Qantas loses altitude on US tax comparison
It's not just President Donald Trump's cuts to the corporate tax rate that have Qantas chief executive Alan Joyce looking wistfully at his US competitors.
It's not just President Donald Trump's cuts to the corporate tax rate that have Qantas chief executive Alan Joyce looking wistfully at his US competitors.
Being held at gunpoint in Africa, regular 4am bedtimes and cold-calling prospects without a cent to your name are a few of the obstacles overcome by three Young Rich Listers.
Tolga Kumova has a simple rationale for some of his investments: check the news.
Alan Joyce will stick to his knitting running the airline when politicians figure out again how to knit.
Are we nearing one of those critical inflexion points for financial markets, where investors are forced to re-examine – and abandon – their most cherished beliefs?
Cheaper, faster, global. It's the sort of innovation ecosystem where China now excels, according to McKinsey Global Institute director Jonathan Woetzel.
Entrepreneur Mike Cannon-Brookes has backed Hamish Douglass' radical proposal to make a 50pc income tax cut available to any company that wants it.
The way that general insurers investigate insurance fraud is being looked at by ASIC.
A landmark treaty between Australia and Timor-Leste is set to breathe fresh life into stalled discussions within the Woodside Petroleum-led Sunrise gas joint venture.
BHP's head of petroleum Steve Pastor has pointed to a "wealth of opportunity" for the mining major in Mexico's emerging oil sector.
BlueScope boss warns US steel tariffs would actually hurt the broader American economy.
Industry players are worried about ad-hoc plans for minimum floor pricing for alcohol which would make even the cheapest bottle of wine $10 in the NT.
Australian shares dropped for the fifth time in six sessions as simmering trade war worries resurfaced with the surprise resignation of White House economic adviser Gary Cohn.
The resignation of Donald Trump's top economic adviser Gary Cohn in protest at the President's trade tariffs is a devastating blow to the White House's economic credibility, writes John Kehoe.
Australian shares dropped for the fifth time in six sessions as simmering trade war worries resurfaced with the surprise resignation of White House economic adviser Gary Cohn.
Reserve Bank of Australia boss Philip Lowe says Australians should feel confident inflation will accelerate, but again warned a return to higher official interest rates would be "gradual".
Are we nearing one of those critical inflexion points for financial markets, where investors are forced to re-examine – and abandon – their most cherished beliefs?
Phil Lowe says we should 'sit and do nothing' against Trump's steel tariffs but sometimes it works to play rough in trade wars.
The resignation of Donald Trump's top economic adviser Gary Cohn in protest at the President's trade tariffs is a devastating blow to the White House's economic credibility and should rattle investors around the world.
As the RBA equals its all-time record for monetary policy inaction, economists are getting restless. Here's a road map for rate hikes.
The Labor government of Daniel Andrews said it would reissue the planning approval by Thursday but in the meantime major constructions works have been suspended
Phil Lowe says we should 'sit and do nothing' against Trump's steel tariffs but sometimes it works to play rough in trade wars.
Bill Shorten's plans to regulate a higher minimum wage, block company tax cuts and oppose Adani all threaten job growth, Malcolm Turnbull says.
The SA Liberals will delay the next state budget if the party wins government on March 17.
Malcolm Turnbull is cautiously optimistic Kim Jong Un may enter peace talks but warns the world has been disappointed before.
According to one source with knowledge of the exchange, Trump specifically asked Cohn: 'We're all on the same team, right?' Cohn didn't answer.
China has signalled a more aggressive crackdown on local government debt, a key area of concern for economists.
Overheated comparisons with the 1930s are obscuring the host of smaller ills that Western democracy is succumbing to.
Cohn could have been the reincarnation of Milton Friedman crossed with Machiavelli and he probably still couldn't have made much more impact than he did
North Korea's offer to put its nuclear weapons on the bargaining table opens the door to negotiations of unpredictable length and inevitable complexity.
In a sign that union-backed super funds are growing increasingly dominant players in Australia's $2.5 trillion retirement savings market, by next year industry funds are expected to be managing more assets than their retail fund rivals.
CBA's treasurer says criticism that hybrid securities are complex products sold to misinformed investors is "misplaced".
Rising property values and being an attractive place to live will boost Australia's number of ultra-wealthy over the next five years.
Freelancer's chief executive Matt Barrie wrongfully sacked the company's operations and HR executive because Mr Barrie got "vindictive", a court has heard.
IWG says it leads the "Workspace-as-a-Service (WaaS) sector". That clunky acronym is the antithesis of aspiration. A slightly higher dividend will not help the company capture the zeitgeist.
Customers and employees want socially responsible activity integrated into the business.
The bar is being raised in the engineering profession as the Victorian government introduces a bill requiring mandatory registration.
In a square in central Barcelona, families with young children perch at picnic tables as traffic thunders past and high-rise blocks loom above them.
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