Markets Live: Investors bet on Hillary
Stocks rise and the dollar surges to a six-month high as investors grow more confident of a Clinton victory.
Stocks rise and the dollar surges to a six-month high as investors grow more confident of a Clinton victory.
Global miner Rio Tinto has suspended two senior executives following the discovery of large payments to a consultant who worked on the Simandou iron ore project in Guinea.
Commonwealth Bank has withdrawn a controversial resolution asking shareholders to approve changes to its bonus scheme for chief executive Ian Narev, which would have introduced new performance hurdles relating to people and culture.
Aldi and Menora have promised to make sure their oregano products contain 100 per cent of the ingredients, after the ACCC found they were adulterated with other leaves
Medibank CEO Craig Drummond has blamed a slowdown hitting the entire $20 billion industry for hindering revenue growth.
US stocks rise for a second straight session as investors bet Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton to win the US presidential election.
Many big US fund managers are staying aggressively positioned with little cash on hand despite election jitters.
Cash Converters will refund almost $11 million to payday loan customers after the corporate watchdog caught it failing to check if borrowers could afford to pay back the loans.
Once upon a time, the best place to snag a retail bargain was the Boxing Day sales. Not anymore.
The Mexican peso is surging. Wall Street is moving higher. These are all signs of increased confidence among market participants that Hillary Clinton will win. But some are hedging their bets.
The Australian dollar hurled itself higher this morning as investors positioned themselves for a Clinton win.
Spot metallurgical coal topped $US300 a tonne for the first time in five years.
US stocks advanced as investors awaited election results amid a tight contest for president.
The ASX should rise modestly at the open, as markets, betting on a Hillary victory, follow a positive lead from Wall Street.
Higher costs in the UK, where a Brexit-battered pound is squeezing retailers and brand owners, have chiselled away the craggy Alpine shape of Toblerone chocolate bars.
Fans of Toblerone chocolate bars complain about a cost-cutting move to space out the peaks on the Swiss treat.
Hundreds of Victorian jobs are under threat as the supermarket giant rethinks its $70m dollar supply deal with fruit and vegetable processor SPC Ardmona.
If you think the possible ascension of Donald Trump is our one big worry you haven't been paying attention. Some climate scientists are worried sick over the possibility that climate change may be passing the point of no return while we procrastinate over trying to control it.
"Decreased entitlements for employees with a proportionately negative impact on female employees."
Top senior executive pay goes to $326,400 as three-year dispute rumbles on.
Retail billionaire Solomon Lew has pounced on a vacant 8-level St Kilda Road office building, paying $55 million to beat off developers on one of Melbourne's premier leafy boulevards.
Some shoppers can't be bothered haggling, others want to but don't have the time. Here's a study that shows how likely you are to get a discount and save a lot of money.
AFL chairman Mike Fitzpatrick was smacked with a record protest vote by Pacific Current investors. Now they want to bench him.
China's business regulator said it has warned leading online shopping companies, including Alibaba Group Holding and JD.com, against adopting dodgy sales tactics at China's biggest shopping day of the year.
Australia's biggest supermarket is taking SPC Ardmona's tinned tomatoes off its shelves after cutting a deal with a new South Australian supplier for the canned commodity.
The fate of the Dreamworld theme park will become clearer this week as the owner, Ardent Leisure work towards a re-opening in the lead-up to the vital holiday season.
A "Clinton-in-the-clear" rally overseas failed to spur a second strong session on the ASX, which closed with only marginal gains.
US-style whistleblower laws don't just pay bounties, they stop companies retaliating against workers doing the right thing by society, US lawyer Jordan A. Thomas says.
The events of the past 10 days - which have seen stocks, currencies, and commodities fluctuate in response to changes in the US presidential race - drive this message home: elections can matter for financial markets, even if in some cases the effects are only temporary.
Selling in the big banks following CBA's quarterly update flattened early ASX gains, ahead of tonight's US election.
Toenails never stop growing, even when you get older.
"Realising there's a big market, that's when I knew this could be a business."
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