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markets live down with mask 28th feb 2020 .

ASX to drop as renewed virus fears rock Wall St

The ASX is set to follow International markets lover as the economic cost and uncertainty of the virus outbreak grip investors once again.

Private equity firms have an important buffer in times of crisis.

Private equity's crucial virus buffer

While the business world scrambles to understand the ramifications of coronavirus, the private equity sector has an important advantage.

Xinja CEO Eric Wilson has put a positive spin on the shock deposit pause.

RBA cut forces Xinja to halt deposits

The start-up bank said it can't take any new deposits because it's hit regulatory ratios before it has started lending and is burning cash at $2 million a month.  

Top 10 tech stocks to own amid the coronavirus sell-off

Does the coronavirus massively disrupt/erase the long term transformational bullish tech trends? Wedbush asks: "The answer in our opinion is a resounding 'No'."

Office lockdowns, enforced home working take hold in London

Health officials in UK have warned there probably aren't enough resources to treat all cases at the potential height of the outbreak.

Elizabeth Warren ends presidential campaign

The senator from Massachusetts at times electrified Democrats, however that enthusiasm failed to translate into votes cast during the primaries to date.

'Misleading' PwC underpayments data questioned

PwC has been accused of sharing "misleading" and "inaccurate" data about the extent of the underpayment crisis facing corporate Australia by the Fair Work Ombudsman.

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Virus crisis

Epping Boys High School.

Sydney high school shut, NSW cases more than double

The number of NSW coronavirus cases has more than doubled in a week after a Sydney high school was shut down after a Year 11 student tested positive.

Wagas Australian co-owner Jackie Yun . . . ‘People see Wagas as a foreign brand but good value.’

Australian expats laud China's swift emergency virus relief

Australian entrepreneurs say while business has taken a blow from the coronavirus outbreak, the Chinese government knows how to handle a crisis.

"Countries have been planning for scenarios like this for decades. Now is the time to act on those plans."

WHO urges nations' to 'pull out all the stops'

"This is not a drill. This is not the time for giving up. This is not a time for excuses," WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said.

Government monitors drug supplies as disruption fears grow

The federal government is actively monitoring the security of Australia's medicine supply amid growing concerns over the coronavirus disruption.

Risk of first recession in 29 years rising

Leading economists fear that the fallout from the coronavirus and bushfires could snowball into Australia's first recession in 29 years.

Companies

Ian Martin, telco analyst at New Street Research, won praise from Justice John Middleton in his TPG judgement.

Lessons for ACCC in TPG debacle

The TPG-Vodafone court loss is the biggest blow to the credibility of the ACCC in years. Perhaps the federal government should examine whether we need a separate communications specialist regulator.

Crash landing ... coronavirus put paid to the already ailing Flybe.

UK airline collapse spurs Macquarie into action

The defunct regional airline Flybe accounted for 90pc of traffic at Macquarie's half-owned Southampton Airport.

The Noble Tom Prosser drilling rig is now working on the second of two wells at the West Barracouta project in the Bass Strait.

Exxon promises new gas for east coast by early 2021

The $600 million West Barracouta project is being developed as the energy giant looks for a buyer for the Bass Strait venture.

Coronavirus is impacting the global travel industry.

International airline bookings plummet amid virus fears

Arrivals from the nation's key tourism markets have dramatically fallen, bringing new pain for Australian businesses.

Rio Tinto boosts tax dispute war chest

The miner has set aside another big lump of cash in case it loses its transfer pricing battle with the Australian Taxation Office.

Inside Mike Baird's decision to quit NAB

He was once considered a shoo-in to be the CEO. All that changed when Andrew Thorburn became a high profile royal commission scalp. Now, Mike Baird is open to offers for executive - but definitely not political - roles.

What big fundies fear most as virus spreads

Signs of tightening credit conditions overseas and higher gearing in Australia have institutional investors fearing coronavirus capital raisings, says a Goldman-Sachs strategist.

