Movers

Cashing in on Pokemon

Simon Bosch

What started as a smartphone game born from a 2014 April Fools' Day prank is now creating business opportunities that simply did not exist last ...

Turkey coup hits markets

Turkey's lira fell the most in eight years as the coup unfolded.

Turkey's lira plunged the most in eight years, an exchange-traded fund tied to the country's shares declined and U.S. Treasuries ticked higher ...

Bob Jane bankrupt after Mitchell action

Bob Jane has declared himself bankrupt, owing millions to the Tax Office and other creditors.

Tyre king Bob Jane has been forced into bankruptcy after Harold Mitchell, his mate of four decades, pursued him over a $200,000 debt.

S&P; 500 slips after rally

US shares have added almost $US2 trillion since June 27 as the benchmark index climbed 8 per cent.

US stocks closed flat, with the S&P; 500 Index slipping to halt its longest rally in four months.

Coca-Cola coffee and milk are on the way

Coca-Cola is concentrating on the breakfast sector.

Coca-Cola Co. is planning to sell packaged arabica coffee beans to Brazilian consumers as the world's largest soft-drink producer expands in ...

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Comment & Analysis

Markets

In Depth

The Economy

China GDP slightly better than expected

Second quarter GDP rose 1.8 per cent quarter-on-quarter.

China's economy grew 6.7 per cent in the second quarter from a year earlier as the government stepped up efforts to stabilise growth in the world's second-largest economy.

Retail

Surfstitch chairman to step down

SurfStitch's Howard McDonald was the first chairman of the two-year-old company.

Online sports retail group Surfstitch chairman Howard McDonald will retire on August 1, continuing the recent management churn at the beleaguered company.

UK giant to open inside Myer

John Lewis's department store on Oxford Street in London.

One of the UK's premier and largest department stores groups, John Lewis, is heading to Australia in partnership with Myer.

Banking & Finance

Mining & Resources

Gutnick is once again a diamond in the rough

Gutnick attends court in 2001.

In his many legal disputes, Joseph Gutnick has always relied on Australian courts, even when dealing with his own close-knit religious community. Now those same courts may come back to bite him.

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