Apple powers Dow past 22,000
Wall Street surged higher in early trade before a bout of profit taking knocked shares lower across the board.
Wall Street surged higher in early trade before a bout of profit taking knocked shares lower across the board.
Enough of the gentle nudges: Superannuation fund trustees are legally obliged to consider climate change risk and that's that.
Online credit card fraud is on the rise, with fraudsters who use stolen card details netting the lion's share of more than $530 million dollars last year, industry body Australian Payments Network has revealed.
Companies wishing to lease office space, in the city and suburbs, had better get the calls into leasing agents, pronto.
Australians would no longer be able to receive wages in cash, and industries classified as being at "high risk" of illegally taking secret cash-in-hand payments including cafes and restaurants could be subject to a minimum rate of tax, which they could then claim a refund on if they can prove to the tax man that they should be paying a lower rate.
The $2.3 trillion superannuation industry is so woeful in its disclosure of climate risk that trustees could be in breach of their legal duties.
Mining giant Rio Tinto has delivered underlying earnings of $US3.94 billion and pledged to return $US3 billion to shareholders.
QBE sold cover through car dealerships that was of "little or no benefit" to consumers.
China-backed Yancoal Australia will raise $US2.5 billion ($3.1 billion) in equity to fund the purchase of Rio Tinto Group's Australian coal assets, with its parent Yanzhou Coal Mining Co. tipping in $1 billion.
Given the year he has had, is it any wonder that James Packer is getting interested in virtual reality.
Shares remain on a roller-coaster ride, keeping the ASX below 5800 points as losses in miners and banks weighed.
The stand out listings traded on the ASX captured at key moments through the day, as indicated by the time stamp in the video.
Losses in miners and the big banks lead the market lower, but global sentiment remains upbeat.
A different kind of tax is powering Apple's profits
Hardware giant unwittingly at centre of widespread tradie tax fraud: chair of Treasury's Black Economy Taskforce
Rising home loan interest rates may push mortgage stress further into "elevated" territory in mining regions and other parts of the country with weak labour markets, mortgage insurance giant Genworth says.
Approvals for the construction of new homes bounced 10.9 per cent in June, giving little indication the housing market is cooling.
With 22 per cent of children considered overweight or obese, the NSW chief health officer is urging parents to increase vegetable consumption.
It will take more than just rhetoric to tame Aussie bulls as the currency hovers near a two-year high.
Expatriates, including temporary expatriates, are set to become collateral damage from the government's nationalistic "Australian homes for Australians first" policy.
Jakarta: A senior trade official insists Indonesia is not "closing our doors" to Australian agricultural products despite its drive towards food self-sufficiency as the two countries enter the eighth round of free trade negotiations in Canberra this week.
What keeps corporate leaders up at night? More than anything, it's the rising super power that is Amazon.
The rise of superbugs has seen global health experts urge farmers to limit antibiotic use. But one salmon company says diseases have forced it to increase the dosage over the past few years.
Pop superstar Beyonce, a Houston native, is mulling an investment in the National Basketball Association's Rockets, according to people familiar with the matter.
Stronger-than-expected sales of iPhones have driven Apple's quarterly revenue higher.
The Australian market looks set to open flat despite a strong lead from international markets overnight.
The market regulator went into action after numerous cases of fraud involving the apps, which encourage consumers to bet whether shares or currencies will rise or fall.
Insurer AAMI has been criticised after it sent an "ad" that strongly resembled a bill to a woman in Sydney.
Apple sold just more than 41 million iPhones in the June quarter, and forecasts a stronger-than-expected September quarter boosted by new iPhones that it will release later this year.
The Australian horticulture industry has set bold new export targets that would lift export earnings by at least hundreds of millions of dollars a year if they are reached.
Putting the mobile into business.
The pace of change is glacial.
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