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Victoria reports 17 deaths, 394 cases

Victoria has reported its deadliest day in the virus crisis so far after 17 people died overnight including two men in their 50s. But the 394 new cases today was the lowest number in 11 days. Follow updates here.

The business cycle is exactly what it says it is. A cycle. Things turn. Every other recession has been followed eventually by an upturn.

Why the bulls are back in charge

The historical record shows that of the 13 post-war recessions, equities have risen during nine of them. Markets are just doing what they always do.

Protesters light fires inside the Lebanese Banks Association.

Beirut erupts in violence as blast anger boils over

Anti-government protests over the port blast that killed more than 150 people, including a two-year-old Australian boy, erupted into violence in the Lebanese capital.

Trump signs relief orders as US passes 5m cases

The executive orders come after negotiations broke down between the White Hosue and Democrats in Congress and would provide $US400 a week in unemployment payments to millions of Americans.

What 30 years in global markets teaches us about COVID-19 fears

Analysis of global bond and equity markets since 1990 reveals some of the secrets to successful investing during good times and bad.

Victoria's shutdown threatens critical deliveries

Critical deliveries of food, medicines and school supplies are at risk as a midnight lockdown of distribution centres, required by Victoria's virus shutdown, threatens to disrupt supply lines and parcel deliveries.

Victoria's epic battle to keep supply chains open

Victorian businesses expected the COVID-19 crisis to escalate this week but did not foresee how tough the new rules would be and how they would chop and change as the week went by.

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CORONAVIRUS PANDEMIC

The Premier, Daniel Andrews, providing a coronavirus update.

How Saturday unfolded. CMO says the spread is slowing

The case numbers in Victoria are 'stabilising' and the rate of mystery cases has reduced, the state's top doctor said. Victoria reported 466 cases and 12 deaths including a man in his 30s.

The normally busy promenade at Southbank on the banks of the Yarra River is deserted in the Melbourne lockdown.

Lack of lockdown consultation raises business hackles

The CEO of pharmaceutical group Sigma says lack of consultation brought extra panic, while Gerry Harvey says getting 'adjustments' right in Victoria is crucial.

Wearing masks will help drive Victoria's numbers to manageable levels within six weeks.

Victoria could have virus under control within weeks, experts say

The state is on track to get daily case numbers down to around 200, allowing the health department to get on top of contact tracing and cut down community transmission.

Quarantine audit needed to prevent repeat of Vic disaster

Restrictions on Australians returning from abroad will stay in place for "some months", and the states have been advised to audit their quarantine procedures.

Deja vu for tourism operators as Qld shuts its borders again

Orpheus Island owner Chris Morris said he expected there to be some kind of border restrictions on Australia's east coast until Christmas.

Companies

The first week of profit season gave us a glimpse of how COVID-19 is reverberating through the economy.

What we learnt: Welcome to profit season's brave new world

A retailer which raised its dividend despite getting $4 million in taxpayer funds is a neat window into the topsy-turvy world of a COVID-19 profit season.

Akoya oyster and mussel team leader Willie De Klerk at work on Andrew Forrest's rapidly expanding Albany farms.

Andrew Forrest is now a big fish in ocean farming

The mining billionaire is casting his net wide, with aquaculture ambitions in oysters, shellfish and yellowtail kingfish in the waters off Western Australia.

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AustralianSuper wants 'true accountability' at Rio for gorge blast

Rio boss Jean-Sebastien Jacques says two of his highest-ranking executives did not convey the cultural significance of Juukan Gorge until after it was blasted.

Billionaire Rich Lister Tony Perich.

Perich family pays high price for Freedom

The billionaire Perich family installed one of their own this week as chief executive of Freedom Foods in a bid to get to the bottom of a $60 million inventory bungle.

Ardent Leisure: How private funders lose to government

Distressed debt funds circling Ardent Leisure have been left disappointed by the Queensland government decision to offer support.

REA warns of Melbourne lockdown hit

The company behind realestate.com.au has reported an earnings dip of 5 per cent in its final results as its total national property listings dropped 12 per cent from the previous financial year.

Virgin administrators rebuff new bondholder bid

The last ditch bid by two Asian hedge funds would offer creditors a better return but Deloitte has dismissed it.

Markets

US stocks closed mixed on the day, though they were higher on the week.

