Can two rich guys fix the energy crisis?
Can two youngish billionaires tweeting from opposite sides of the planet solve the South Australian energy crisis?
Can two youngish billionaires tweeting from opposite sides of the planet solve the South Australian energy crisis?
Calling a meeting of CEOs will do little to address the core problem of Australia's energy crisis.
Listen to Anthony Pratt for half an hour and it is easy to wonder why every Australian manufacturer is not flocking to the US to do business.
Technology, growth, savings and Donald Trump were high on the agenda on day one.
It is a rare display of solidarity in the hyper-competitive aviation industry.
Westpac CEO Brian Hartzer was less conciliatory but just as polished as he fronted round two of the parliamentary review of the big four banks.
Qantas, Virgin and Rex have joined forces to take on monopoly airport owners and lobby for more infrastructure.
Origin boss Frank Calabria says the push from the energy industry for policy certainty has not resonated with households.
Whether they like it or not Australia's major banks are facing new rules governing the accountability of executives.
When Julie Bishop travels to PNG this week, she will discover that our closest neighbour's economy is in deep trouble.
The new British owners of economic forecasting firm BIS Shrapnel are happy for their local economists to make big calls including the view that the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development has got it wrong on the Australian housing market.
Long before "fake news" became part of everyday conversation, Capital Economics wasn't convinced about the reliability of China's GDP data.
Rio's Guinea corruption scandal took an interesting turn as the board made it clear it has no evidence former CEO Sam Walsh acted corruptly.
Wayne Byres says APRA's investor lending speed limits are working. But he's only partly right.
Some Telstra watchers say the problems facing the company are of such magnitude that the stock will fall to about $3.50, which is where it was in 2012.
A new report says the idea Chinese companies blindly follow Communist Party orders is wrong.
The tens of millions of dollars spent by CBA on investigations into its life insurance arm has turned out to be money well spent.
Mike Baird is the first Australian politician with an even chance of having a shot at becoming the CEO of a top 100 company.
No one is going to emerge from the mess Bellamy's Australia has got itself in with their head held high but there is light at the end of the tunnel for shareholders.
Mark Bouris has avoided having to fire himself after Yellow Brick Road earned a maiden profit.
Activist shareholder Jan Cameron may emerge the winner from the complicated machinations surrounding Bellamy's.
The property developer says there has been sharp upturn in cash settlements since the big four Australian banks cut lending to offshore investors last year.
QBE CEO John Neal has been docked $550,000 pay for his failure to notify the board in a timely manner of a relationship with his secretary, in a move that will overshadow the strongest result in years.
The fight for board control at Bellamy's has taken an intriguing twist in the lead up to a shareholder meeting called by activist Jan Cameron.
Another day and another long-serving chief executive steps down to smell the roses.
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