Google's Shopping Actions lets consumers more easily buy goods from retailers through the company’s search engine, digital assistant and Express delivery.

(Bloomberg)—Walmart Inc., No. 3 in the Internet Retailer 2018 Top 1000, has quietly withdrawn from one of Google’s marquee efforts to challenge Amazon.com Inc. (No. 1) in e-commerce.

Walmart removed its products from Google’s Shopping Actions service, the internet giant said on Thursday. The retailer also recently dropped out of Google Express, a related delivery service.

In March, Google unveiled Shopping Actions, which lets consumers more easily buy goods from retailers through the company’s search engine, digital assistant and Express delivery. The service launched with Walmart and Target Corp. (No. 17) as flagship partners, an alliance that showed the retail stalwarts attempting to curb Amazon’s expansion. Google takes a commission on sales from partners.

Losing Walmart, the world’s largest retailer, is a blow for Google. Walmart has emerged as one of Amazon’s main e-commerce competitors. The Bentonville, Arkansas-based company is making a major push to hire tech talent, expand its own delivery service and use its network of physical stores to lure new customers online.

Building more of its e-commerce capabilities in-house may have reduced Walmart’s need to partner so closely with Google. For instance, if the retailer is running its own deliveries from stores, it’s less likely to work with Google Express.

“Walmart and Google remain committed to our strategic partnership,” a Walmart representative said in an emailed statement.

A Google spokeswoman echoed that statement but declined to provide further details. “We are committed to the success of retailers and partner with them in many different ways to help users discover and purchase millions of products across platforms,’ the spokeswoman said. “Walmart remains a strategic partner across multiple businesses including Google Ads.”

In October, Alphabet Inc.’s Google said Nike Inc. (No. 27), Best Buy Co. (No. 8) and Sephora (owned by LVMH, No. 121) had joined “hundreds of other merchants” in the Shopping Actions program.

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Both Google and Walmart representatives said the retailer will continue to build software that works with Google’s voice-controlled digital assistant.

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