Hello, I'm Nick Marsh with the BBC business updates.
OpenAI has signed a $38 billion contract with Amazon to access its cloud server infrastructure,
as the maker of chat GBT continues its run of major partnerships to secure computing power.
This year, the firm signed deals worth more than a trillion dollars,
with Oracle, Broadcom, AMD and the chipmaking giants Nvidia.
Here's our North America business correspondent, Michelle Fleury, on the significance of the deal.
It marks a major shift from OpenAI's exclusive reliance on Microsoft after the two companies renegotiated their contract last week to let OpenAI buy cloud services from any provider.
AWS executive Matt Garman says Amazon's technology will serve as a backbone for OpenAI's AI ambitions.
Starbucks says it's selling a 60% stake in its business in China as part of a $4 billion deal with the investment firm Boyu Capital.
Starbucks entered China in 1999 and the country is now its largest market outside of the United States with 8,000 stores.
But it's struggled in recent years with the rise of homegrown brands such as Lock in Coffee.
The online retail giant Sheehan says that it's banned the sale of all sex dolls on its platform around the world after it was accused of displaying products with a quote,
childlike appearance on its website.
Sheehan was founded in China,
but it's now headquartered in Singapore and it's due to open its first physical shop on Wednesday in a Parisian department store.
But after the French consumer watchdog said that there was little doubt as to the child pornography nature of certain products on the platform,
the country's finance minister threatened to ban the firm from France.
And the US conglomerate Kimberly Clark is set to buy Kenview, the maker of Tylenol,
which has faced attacks from the White House and flagging demand for its products.
The more than 40 billion cash and stock deal would create a consumer giant.