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Victoria police set up high visibility booze buses to enforce new restrictions across 36 Melbourne suburbs.

Victoria's outbreak jumps state borders

Victoria's second surge has caused infection breakouts in Sydney and Darwin as authorities lock down 36 suburbs, amid warnings the global pandemic is only a quarter done.

Mincor shares went into a trading halt on Wednesday ahead of the raising.

ASX jumps as Afterpay soars 9.5pc to lead tech sector gains

Australian shares shot higher on Thursday, with Afterpay surging to a new high and other tech stocks climbing as the sector took its lead from the US.

Police at a road block enforce lockdowns in one of 10 Melbourne postcodes after a spike in coronavirus cases.

Quarantine system 'incredibly effective' despite Melbourne outbreak

Deputy Chief Medical Officer Michael Kidd has backed the hotel quarantine system despite revelations breaches by guards contributed to the infection surge in Melbourne. Australia passed the milestone of 8000 cases. Follow our live coronavirus blog here.

Home listings climb as vendors slash prices

A large amount of fresh housing stock has hit the market as vendors cut their asking prices.

UBS snares two $100m-plus blocks in Reliance Worldwide, Aristocrat

Hot on the heels of its CSL block on Wednesday, UBS was back among the chunky institutional trades on Thursday afternoon. 

Trad cleared in corruption probe

Former Queensland deputy premier Jackie Trad, who resigned from cabinet in May, has been cleared by the Crime and Corruption Commission.

Watchdog finds builders' elections improper

The watchdog for unions and employer groups has found Victoria's peak construction body had been improperly electing some of its top officials for years.

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Companies

A jetty at Crib Point, where the floating gas import terminal would be placed.

Hunt backs NSW rival as AGL seeks LNG import tick

Flinders MP Greg Hunt's renewed opposition to AGL's Crib Point project in Victoria comes as the federal government backs a gas-led recovery in manufacturing.

Tim Archer, News Corp Australia's head of M&A execution.

News Corp M&A exec joins old AAP board

Press release business Medianet, analytics division Mediaverse, and sub-editing business Pagemasters are among the remaining assets which will be assessed.

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Credit cards not dead yet, says Citi consumer boss

Alan Machet, CEO of Citi's consumer bank, says there are structural pressures on credit cards but many buy now, pay later users will end up applying for one.

Myer hasn't issued a sales update since March, leaving investors and analysts in the dark.

Myer's silence leaves investors in the dark

The department store chain is under growing pressure to issue a trading update amid increasing uncertainty over sales and earnings during the coronavirus crisis.

Cashed-up Webjet can survive 'Dr Doomsday' scenario

As the travel outfit taps another $160 million just after raising $346m in April, the CEO bristles at a shareholder question about value dilution.

Digital health companies face funding shortfall

Despite funding headwinds following the COVID-19 pandemic, the majority of digital health startups plan to raise capital in the year ahead, according to a new report.

Dicker Data soars past $1b in first-half revenue

David Dicker's IT distribution business has weathered more than one economic downturn, having been founded in 1978.

Markets

Australian shares.

ASX soars above 6000; Afterpay surges 9pc

The Australian sharemarket closed above 6000 points for the first time since June 10. The S&P/ASX200 Index rallied 1.6 per cent. Afterpay soared 9.5 per cent to a record high as Citi more than doubles price target.

Commodity prices are in for a strong year as the global economy recovers.

Iron ore price set to slide but budget boost intact

The price of iron ore, Australia's largest export, will slide below $US100 a tonne in the new financial year, a sharp contrast to forecast gains for oil.

Paul Winter and Pieter Stoltz from UBS. Winter lead authored a paper on active management.

Are hedge funds the true smart money?

There is evidence of intelligent life in the hedge fund universe. But it remains difficult to access.

Bond buyers look beyond three-year yield in world of curve control

Several central banks have been eyeing the RBA's success in keeping the three-year yield pinned to 0.25 per cent but the Fed does not appear too impressed.

