Markets Live: Aussie surges amid Trump slump
Shares have opened lower, pulled down by the big banks as the Trump trade of the past months shows more signs of unwinding.
Shares have opened lower, pulled down by the big banks as the Trump trade of the past months shows more signs of unwinding.
Bank of America calls it the Icarus Trade: global stock markets will surge another 10 per cent in a "melt-up" this quarter, followed by a mirror "melt-down" later in 2017. HSBC's latest global outlook is even darker.
George Soros lost nearly $US1 billion as a result of the stockmarket rally spurred by Donald Trump's surprise presidential election, the Wall Street Journal reported.
The lockstep moves in financial assets that characterised markets in the past few years are breaking down.
Hundreds of workers at one of Australia's largest power plants will have their pay drastically slashed by up to 30 per cent.
The US Q4 earnings season really kicks into gear tonight, with Bank of America (22:45 aedt) and JPM (00:00 aedt) starting the proceedings.
​The European Central Bank should start unwinding its ultra-loose monetary policy this year, said Germany's finance minister.
Turkey's central bank finally gained traction in its efforts to prop up the lira.
​Chinese rebar steel futures rose for a fourth session amid Beijing's campaign to pare excess steel production capacity.
The S&P; 500 and the Dow were set for their worst day since October as bank stocks tumbled ahead of earnings.
Oil climbed after Saudi Arabia said it cut its production even more than required by an OPEC deal.
The Aussie has surged above US75¢, extending its advance so far this year to more than 4 per cent on the greenback's woes.
The Obama administration filed a new complaint against Chinese aluminium subsidies at the World Trade Organisation.
​Indonesian authorities say they grounded Tigerair Australia because the budget airline was selling tickets on flights using aircraft owned and piloted by its parent company Virgin Australia, in breach of the rules of its licence.
Its shares have slumped by a third in just two days, but that isn't enough to whet the appetite of some analysts, who reckon the shares should decline another 20 per cent or so to bring them back to 'fair value'.
Primary Healthcare and its criminally charged chief executive Peter Gregg face a long and drawn out court process that could take 18 months, according to legal experts.Â
ANZ Bank is moving a step closer towards "virtual" credit and debit cards, through new changes to automatically upload replacement cards for those that are lost onto customers' smart phones.
Record low insurance premiums for small businesses, particularly tradies, are creating a drag on earnings for big insurers
A wage negotiation at the world's top copper mine is showing the downside for producers of recovering prices.
Pharma investors and companies need to stop assuming Republicans can rein Donald Trump in and prepare for the policy fight they thought they'd mostly be able to avoid for at least four years.
Healthcare stocks dragged the ASX to its second loss of the year after an address by Donald Trump fuelled investor uncertainty.
A former Barclays director has been sentenced to five months in jail for passing merger tips to a plumber friend and getting cash and free tiling in return.
Rising income inequality is the most important underlying trend determining global events, according to the WEF's annual assessment of global risks. For business, the biggest risk is the potential for cyber attacks.
Losses in healthcare stocks and the supermarket giants offset gains in energy and miners, pulling the ASX down for just the second time in 2017.
Industry group has dropped all references to Australia Day amid growing calls to change its date.
Energy giant AGL has been fined $124,000 in the NSW Land and Environment Court for failing to disclose political donations when making planning applications in the state.
Uber Vice President of Global Vehicle Programs Sherif Marakby talks about autonomous cars and the company's future at the North American International Auto Show in Detroit.
US President-elect Donald Trump said pharmaceutical companies were "getting away with murder" in what they charged the government for medicines, and promised that would change, sending drugs stocks sharply lower on Wednesday.
Fresh from a year that delivered major political shocks and proved tougher than expected, Australian business leaders are taking a cautious approach to 2017.
It's the double whammy that worries economists, that Trump's populist pose assigns less value to economic expertise, while also creating the conditions under which it's most likely to be needed.
Does living by the beach and running a multi-million dollar business sound too good to be true?
Two business owners who have seen gentrification firsthand explain what it means.
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