What the 2018 federal budget means for you
From a savings perspective, the 2018 federal budget can perhaps best be described as one for young and old.
From a savings perspective, the 2018 federal budget can perhaps best be described as one for young and old.
After another extraordinary week for AMP, the company's shares are the cheapest they have been since it shed its mutual ownership structure and listed on the ASX.
The budget and Labor's response has cast the battlelines for the long election campaign that has now started in everything but name.
The Liberal Party will not contest two upcoming byelections in WA and will cut loose sitting minister Jane Prentice at the next federal election.
Retirees are being urged to tap into the equity in their homes to bolster their incomes, but many would prefer to leave it to their kids.
More than $663 million was wiped off the value of AMP over fears of a potential overhaul of financial planning laws.
The number of high-income people slated to carry a growing load of the nation's tax burden is set to double.
Canadian dairy giant Saputo won the keys to Murray Goulburn but it had to offer more than just the highest price.
Australia is more used to mining magnates but the Wilson and Munz Rich List families have built vast wealth through plumbing.
Bank of America Merrill Lynch has poached a Credit Suisse managing director to head up client coverage in its investment banking team.
BHP chief Andrew Mackenzie believes the Turnbull government should save its money for health and education rather than infrastructure.
Telstra and Optus are taking each other to court in two separate cases where each is alleging the other is engaging in misleading and deceptive advertising.
Oil slipped, narrowing a second weekly gain, as traders consider the potential supply impact of renewed US sanctions on Iran.
The S&P; 500 advanced 2.4 per cent as the gauge jumped above the 50-day moving average on Wednesday and then rose past the 100-day support line on Thursday.
An Argentinian entrepreneur has persuaded his A-list clients to not only buy up big in Bitcoin but to pay him to protect their investment.
A shift to tighter credit conditions will translate to real earnings pressure for bank stocks, meaning the big four are at risk of further price pain.
Beyond the political bluster, five byelections and the next federal election will be fought out against a much more benign economic backdrop than we have seen for some years. And that changes the politics.
There's an old political adage - usually, although perhaps erroneously, attributed to Winston Churchill - that one should never let a major crisis go to waste.
The perceived turn-around in political fortunes has been truly extraordinary.
The appointment of Rob Adams as chief executive of Perpetual sends a strong signal to the market that the board, led by former ASIC chairman Tony D'Aloisio, sees the company's future in the manufacture and distribution of funds management products.
Labor is leaning towards reversing tax cuts for about 20,000 small and medium-sized businesses as the tax wars heat up ahead.
The government's hopes of bucking history and winning a seat off Labor has received a boost, although company, income tax cuts remain unpopular.
Labor says if each major sector of the economy needed to reduce its greenhouse emissions, a way would need to be found to determine what that the targets should be.
A potential key to the Coalition winning the next election is the ability to serve up a shock budget surplus on a rolling 12-month basis, which is within reach.
A key claim from Bill Shorten's budget reply speech about a doctor earning $200,000 paying the same amount of tax as a nurse on $40,000 is misleading.
It's the hottest property market in the world right now. And the views into North Korea are unbeatable.
Malaysia's shock election result has left analysts and foreign governments scrambling to recalibrate how they view the region.
Donald Trump will try to sweet-talk the North Korean leader out of his nuclear weapon drive when the two meet in Singapore.
Mahathir Mohamad says Malaysia's king will pardon coalition partner who helped him to victory.
Iran, North Korea, China: The President has set the stage for a big few weeks for himself and the world.
There was relief all round that there were no big changes to superannuation in the federal budget. But this doesn't mean you don't need to take a close look at all the "mini measures" and how they would affect you.
Like most things in the overly complex world of super, exit fees are just one cost of changing funds and they are not the largest.
Don't be lulled into a super snooze - make sure you're up to speed with the changes that started last year, some still in the pipeline.
The Planet Labs co-founder has earned his stripes as an entrepreneur in the hugely competitive US tech scene but has a dim view of those who don't follow their own rules.
The ATO is targeting tax agents and considering sophisticated new surveillance tactics in its bid to crackdown on black economy cash transactions, according to tax specialists.
The new kids on the block are racially diverse, sexually diverse, ultra-socially conscious and hyper-sensitive.
The woman from Brisbane moved company headquarters and her family to Malaysia to ensure the rare earths miner's turnaround.
Dealing with his father's estate has brought back memories for Evan Hughes. He shares some here.
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