Sunny third-quarter economic outlook turns cloudier

With health concerns forcing a growing number of US states to backtrack on reopening, the depth and breadth of the economic recovery is at risk.

Opinion

Why Morrison will let this 'crisis go to waste'

Scott Morrison will inevitably be criticised, including internally for letting "a crisis go to waste" in terms of an overdue tax reform agenda. He will prefer not to waste his strong chance of re-election.

ABC adept at playing cuts victim

The national broadcaster's revenue has been barely touched by the pandemic – and it's out of touch on most other things too.

John Roskam

Columnist

John Roskam

No end to pandemic pain for landlords

In the face of the pandemic, landlords have been called on to support their tenants. Many have been happy to help. But they are not happy to see their rights eroded in quite unprecedented ways.

Robert Harley

Contributor

Robert Harley

Why the economic recovery will be a long, slow slog

CBA chief economist Stephen Halmarick warns that even though total spending on CBA credit and debit cards is 4 per cent higher than this time last year, "the momentum of the improvement has slowed".

Karen Maley

Columnist

Karen Maley

Defence build-up underscores the security alarm

That there will be no let-up in Australia’s defence build-up in the post-COVID-19 recession-hit world highlights the alarm in Canberra about the regional security picture.

The AFR View

Editorial

The AFR View

Victoria's resistance doesn't bear comparison

The Andrews government admits the massive problems created by the failures in Victoria's quarantine hotels, but rules out using the ADF. Why?

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Politics

Prime Minister Scott Morrison is considering offering safe haven to Hong Kongers.

PM mulls safe haven for Hong Kongers

Scott Morrison says Australia is concerned over China's national security crackdown in Hong Kong, where the imposition of new laws has undermined the island's autonomy.

Blair Comley, director at EY Port Jackson Partners, says governments will need to raise more revenue from the GST.

Costs rising on tax reform failures

The costs of failing to reform the tax system, including the 10 per cent GST, will get worse unless political leaders tax consumption and land more, former top government tax officials and business says.

Bars have been identified as a cause of superspreading according to Japanese research

Millennial super-spreaders causing most infections

International studies have found younger super-spreaders infecting others in care facilities, bars and restaurants are the primary cause of community transmission.

Daily Telegraph loses $2.9m Rush appeal

The newspaper has lost its appeal over a court ruling that it defamed Hollywood actor Geoffrey Rush.

NSW blows whistle on tax failings

The low GST is forcing up "damaging" income taxes, warns a new report commissioned by NSW Treasurer Dominic Perrottet.

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World

Scenes from Wednesday night were reminiscent of last year's clashes between police and protesters.

Hong Kong marks new laws with 370 arrests

Police have arrested 370 protesters in the first wave of demonstrations over new national security laws that carry maximum penalties of life in prison.

Vladimir Putin shows his passport to an election commission official before voting on Wednesday.

Russians grant Putin right to extend his rule until 2036

The Central Election Commission said 77.9 per cent of votes counted across the world's largest country had supported changing the constitution.

Riot police in action during a July 1 rally in HK against the new security law.

Britain throws open doors to 3 million Hong Kongers

Boris Johnson makes good on a promise to allow eligible Hong Kong residents to resettle in Britain as Beijing's security law comes into force.

Taiwan sees a threat in Beijing's new security law for Hong Kong

China's move to strengthen its grip on Hong Kong has further eroded what little support there was in Taiwan for unifying with the mainland.

'Worth risking': Can Europe save its summer?

As much as 10 per cent of European economic activity depends on tourism so the complete loss of this year’s season is a price no government can easily pay.

Property

Tamawood chairman Robert Lynch is calling on the governments to fast-track the HomeBuilder scheme.

Fast-track HomeBuilder scheme, builder says

Construction job losses are set to rise further due to the delay in deploying the HomeBuilder scheme, a builder says.

One in 10 off-the-plan apartment sales collapse

A large number of off-the-plan buyers are walking out of their apartment purchases despite risking losing tens of thousands in deposit.

