Don't punish me for Turnbull: PM's plea
Scott Morrison has pleaded with Wentworth voters not to punish his government for dumping Malcolm Turnbull, by arguing he did not support the leadership spill.
Scott Morrison has pleaded with Wentworth voters not to punish his government for dumping Malcolm Turnbull, by arguing he did not support the leadership spill.
A chance discovery by the tax office began a 12-year legal battle that has ended in acrimony and estrangement for members of a wealthy Sydney family.
As Leigh Clifford nears the end of a near 50-year career in Australian business he is more than willing to have one final shot at the union movement.
Even the best-laid plans can be derailed by latent sibling rivalry, acrimony among in-laws and breakdowns in blended families.
The banks' CEOs had a dry run at next month's appearance in front of the banking royal commission when they fronted up at a parliamentary committee.
A glut of new housing, falling prices and slowing demand is causing a threefold increase in the number of off-the-plan Sydney apartment buyers settling for less than the purchase price.
Investors considering handing their money over to professional fund managers are usually told to look at the medium to long-term performance figures before making a move.
After 30 years, Primary Health Care is looking for a complete brand refresh, asking shareholders to vote on a new name.
Qantas Airways chairman Leigh Clifford has attacked the ACTU's industry-wide wage bargaining policy saying it will stifle investment and costs jobs.
Blackstone's tilt at the listed Investa Office Fund was undone when its target's largest investor sold to rival bidder Oxford.
NAB has slashed the number of home loan referrers from 8000 to 1000, and revealed 300 staff were sacked last year for breaching its code of conduct.
Management of Coronado Global Resources will spend the weekend considering whether to persist with an Australian listing.
US stocks edged lower as investors assessed the latest batch of corporate earnings and simmering geopolitical tensions ahead of the weekend.
The drums are beating for value investing after a long period in the wilderness at the expense of the growth phenomenon. This time, team value has the macro forces on side.
The pressure is on for Amazon, Alphabet and Microsoft as they prepare to report quarterly results.
Oil prices rose on Friday in New York on signs of surging demand in China, although prices were headed for a second weekly decline on swelling US inventories.
Bond market bull Robert Tipp says the sheer weight of global savings is poised to press US Treasury yields lower.
Listen to all the spin on Saturday night about the result of the Wentworth by-election, but it shouldn't blot out the host of important messages that have emerged already.
The banks' CEOs had a dry run at next month's appearance in front of the banking royal commission when they fronted up at a parliamentary committee.
Affluent Wentworth voters hoping to express discontent with the dissidents who removed their prime minister might inflict massive financial losses on themselves in one of Australia's most investment-orientated electorates.
Kerryn Phelps opposes Labor policies that would penalise the wealth creators and savers of Wentworth but her election would take Australia a further step toward an anti-enterprise Labor alternative.
Australia is in the best economic shape since the GFC but this week the government failed miserably to spread the good news. Can it turn a bad week around with Wentworth win?
The PM's apparent willingness to ditch elements of long-standing Australian policy such as Jerusalem and Iran invokes the Australian diplomat's worst nightmare: isolation.
Andrew Bragg, who withdrew from the preselection race for Wentworth, is involved in a three-way contest for the top two spots on the NSW Liberal Senate ticket.
Treasurer Josh Frydenberg is trying to broker a deal that would raise $6 million for the federal Coalition, giving it the firepower to take on the union-financed Labor Party.
Wentworth has been the focus of not just change and disruption but also alarming political scenarios for the Coalition.
Turkish prosecutors investigating the disappearance of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi questioned Turkish employees of the Saudi consulate in Istanbul.
A German-based investigative journalism website says it has fresh evidence about the scale of what it claims is a flourishing $89 billion Europe-wide tax fraud that has entangled Macquarie Bank.
China's economic growth cooled to its weakest pace since the GFC in the third quarter, with regulators pledging further support and the trade war with the US began to bite.
The US has a deep vested interest in religious and social reform in the troubled Saudi kingdom.
British companies are at a loss as to how to prepare for a no-deal Brexit after Theresa May's government and EU failed to come any closer to a compromise this week.
Investors with large amounts of property shares and real estate investments are being told to lower their exposure amid fears a sharp correction could wipe out their portfolios.
Australians are doing very nicely compared to their global peers, with superannuation balances and high property prices driving up individual wealth.
The Aussie sharemarket is the cheapest it's been since 2015 and the recent broad-based selling offers lessons and potentially opportunities.
Men worry needlessly that all women are going to falsely accuse them of harassment.
When two American sprinters defied ettiquette and raised their fists, they changed sport forever.
As he steps down from the chairman's role at Qantas, Leigh Clifford provided his views on a range of topics.
The billionaire's vast holdings – with real estate, art, sports teams and venture capital stakes – would take years to unravel, if that's even what he wanted.
The late Microsoft co-founder had a dream, to see his love of space and science fiction come to life in the Stratolaunch space plane.
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