Markets

What Rich Listers are doing amid market chaos

More than $5.3 billion has been wiped off the paper wealth of Financial Review Rich Listers since the market’s peak a fortnight ago.

US stocks tumbled anew.

Global equities sell-off amid renewed virus fears

Bearish sentiment knocked more than 1000 points from the Dow by late trade in New York amid ever heightening worries about the coronavirus.

AFR

Back to the 1990s for bond market as growth fears rise

Mounting recession fears are expected to breathe new life into the 40-year bond bull market, as they did in the 1990s recession.

OPEC backs biggest oil cut since 2008 crisis, awaits Russia

Russia and Kazakhstan have not yet agreed to a deeper cut, raising the risk of a collapse in cooperation that has propped up prices since 2016.

What big fundies are fearing most as coronavirus spreads

Signs of tightening credit conditions overseas and signs of higher gearing in Australia have institutional investors fearing coronavirus capital raisings.

Opinion

This virus is more than an economic threat

The dunny paper panic is dumb because toilet paper is still made here. The real concern is Australia's China-reliance in key sectors such as medicines.

Phillip Coorey

Political Editor

Phillip Coorey

Why bank stocks are being hammered

Investors worry that the big banks will see a spike in bad loans, as they're pressured to show leniency to borrowers affected by the the coronavirus outbreak.

Karen Maley

Columnist

Karen Maley

Don't bail out bloated unis

Universities that have gorged on private fees from Chinese students should not force taxpayers to socialise their losses as the travel bans hit enrolments.

John Roskam

Columnist

John Roskam

Class actions face political scrutiny

The Coalition government looks at the effect of class actions as Victoria's government hurries legislation to let lawyers charge US-style contingency fees.

Law firms must plan for profit hit from Fair Work ruling

The important lesson is to be prepared for different scenarios – and have contingency plans in place for some award mayhem.

Joel Barolsky

Contributor

Joel Barolsky

China's stumble spells the end of complacency

Australians have used the easy prosperity delivered by China for the last few decades to indulge in the economic equivalents of First World problems.

The AFR View

Editorial

The AFR View
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Politics

Treasury Secretary Dr Steven Kennedy said the virus impact will hit the June quarter too.

Jobs subsidy plan to bust recession fears

Wage subsidies to prevent small and medium businesses laying off workers are being actively considered as part of the government's stimulus package.

ASIC chairman James Shipton says AustralianSuper faces an ongoing probe about the accuracy of material disclosing a new levy.

ASIC probes AustralianSuper over fee disclosure

The corporate regulator is examining whether AustralianSuper is telling the truth when it blames government legislation for forcing it to introduce a new levy.

Federal Sex Discrimination Commissioner Kate Jenkins.

Call for end to 'confusing' sexual harassment regime

The world-first inquiry has recommended the sexual harassment equivalent of Fair Work's anti-bullying regime and wants greater powers to investigate workplaces.

PM to Coalition: net zero emissions is on the cards

Prime Minister Scott Morrison indicated that while the government may not formally adopt a net zero target, as Labor has done, it may just get there anyway.

Employer groups should police underpayments: unions

A union peak body is calling on the government to fund employer groups, as well as unions, to audit underpayments to crack down on a 'wage theft epidemic'.

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World

China's economy is in further trouble after the virus outbreak.

China's dangerous dance with the coronavirus devil

Pathogens do not respect borders. In a world moving ever closer to isolationism and returning to great power rivalry, it looks as if we’re going to have to learn that lesson again from scratch.

It doesn't help an association with white man’s burden  that one of the icons of climate change activism is Greta Thunberg, a Nordic, blonde Scandinavian teenager preaching panic.

Climate activism is the new 'white man's burden'

Rich nations wanting to deprive the poorest nation of the coal needed to alleviate poverty recalls the discredited logic of Empire.

The US's SEC wants companies to disclose how reverse factoring affects liquidity and cash flows.

Behind the SEC's war on freedom of speech

The SEC's move to regulate proxy advisory firms is a naked political gambit.

Indonesia ramps up COVID-19 testing as regional cases climb

It's now clear the virus has been in the country for weeks, even though Indonesians were told they were not at risk.

