Artificial intelligence has made significant inroads into the retail sector this year, particularly during Black Friday, evolving into a pivotal middleman in the shopping experience. As consumers increasingly rely on AI for product discovery and deal-hunting, several technology-focused exchange-traded funds (ETFs) are positioned to benefit.
The iShares U.S. Technology ETF (NYSE:IYW), which includes major players like Apple Inc (NASDAQ:AAPL), Amazon.com, Inc (NASDAQ:AMZN), and Microsoft Corp (NASDAQ:MSFT), is at the forefront of this transformation. These companies dominate sectors such as cloud computing and AI-driven search and recommendation engines. Similarly, the Global X Artificial Intelligence & Technology ETF (NASDAQ:AIQ) provides exposure to notable firms like Alphabet, Inc (NASDAQ:GOOGL) and Meta Platforms Inc (NASDAQ:META), which supply the AI models enabling comparison shopping and virtual assistants.
Funds focused on the internet and innovation, such as the First Trust Dow Jones Internet Index Fund (NASDAQ:FDNI), are also well-positioned to capture retail dynamics. With holdings that include Amazon, Meta, and Shopify Inc (NASDAQ:SHOP), FDNI benefits from platforms increasingly influenced by AI-enhanced product placement.
This increased focus on technology ETFs aligns with a record-setting Black Friday. According to data from Adobe Analytics, U.S. online spending reached $11.8 billion, marking a 9.1% increase from the previous year. E-commerce sales grew by 10.4%, significantly outpacing the 1.7% rise in in-store sales. Traffic to retail websites driven by AI surged by more than 800%, illustrating the profound impact of price-comparison tools and recommendation engines on consumer behavior, especially amid concerns over tariffs and a more cautious labor market.
Worldwide, AI-enabled agents accounted for $14.2 billion in online Black Friday spending, with over $3 billion of that total occurring in the U.S., according to Salesforce. Shoppers gravitated toward popular items such as LEGO sets, Pokémon cards, gaming consoles, and AirPods, frequently guided by AI-generated recommendations and curated lists of deals that streamlined the shopping process.
Despite the strong spending results, consumers bought fewer items per order, as rising prices impacted their budgets. Discount levels remained steady compared to last year, and ongoing inflation and unemployment worries made shoppers more deliberate in their purchasing decisions.
Looking ahead, Cyber Monday is anticipated to break new spending records. The clear takeaway from this year’s shopping landscape is the emerging role of AI as retail’s most effective salesperson. ETFs that hold shares in companies behind these influential algorithms may quietly outperform expectations this season, as the integration of AI into retail continues to reshape consumer habits.
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