The Bruce Stafford-designed residence is set on almost 1500 square metres.

Media scion has second go at selling house for $30m

Alexander Ma, the son and heir apparent of Hong Kong press baron CK Ma, was just 28 when he paid $26.5 million for the Bruce Stafford-designed home in 2017.

Charter Hall closes in on Qube's Minto site

Logistics group Qube looks set to accelerate the sale of a 30 hectare industrial site at Minto, in Sydney's south-west, for about $220 million.

Pandemic pushes Lendlease into the red

Urban developments, construction and apartment settlements have all been hit through the pandemic-induced slowdown.

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Wealth

One of the worst outcomes would be for a facility to close suddenly and for residents to be unclear about their future home.

Aged care pressures are mounting

A dark cloud has been hovering over aged care for a while, but a confluence of risk factors means it's getting darker.

Be wary of hasty SMSF decisions in volatile markets

Don't use these unusual investing times as a basis to start your own self-managed superannuation fund, writes John Wasiliev, who answers your queries on super.

How a year of drama can help investors

Top fundies say the dislocation caused by COVID-19 can create opportunities in the search for quality companies in the new financial year.

Technology

The app has been rated top of its class for privacy and security

COVIDSafe app best of class for privacy, says study

The COVIDSafe app has been rated highly for its security against its global peers, according to a study by the University of Adelaide computer science school.

TikTok has built a huge audience in India, where it has been downloaded more than 610 million times.

With India’s TikTok ban, the world’s digital walls grow higher

Censorship and politics are fracturing the global internet, isolating users and industries accustomed to ignoring national borders.

US civil rights groups have enlisted the multinationals to help pressure the social media giant into taking concrete steps to block hate speech in the wake of the death of George Floyd and amid a national reckoning over racism.

Facebook frustrates advertisers as boycott over hate speech kicks off

Advertisements for more than 400 brands including Coca-Cola and Starbucks were due to vanish from Facebook on Wednesday, after the failure of last-ditch talks to stop a boycott over hate speech on the site.

Work & Careers

Katherine McConnell, CEO of Brighte, says its hard to innovate via Zoom.

Why these CEOs are itching to get back to the office

For these three CEOs, the remote working experiment has highlighted just how indispensable the office really is.

Why this CEO loves being interrupted

Optus chief Kelly Bayer Rosmarin loves having an open desk and will often pop into meetings or lunch gatherings to keep her finger on the company's pulse.

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Life & Luxury

Winemakers with a thirst for activism

The drinks industry is using its reach and clout to speak out about political issues, which sometimes leaves a sour taste and divides drinkers along the way.

The F8 Spider looks fast standing still.

The Ferrari F8 Spider roars, glides and bites

The brakes bite as suddenly as an asp and sink in as smoothly as fangs. You’ll love every minute of driving this disarming supercar — if you can afford it.

The Lamborghini 63 luxury speedboat was developed by Italian Sea Group, with design consultation from Lamborghini’s Centro Stile team.

Lamborghini’s new $4.9m yacht has supercar DNA

Can’t get your hands on the Sián hybrid supercar? Get the boat instead, because the marque has a similar luxury vessel called the 'Tecnomar for Lamborghini 63'.

Daniel Ricciardo was set to race for Renault in Melbourne when the race was cancelled due to COVID-19.

Restart your engines! F1 gets the green light

After a false start in Melbourne, we should be racing again this weekend – but Australian fans will need to watch it from their screens.

Photograph of Long Jack Phillipus Tjakamarra, at Papunya, with his painting Untitled (Kalipinya), photograph taken by either Spanish surrealist sculptor Eudald Serra or his travelling companion, chemist Alberto Folch, who travelled to Australia in the 1960s and 1970s collecting Aboriginal art. Saleroom 02/07/2020 - Menzies

Rare 1972 Western Desert artwork leaves curator 'gobsmacked'

For the first time since its creation, an Aboriginal board painting from the Pupunya group is being auctioned on the secondary market.

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