Corporate Travel's short-seller war

Corporate Travel's Jamie Pherous and his deal-machine has been on the radar of short-sellers since early 2016. He's managed to hold them back until now.

Mystery woman could delay Rush trial

The judge hearing the Geoffrey Rush v The Daily Telegraph defamation trial says the case could be delayed six months because of a late attempt by the paper to introduce a mystery witness.

Incoming Macquarie Bank CEO Shemara Wikramanayake.

Confident Macquarie looks to profit record

Macquarie's incoming boss is unmoved by the impact rising interest rates will have on one of the trophy asset classes the investment bank has been historically linked to.

Macquarie unlikely to look at AMP

Highly respected CLSA banking analyst Brian Johnson has scotched suggestions that Macquarie Group could buy beleaguered wealth manager AMP.

Best ASX bets in the war on waste

Cleanaway is emerging as a safer bet in the war on waste, but the economics of recycling and rubbish collection are complex for ASX investors.

The S&P 500 pared about half of Friday's loss that reached as much as 1.5 per cent after President Donald Trump said he ...

Stocks decline amid trade tensions

Stocks fell as investors assessed whether the US and China will be able to ease trade tensions. Apple dropped, hitting tech-heavy indexes.

What torpedoed stocks in 'Red October'

If February's sell-off was about adjusting expectations around inflation in the US and the path of Fed monetary policy, the second major correction for the year has been all about earnings.

Opinion

John Kehoe

Saving Brand Australia

Strong and independent public institutions can only shelter us for so long from a widespread complacency that risks Australia's global reputation.

Falling house prices and rising petrol petrol prices are eating into household budgets.

Soft spending a red flag for economy

Falling house prices and rising petrol petrol prices are eating into household budgets, threatening to further weigh on consumer spending and eventually drag down economic growth.

Once we friends....Malcolm Turnbull felt the need to correct the record after Scott Morrison's interview on Alan Jones' show.

Why Turnbull won't go quietly

Any politician knows that when you are "interviewed" by Alan Jones you have two choices – agree with him or be berated.

The good and bad of weak inflation

The Reserve Bank of Australia wants subdued inflation to pick up, but the government is actively trying to push down cost-of-living pressures.

The unemployment rate was steady at a 49-year low of 3.7 per cent as 711,000 people entered the labour force.

US job growth soars; wages surge

US job growth rebounded sharply in October and wages recorded their largest annual gain in 9-1/2 years, bolstering the case for higher interest rates.

Trump's racist closing argument

Donald Trump and his fellow Republicans are closing the election with the most naked appeal to racial prejudice since the dark days of Jim Crow.

Goldman drawn into massive fraud case

Goldman Sachs is facing one of the most significant scandals in its history, a multibillion-dollar international fraud that investigators say was carried out with help from its bankers.

China's debt is now around 300 per cent of GDP by some estimates.

US trade hostilities overshadow Xi's Shanghai party

China's President Xi Jinping will be schmoozing the rest of the world in Shanghai this week with his signature trade fair. But behind the pomp and ceremony, China's economy is showing early signs of buckling under US trade pressure.

Personal Finance

The key fashion and leather goods division is the largest contributor for LVMH.

LVMH 'unexpectedly defensive' play

Strong results from the world's largest luxury goods maker would seem to have put paid to the theory that consumers globally are starting to feel the pinch.