Russia-Turkey talks a last chance to avert Idlib calamity

A summit between the Turkish and Russian leaders may be the last chance to work out a deal that avoids further calamity in Syria's northwest.

Property

How the 365m-tall Green Spine tower will look.

Australia's tallest skyscraper gets council go-ahead

On a site now home to the BMW dealership, the taller of the project's two towers would rise through 102 storeys to 365.1 metres above the ground.

The Vibe Darling Harbour hotel opened late last year

Thai family strikes biggest hotel deal of the year

The new owners are food importers the Savetsomphob family who also own the Intercontinental Resort in Koh Samui, which they bought in 2018.

The rethink will add hotels, offices and homes to the retail concept.

Westfield owner dumps plans for big London mall

Facing a tough market, Unibail-Rodamco-Westfield is taking Croydon out of its development pipeline and going back to the drawing board.

ARA takes control at logistics investor LOGOS

Powerful Singaporean fund manager ARA Asset Management has taken a majority stake in LOGOS Group, a local industrial property investment platform.

JPMorgan to sell mall and office tower in Melbourne

The St Collins Lane mall and the Twenty8 Freshwater Place office tower will be put on the market.

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Wealth

The older generation is gifting money to adult children and want to protect that money from a relationship breakdown.

Why you can't have your cake and eat it

When it comes to property held in an SMSF, things can get tricky, writes John Wasiliev, who answers your questions on superannuation.

KPMG helps Defence talk to itself

The big four firm is also providing strategy and planning services to the Department of Defence.

When you should close your SMSF

The five 'trigger' situations include insufficient funds, declining mental or physical capacity, death, lack of time to oversee a fund and moving overseas.

Technology

TPG boss David Teoh managed to beat expectations in what is likely to be his last set of results as chief executive of the company he built from the ground up.

TPG lifts guidance as Vodafone merger beckons

The announcement came as the ACCC, which had opposed the $15 million merger, announced it would not appeal the Federal Court's decision to allow it.

ACCC boss Rod Sims said he remained disappointed with the Federal Court's ruling, but would not appeal.

ACCC will not appeal TPG-Vodafone ruling

The competition watchdog will not appeal the Federal Court's decision to allow the merger ofTPG Telecom and Vodafone Hutchison Australia to merge.

Huawei Australia chairman John Lord.

Huawei insists it hasn't given up on 5G

Besieged Chinese telecommunications giant Huawei will launch a last ditch charm offensive to persuade the federal government to let it build 5G networks in Australia.

Work & Careers

ASIO boss Mike Burgess.

What I learnt sharing a drink with ASIO

Australia's spooks could teach our business leaders a thing or two about addressing controversial topics.

The executives solving customer trust issues

AGL's chief customer officer Christine Corbett says using customer data is a balancing act between convenience and privacy as businesses work to rebuild trust.

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Life & Luxury

Healthy homemade trail mix.

How to stockpile healthy food for a 14-day quarantine

If you really feel the need to hoard food, don’t feel you have to fill your pantry with saltines and tomato soup.

A teaser image of the Apex AP-0, which is priced to compete with Tesla's Roadster.

The Aussie brothers taking on Tesla with $294,000 supercar

The car, codenamed AP-0, is the brainchild of Jason and Gary Leung, who founded Apex Motors. Its forerunner, the AP-1, feels fast. Really fast.

Nick Jackson is one of only 450 people in the world to earn the title Master of Wine.

How does it feel? The secret to wine tasting mastery

Turns out you can tell a lot about a wine from its structure on your tongue, reveals the author of an indispensable new blind-tasting guide.

Virus stops James Bond in his tracks

It's Daniel Craig's last outing as 007 and the Billie Eilish song is already out, but 'No Time To Die's release is pushed back seven months on virus fears.

Amazon Echo Show 8

Echo Show 8 review: Alexa, shut up already

If your main interest in a smart display is communicating with family and friends, Amazon's are a clear choice – irritations aside.

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