'High 60s': Aussie dollar bears stir
Australia's shrinking yield advantage over the US has stirred the Aussie dollar bears but the currency is deemed unlikely to plunge hard.
Australia's shrinking yield advantage over the US has stirred the Aussie dollar bears but the currency is deemed unlikely to plunge hard.
Australia's $2.8 trillion fund industry is one of the last havens for fund managers relying on human judgement for their investment calls. That may be about to end amid the global onslaught of low-cost, index-tracking funds.
Passengers on board the Malaysia Airlines flight turned back to Melbourne after a man made a bomb threat have spoken of their ordeal and the long wait for police to storm the plane.
An Australian cybersecurity startup is gaining international attention but claims Australian big business and governments are reluctant to support home-grown talent.
Investors bought up banks on Wednesday, but a good day failed to offset the worst month since January 2016.
The stand out listings traded on the ASX captured at key moments through the day, as indicated by the time stamp in the video.
A former New York math teacher allegedly graduated from ripping off his students of a few hundred dollars 14 years ago to scamming billionaires millions of dollars.
Shares see-saw and the Aussie dollar drops after soft Chinese manufacturing data clashed with solid growth in local retail sales.
Australian house prices fell in May for the first time in 18 months, in an early sign lending restrictions are starting to damp demand.
BHP's board is expected to select a new chairman at its June meeting to replace long-serving former Ford Motor Co boss Jac Nasser, according to two sources.
Alleged would-be hijacker was released from psychiatric facility hours before boarding flight, police say.
Wesley William Hall is suing Westpac for unfair dismissal and is seeking $600,000 in compensation.
The two biggest US banks said second-quarter trading revenue is on pace to drop at least 10 per cent.
It is easy to think of the Commonwealth as a mere relic of empire. But it could be the future face of globalisation.
Australian retail spending rose 1 per cent in April, beating market expectations of a modest rise.
AMP Chief Economist Shane Oliver predicts the risk of another RBA rate cut this year.
Tatts has won the right to run lotteries in Victoria for another 10 years after winning a new licence.
Uber suffers a $US708 million loss in the first quarter as its head of finance joins the exodus of top execs leaving the company.
Each big company is a sort of little city unto itself. If the city tries to scatter itself to the four winds, the traffic stops, and the city starts to die
Trump's next Twitter misfire could be deadly serious if his account isn't better protected.
Passengers overpowered a man carrying a large black box who was trying to enter the cockpit of a Malaysia Airlines flight shortly after take-off from Melbourne Airport.
Australia is experiencing a "spectacular housing bubble", which needs to be addressed with tougher regulatory measures, said Willem Buiter, Citigroup's chief economist.
Pimco sees a 70 per cent chance of a recession in the next five years and says it's time for investors to start building cash reserves.
Russia wants the rouble to stop acting like an oil currency.
We open the page on the month of June and I for one hope we can break this malaise in markets.
The climate genie, already out of the bottle, just got that bit harder to put back in.
Credit Suisse Group is seeing a greater willingness among clients to put their cash to work as uncertainties eased.
Tesla chief executive threatened to resign his position as an adviser to President Donald Trump if the US withdraws from the Paris climate deal.
James Packer helped make Lawrence Ho a billionaire, but his former business partner is in no mood for favors following Crown's China nightmare.
Nickel prices tumbled on investor concern over rising supply from top producers Indonesia and the Philippines.
An Australian cybersecurity startup is gaining international attention but claims Australian big business and governments are reluctant to support home-grown talent.
This new movement is a natural reaction to our fast-paced lives.
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