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Barbie's about to get a brain — and it's powered by OpenAI

Barbie's about to get a brain — and it's powered by OpenAI

Yahoo13-06-2025
Barbie's parent company Mattel has teamed up with OpenAI.
While details are still under wraps, the first AI-powered product is expected to drop later this year.
The partnership comes as toy manufacturers face weaker demand due to tariffs.
Barbie might get an AI upgrade.
Mattel, the maker of Barbie, Hot Wheels, and Uno, has teamed up with OpenAI to bring artificial intelligence to its iconic toy brands, the companies announced on Thursday.
By using OpenAI's technology, Mattel will "bring the magic of AI to age-appropriate play experiences with an emphasis on innovation, privacy, and safety," the California-based toy manufacturer said in a press release on Thursday.
While details are still under wraps, the first AI-powered product is expected to drop later this year.
Mattel isn't handing over its intellectual property in the deal. The company retains full control over the products being developed, said Josh Silverman, Mattel's chief franchise officer, in an interview with Bloomberg.
Talks with OpenAI first began late last year, he added.
It's not just about the toys. Mattel will also incorporate OpenAI tools like ChatGPT Enterprise into its business operations, the toy company said.
Mattel shares rose 1.8% to $19.59 earlier Thursday, before edging down to $19.30 in after-hours trading.
Mattel and OpenAI did not respond to a request for comment from Business Insider.
The move comes as toy manufacturers face weaker demand, with consumers pulling back on spending amid uncertainty over President Donald Trump's trade policy.
Mattel withdrew its annual forecast last month and said it would increase prices for some products in the US to offset Trump's tariffs.
The company also said it would "adjust" its promotional activity to save costs. Its cost-savings target for the year rose to $80 million from $60 million, Anthony DiSilvestro, Mattel's chief financial officer, said in an earnings call last month.
Over the past year, Mattel has leaned on entertainment — including movies, TV shows, and mobile games — to help offset a slowdown in toy sales.
OpenAI, meanwhile, has recently inked partnerships with major consumer brands, including Starbucks.
The coffee giant is rolling out a new OpenAI-powered tool called Green Dot Assist to help baristas remember drink recipes and suggest food pairings.
Built using Microsoft Azure OpenAI, the tool runs on an iPad behind the counter in stores and will work as an in-store virtual assistant for baristas, Starbucks said in a press release Tuesday.
Read the original article on Business Insider
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DOE plays out worst-case scenarios for US grid
DOE plays out worst-case scenarios for US grid

