ASX winners and losers - a snapshot
The stand out listings traded on the ASX captured at key moments through the day, as indicated by the time stamp in the video.
The stand out listings traded on the ASX captured at key moments through the day, as indicated by the time stamp in the video.
Wages and salaries rose 1.2 per cent, or $1.6 billion, in the three months to June in a sign that businesses are finally willing to share their fortunes with workers.
Commonwealth Bank has underlined the painstaking legal process that awaits it, when claims that it repeatedly breached anti-money laundering and counter terrorism financing laws are tested in court.
Job advertisements rose for a sixth straight month in August, suggesting the strong pick-up in employment seen so far this year could run for a while yet.
North Korea's latest provocation has sends shivers through markets, with the ASX lower and safe-haven assets back in demand, while CBA is again the focus of selling in the big banks.
CBS repaid $142.7 million of Ten's debts on Friday, including bank loans and fees owed to shareholder guarantors Lachlan Murdoch, Bruce Gordon and James Packer.
Commonwealth Bank of Australia has announced a shake-up of its board, with three directors set to leave and experienced banker Rob Whitfield to take up a board seat.
Australia is stuck in an economic disconnect, and it's leaving the RBA with little choice but to leave rates on hold.
Global scarcity of the greenback looms as the US prepares to turn off the liquidity tap.
Uncertain start to the week in store for the ASX on the back of the weekend geopolitical developments
US lawyers have told Reuters that CBA was already responding to information requests from a number of US agencies.
With critical regulations over room sharing in Australia's two biggest states hanging in the balance, resistance to the popular service is building momentum.
Boosting multilateral trade systems is set to be the focus for BRICS meeting.
Housing affordability in Sydney has slumped to an all-time low.
Solving the problem of finding the right person at big conference.
In an eleventh-hour truce, Ardent Leisure have resolved their issues to elect two Ariadne directors to the board and in doing so have cancelled the meeting slated for Monday, September 4.
Forget nail salons and burger joints: Old shops are in vogue for a new website.
North Korea's test on Sunday could sap appetite for risk assets in a week where the RBA is expected to keep rates on hold again.
Over the past six years Kylie Grey's salary has increased by just $4 an hour.
Econocrats' job is to minimise the damage from lurch to populism.
Unions are preparing to fight the NSW government over plans to encourage overseas businesses to set up shop around Badgerys Creek airport.
Women's fashion never looked so good for former Babcock & Brown duo Trevor Loewensohn and Phil Green.
Santos's plan to develop coal seam gas in northern NSW has been found by an independent expert panel to lack key data that potentially underestimates impacts on threatened ecosystems and ground and surface water.
The issue is so frustrating, one engineer said she would not recommend the industry to young female students.
As long as well-meaning people from prosperous places like Australia continue to finance the orphanages, children will be enslaved in them as bait for all those hugs and selfies.
People, like markets, despise uncertainty. We'd rather go along with the fiction that someone is in control. The problem, of course, is that once they know that, governments and managers act accordingly.
Unlike Apple at the time of that 2011 handover, Uber is a wildly unprofitable, undermanaged mess of demotivated workers and squabbling directors.
Citi Australia plans to spend an extra $1.5 million on its Pathway to Progress program.
A Melbourne labour-hire operator who allegedly paid an apprentice mechanic nothing for almost three months' work instead used the man's wages for a deposit on a Peugeot.
Childcare centres go high tech with automatic smartphone sign ins and booking systems to snap up vacancies.
Australians are not entrepreneurial or enterprising and fail to demonstrate initiative, according to demographer Bernard Salt.
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