership for AI usage, safety, and customer-facing behavior (Axios)
Agentic Commerce Set to Independently Research and Handle Digital Transactions for Consumers: Crowdfund Insider’s summary of CB Insights’ agentic-commerce market map is a useful ecosystem overview, especially for its separation of horizontal agent infrastructure from commerce-specific discovery, payment, and post-purchase applications (Crowdfund Insider)
How the travel industry is actually using AI in 2026: The Paypers’ travel-sector analysis is relevant because travel combines high-value transactions, personalization, fraud risk, loyalty economics, and complex booking flows; those constraints make it an early testbed for agent-assisted commerce beyond retail catalogs (The Paypers)
🧭 Looking Ahead
Shoptalk Europe 2026
Date: June 9–11, 2026
Location: Fira Gran Via, Barcelona
Focus: Shoptalk Europe’s 2026 agenda already includes sessions on AI readiness, shifting consumer priorities, and retail transformation. For agentic commerce watchers, it should be one of the best places to hear how European retailers are thinking about data readiness, orchestration, and AI-enabled growth
MAG Payments Summit London 26
Date: June 9–10, 2026
Location: Convene, 155 Bishopsgate, London
Focus: European merchant payments, regulation, technology, and operating-model shifts for large commerce organizations
VivaTech 2026
Date: June 17-20, 2026
Location: Paris, France
Focus: European AI, commerce platforms, startups, infrastructure, and enterprise technology partnerships.
CommerceNext Growth Show 2026
Date: June 23-24, 2026
Location: New York, NY
Focus: Ecommerce growth, retail media, digital commerce operations, AI-enabled customer acquisition, and retention.
GITEX AI Europe 2026
Date: June 30-July 1, 2026
Location: Berlin, Germany
Focus: Enterprise AI, cybersecurity, cloud infrastructure, AI governance, and cross-sector technology deployment.
Berkeley Agentic AI Summit 2026
Date: August 1-2, 2026
Location: Berkeley, CA
Focus: Agentic AI research, infrastructure, interoperability, governance, and academic-to-industry transfer
General information only. Not legal, tax, investment, or professional advice. No warranty as to accuracy or completeness. Verify independently and consult your own advisers.
If you believe any information is inaccurate, please contact AgenticCommerce@proton.me and we will make a good-faith effort to review and correct it where appropriate.
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