E&E News

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  • E&E News

DOE plays out worst-case scenarios for US grid

A Department of Energy report issued Monday warns that the United States will lose the race for leadership in artificial intelligence technology unless it slams the brakes on plans to close older coal- and gas-fired power plants and speeds up construction of new ones. To dramatize the challenge, DOE said that parts of the mid-Atlantic and Great Plains regions could face 400 hours of power outages in 2030 in a worst-case scenario where tech companies build giant energy-hungry AI data centers unabated, old coal plants keep closing and new power supplies come online slowly. Hardest hit under this scenario, according to the DOE analysis, would be eastern states served by the PJM Interconnection grid. Weeks of power shortages in Maryland, Pennsylvania and Virginia by 2030 would result from power plant closures and data center expansion. Under the most severe weather conditions based on history (not including future climate forecasts), power shortages in the area could total more than a month over the course of a year. Advertisement While the DOE scenarios are startling, the department noted that U.S. grid operators responsible for keeping the lights on would not approve data center growth that would 'jeopardize the reliability of the system.' Still, the DOE analysis sets the stage for emergency actions President Donald Trump has promised. That includes ordering coal- and gas-fired generators to cancel planned closures and to keep running. A nearly 90-year-old provision of the Federal Power Act, written for wartime use, gives him broad leeway to keep the plants open during national emergencies. The DOE report declares Trump's vow to win the AI race against China is such an emergency. 'Absent intervention, it is impossible for the nation's bulk power system to meet the AI growth requirements while maintaining a reliable power grid and keeping energy costs low for our citizens,' said the report. Presented as a technical analysis, the DOE report adopts Trump's rebuke of former President Joe Biden's goal of closing down coal power plants in favor of carbon-free wind and solar generation, which Trump recently called 'windmills and the rest of this JUNK.' 'Caused by the harmful and shortsighted policies of the previous administration, our Nation's inadequate energy supply and infrastructure causes and makes worse the high energy prices that devastate Americans, particularly those living on low- and fixed-incomes,' the report said. Advanced Energy United, a group of clean technology developers and energy users, took issue with sweeping assertions that wind, solar and battery technology are a net-negative for the grid as opposed to energy assets during a period of rising electricity demand: 'The study released today by the Department of Energy appears to exaggerate the risk of blackouts and undervalue the contributions of entire resource classes, like wind, solar, and battery storage, despite the fact that regions like Texas that have enabled rapid growth of these technologies have been rewarded with lower costs and a more reliable grid,' said Caitlin Marquis, managing director at Advanced Energy United. '[It's] troubling that this final agency action will not be subject to public scrutiny before it's used to justify retaining power plants that aren't needed for reliability — a decision that would directly add costs to consumers bills,' Marquis added. Jennifer Danis, federal energy policy director at the Institute for Policy Integrity at the New York University School of Law, questioned whether the analysis supports emergency declarations from the administration ordering aging coal and gas plants to halt their retirement plans. 'Reforms may be needed to ensure better planning for future resource adequacy to power AI,' Danis said in a statement, 'but they should focus on improving existing markets and planning standards, as well as speeding up new resource interconnection, rather than forcing customers to pay to keep old, inefficient plants online.' Biden's energy agenda — an unprecedented campaign to combat the threat of climate change fueled by the burning of coal, natural gas and oil for electricity — was only partially realized when Trump's victory last November signed death warrants for much of the plan. The DOE report does not mention climate change. 'AI is going to change our world' A consensus of grid operators in U.S. competitive power markets like PJM and the Southwest Power Pool is that grid reliability faces extraordinary stresses if the heavy rate of fossil plant retirements continues. Coal-fired plants, which supplied half of U.S. electricity two decades ago, have shrunk to just a 16 percent share, trailing natural gas plants, nuclear reactors, and just ahead of wind and solar power. The conclusion of power industry leaders at a Federal Energy Regulatory Commission conference last month was 'keep what we have' until the dimensions of the AI boom are clear and the pace of new plant construction can finally pick up. 'AI is going to change our world,' said Manu Asthana, the PJM CEO, told the FERC conference. 'In our forecast between 2024 and 2030, currently we have a 32-gigawatt increase in demand, of which 30 is from data centers,' Asthana said. PJM must 'find that intersection between reliability and affordability that works both for consumers and suppliers, and that intersection is getting harder and harder to find.' Clean energy advocates fault PJM for an overly costly, complex process for approving new solar and wind projects in the region over nearly a decade. 'As if this wasn't challenging enough,' said Lanny Nickell, CEO of the Southwest Power Pool, 'we are now projecting our peak demand to be as much as 75 percent higher 10 years from now, and that's largely driven by electrification and data center growth.' DOE reported that 104 GW of fossil fuel plant capacity is expected to retire by 2030. (One GW of power output—1,000 megawatts—supports about 850,000 average U.S. homes, with wide regional differences.) 'This capacity is not being replaced on a one-to-one basis and losing this generation could lead to significant outages when weather conditions do not accommodate wind and solar generation,' DOE said. The supply-demand balance gets much worse with DOE's assumption that at least 50 GW of new around-the-clock plant capacity will be needed to power data centers between now and 2030. The DOE report looks backward at historical weather patterns. That runs contrary to the warnings of grid officials at last month's FERC conference, urging regulators and the power industry to look ahead to worsening assaults of extreme weather fueled by climate change. While these scenarios underscore the need for harder, weather-protected energy infrastructure, they highlight the power system's dependence on just-in-time natural gas supply that can also be threatened in severe winters, officials said. Jim Robb, CEO of the North American Electric Reliability Corp., the high-voltage grid's security monitor, told last month's conference that weather models need improvements. 'We also need to have a much better understanding of natural gas, particularly in winter.'

The Best 4 Healthcare Stocks To Buy Now In A Growing Sector
The Best 4 Healthcare Stocks To Buy Now In A Growing Sector

Forbes

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The Best 4 Healthcare Stocks To Buy Now In A Growing Sector

