Globant, Suntory Global Spirits Partner to Deploy Gen AI Commercial Insights Agent
The AI-powered Commercial Insights Agent can interpret complex business questions across dashboards, reports, and unstructured documentation. By automating insight retrieval, the agent is expected to reduce operating costs associated with traditional business intelligence workflows and decrease the time-to-action.
A close-up of an experienced game engineer's hands typing a complex code on a laptop.
Additional benefits of the Commercial Insights Agent for Suntory Global Spirits include self-serve decision support at scale, which allows teams in different departments to independently access data insights, ask questions, or generate reports without dependencies on other teams. The agent is also trained on internal data to provide contextual GenAI recommendations.
Globant (NYSE:GLOB) provides technology services worldwide.
While we acknowledge the potential of GLOB as an investment, we believe certain AI stocks offer greater upside potential and carry less downside risk. If you're looking for an extremely undervalued AI stock that also stands to benefit significantly from Trump-era tariffs and the onshoring trend, see our free report on the .
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Disclosure: None. This article is originally published at Insider Monkey.

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E&E News
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'If it's not going to be a one-off, I would probably expect that this would be the starting point for future partnerships along the order of MP Materials.' MP Materials declined to comment, deferring questions to the DOD. Tyson Slocum, director of Public Citizen's Energy Program, said past administrations have used the Cold War-era law in various ways, including to address supply chain issues during the pandemic, but not to circumvent existing laws. Slocum criticized DOD for not being more transparent. 'This appears to be an unprecedented abuse of DPA to exploit emergency authorities to circumvent federal standards,' said Tyson. 'It's outrageous that we're learning this from a company disclosure rather than the Department of Defense.' But there are some guardrails in place for the deal, said Zoe Oysul, a senior policy analyst at SAFE's Center for Critical Minerals Strategy: Congress will have oversight of funds needed to sustain the deal, and the government will have direct oversight given the DOD is now MP Materials' largest stakeholder. President Donald Trump declared a national energy emergency and inked an executive order in March to counter the threat of U.S. reliance on 'hostile foreign powers' mineral production.' At the same time, Beijing has throttled exports of rare earths and magnets, rattling supply chains. Rare earths are a group of 17 metallic elements that are used to make EVs, consumer electronics, medical equipment, aircraft engines and military equipment such as missiles and radar systems, and it is used in oil refining. 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Drew Horn, who worked on minerals policy in the first Trump administration and is now founder and CEO of advisory firm GreenMet, said the DOD's use of the provision is indeed unprecedented. But Horn countered that the goal is not to avoid compliance with existing laws. Instead, Horn said the administration is finding ways to act more nimbly and cut through red tape in an emergency situation to combat China. While Horn acknowledged public details about MP Materials deal are sparse, he said top Trump officials who finalized the agreement have deep experience, do not want to create the perception of a monopoly or unfair preferences, and feel their use of the Cold War-era law is legally defensible and necessary to counter a national security threat. 'It's definitely unprecedented,' said Horn. 'The intent was to send the market a strong signal that the U.S. government is going to try and provide price protection measures against PRC market disruption.' 'Truly frightening' The lack of detail around the MP Materials' deal has some calling for more congressional scrutiny. Matthew Zolnowski, president of the supply chain consulting firm Greyfriars LLC, who previously oversaw DPA investments in critical minerals and pandemic response at DOD, agreed the government's use of the provision appears to be unprecedented. But Zolnowski said while the provision of the DPA authorizes DOD to circumvent existing laws, the agency still has to comply with the Anti-Deficiency Act, a federal law that bars agencies from spending or obligating more money than Congress has appropriated. Zolnowski said congressional appropriators should scrutinize the deal, which appears to cost about $3.5 billion — an amount that he said exceeds current appropriations to the DPA fund even when considering the GOP megabill's addition of $1 billion. 'Using the 'without regard' clause by itself is not unlawful. Instead, it operates in a lawless space, constrained only by the availability of funds and a national security need, however a president defines it,' said Zolnowski. 'For the sake of separation of powers, that's truly frightening.' DOD entered into the July 9 MP Materials deal to accelerate the build-out of a U.S. rare earth magnet supply chain to reduce foreign dependency for rare earth magnets, said a DOD spokesperson when asked about the government's unusual use of the DPA. The department selected 'a unique approach to this agreement to account for the difficulties in establishing and sustaining production of critical rare earth magnets in a market environment in which China controls much of the supply chain,' the spokesperson said. The agency leveraged preferred equity, loans, price floors and other approaches to ensure access to critical defense capabilities while also sharing the risk inherent in a commercially dominated market space, the DOD official said. 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DOD is also guaranteed a floor price of $110 per kilogram for rare earths produced at the mine. Also part of the agreement: MP Materials plans to triple capacity at its existing plant in Texas and build a second, larger facility to pump out rare earth magnets by 2028. The location of the second facility has not been announced, but the DOD has vowed to buy all magnets from the new facility for a decade. In the weeks following the announcement of the DOD agreement, MP Materials inked a $500 billion deal to supply Apple with rare earth magnets made from recycled material. General Motors has also agreed to take deliveries of rare earth magnets from the Texas facility. Jerry McGinn, a former DOD official who now directs the Center for Strategic and International Studies' Center for the Industrial Base, said the federal government needs creative solutions for its minerals needs. 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CNBC
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