The relatively high dividends paid by some of these companies may prove worth the uncertain revenue ... More impact of Medicaid cuts. The healthcare sector is one of the largest in the U.S., with spending expected to account for 20% of the American economy as it reaches $5.2 trillion in 2025, according to NerdWallet. But the healthcare sector is likely to suffer considerably in the wake of the passage into law of the so-called Big Beautiful Bill. The industry's pain will result from a roughly $1 trillion reduction in Medicaid spending through 2034, according to the Congressional Budget Office. These cuts are likely to cause widespread pain. For example, 15.9 million Americans could lose Medicaid coverage, according to the Urban Institute. Hospitals' expenses for Medicaid patients could fall by $37 billion, estimated the Commonwealth Fund; to offset the lower revenue, hospitals, nursing homes, and doctors' offices could eliminate 477,000 jobs, according to the American Association of Medical Colleges. And many rural hospitals may be forced to close, forcing patients to travel further for care, noted the American Hospital Association. Nevertheless, the growth of companies providing high-value solutions to painful problems whose business models are relatively impervious to Medicaid cuts could provide attractive opportunities for investors. 4 Top Healthcare Stocks to Buy Now Healthcare consists of interconnected industries including the following: From this sector, the following stocks stand out. 1. Cardinal Health (CAH) Dublin, Ohio-based Cardinal Health distributes pharmaceuticals and medical products to more than 100,000 locations – controlling roughly 50% share of the market. Cardinal Health's stock rise can be attributed to a 2% boost, to $8.18, in analysts' 2025 consensus earnings per share due to stronger-than-expected growth and profitability in the company's pharmaceutical distribution and medical products segments, according to AInvest. Moreover, the stock could rise should the company report better than expected second quarter 2025 earnings. Due to Cardinal Health's 'cost discipline, supply chain stability, and rising demand for healthcare services post-pandemic,' analysts anticipate the company will report EPS of $2.04 – two cents above the Zacks consensus. Cardinal Health is on my list because investors have recognized the company is improving its operations, and many anticipate the company will exceed investor expectations. If demand remains strong and profitability rises, its shares could rise more. Medicaid cuts pose a significant risk to the healthcare sector, including Cardinal Health. Yet the company's diversified business model could enable it to withstand the worst damage from these cuts, AInvest reports. 2. Cencora (COR) Conshohocken, Pennsylvania-based Cencora – formerly known as AmerisourceBergen – is a drug wholesaler and contract research organization. Cencora's stock rise is likely due to the company's faster than expected growth in the first quarter of 2025. This growth resulted from higher unit volume, a boost in demand for diabetes and weight loss drugs, and a 2% increase, to $15.83, in the company's fiscal year 2025 earnings per share guidance, according to StockTwits. Although the pharmaceuticals distribution industry is intensely competitive, Cencora is expected to deliver solid profit growth and to exceed investor expectations. Specifically, investors anticipate the company's profits will rise 12.8% over the next five years in the wake of delivering 6% better than expected EPS for each of 'the trailing four quarters,' noted Zacks. I included Cencora due to its track record of beating investor expectations. However, Medicaid cuts could reduce drug sales as millions of Americans lose their Medicaid coverage – thus cutting into Cencora's revenues, noted AInvest. However, the company's focus on growing areas like specialty pharmaceuticals and its acquisition of a retinal care company could help offset the likely negative effects of Medicaid policy changes, according to Zacks. 3. Hinge Health (HNGE) San Francisco-based Hinge Health develops healthcare software for musculoskeletal care, acute injury, chronic pain and post-surgical rehabilitation. The company's stock market rise flowed from its torrid revenue growth – up 420% in the quarter ending in March, according to Google Finance. Hinge Health stock rose 23% after the company's May 2025 initial public offering. The stock is propelled by strong investor confidence in the company's digital musculoskeletal care platform and positive financial performance, according to BusinessInsider. Hinge Health is on my list for these same reasons. What's more, since the company primarily targets self-insured employers and is partnering with major health plans to expand into the Medicare Advantage market, this diversification could mitigate the pain of Medicaid cuts, noted AlphaSense. Nevertheless, Hinge Heath's stock price will likely rise only if the company beats expectations and raises guidance when the company next reports quarterly earnings. 4. Gilead Sciences (GILD) Foster City, California-based Gilead Sciences researches and develops antiviral drugs used in the treatment of HIV/AIDS, hepatitis B, hepatitis C, influenza and COVID-19. Gilead's stock rise resulted from expectations-beating earnings in the first quarter, coupled with an optimistic forecast for 2025 EPS due to strong sales of existing products and new treatments, according to Reuters. In addition, the company's 99.9% effective HIV drug Sunienca received regulatory approval in the U.S. and Europe. Gilead is on my list because of its strong growth and bright prospects. However, since about 25% of the company's revenue is exposed to Medicaid – notably to its HIV drug Biktarvy – the Medicaid cuts could reduce the company's total revenue by 1% to 2%, according to Fierce Pharma. Bottom Line Healthcare is a huge, complex industry. Medicaid cuts could take a sizable bite out of many industry participants' revenue. The four companies described above – Cardinal Health, Cencora, Hinge Health, and Gilead – are likely more impervious to these cuts than owners of hospitals – particularly rural ones. Investors should scrutinize whether the relatively high dividends paid by some of these companies are worth the uncertain revenue impact of the Medicaid cuts.

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