Nasdaq snaps seven-session streak of gains

A sharp slowdown in jobs growth and as yet no deal on more stimulus put investors on the defensive ahead of the weekend.

Gold prices continue to hit new heights.

Gold's record-breaking run a boon for ETFs

Gold's allure as a hedge against global economic disaster is attracting retail investors in their droves.

The S&P/ASX 200 Index posted a weekly gain of 77 points, or 1.3 per cent.

ASX ends week higher on surging commodity prices

The Australian sharemarket pushed higher over the week as commodity price strength supported the earnings outlook for resources companies.

What we learnt: Welcome to profit season's brave new world

A retailer which raised its dividend despite getting $4 million in taxpayer funds is a neat window into the topsy-turvy world of a COVID-19 profit season.

More pay cut pain ahead, warns RBA

More than one in three businesses will implement a wage freeze over the next 12 months and household incomes will shrink a record 6 per cent by the middle of next year, according to the Reserve Bank of Australia.

Opinion

Virus leaves no room for politics or ideology

The reality of a long and deep economic depression – and one in which no one can confidently predict the end – has been sinking in, writes Laura Tingle.

Laura Tingle

Columnist

Laura Tingle

Growing cause to question the Andrews strategy

We may still all be Melburnians, but the huge national cost of Victoria's lockdown demands more answers than the country is getting.

The AFR View

Editorial

The AFR View

Victoria used to run the country. Not any more

COVID-19 means change and this is happening to Victoria, the state that largely made the running in Australian political and corporate developments over the first 66 years of Federation, but is now in crisis.

Andrew Clark

Senior writer

Andrew Clark

Trouble in the Murdoch trust fund

Rupert's succession saga is over but brace for a trust fund melodrama as the money stream dries up.

Neil Chenoweth

Senior writer

Neil Chenoweth

When will Victoria’s COVID-19 crisis peak?

The lesson for investors is the importance of accounting for the possibility of irrational decisions from policymakers.

Australia's big soft power test

Australia cannot recover well if our neighbouring region is destabilised and deteriorating. This is a major diplomatic challenge.

Gordon Cairns

Contributor

Gordon Cairns
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Politics

Australian War Memorial director Brendan Nelson.

'Motivated by resentment': verbal grenades in War Memorial heritage battle

Former defence minister Brendan Nelson has hit back at critics of a $500 million redevelopment of the Australian War Memorial.

Scott Morrison

PM open to virtual participation in federal Parliament

Scott Morrison says MPs voting on legislation must be in Canberra, but options for video conferencing could be considered.

The prime minister’s exhortation for us to be kind to another sometimes sounds as hollow as Ellen DeGeneres appears to be.

Quarantine audit needed to prevent repeat of Vic disaster

Restrictions on Australians returning from abroad will stay in place for "some months", and the states have been advised to audit their quarantine procedures.

Forecasting has never been more fraught

The Reserve Bank's assistant governor Luci Ellis mentioned the word uncertainty no less than a dozen times in a speech on Friday.

Porter seeks to support High Court 'double dipping' challenge

The government is seeking to intervene in a High Court challenge over the landmark casual 'double dipping' ruling which exposed employers to billions in backpay.

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World

Biden v Trump.

Russia interfering in US election to hammer Biden, help Trump

At the same time, China is assessing whether to take more aggressive action to bolster its preference that Donald Trump be defeated.

President Trump said he was using a national security provision to slap tariffs of 10 per cent on some Canadian aluminum products and accused Canada of "taking advantage of us, as usual".

Canada calls Trump administration 'most protectionist' in US history

"We will impose dollar-for-dollar countermeasures in a balanced and perfectly reciprocal retaliation. We will not escalate and we will not back down."

Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam.

US sanctions Hong Kong's Carrie Lam, other officials

President Donald Trump’s offensive against China comes as he assigns full blame to Beijing for the coronavirus outbreak in the US.

US economy added 1.8 million jobs in July

The gains were modest in comparison with June and there's worry that a resurgence in the pandemic will hit the data for August hard.

Beirut death toll tops 150; Hezbollah denounces critics

Hezbollah - now part of Lebanon's government - is widely believed to use the port facility for its own smuggling operations, including weapons from Iran.

Property

Inside Mirvac's first build-to-rent Sydney apartments

Mirvac's first build to rent upmarket apartments are renting at above market rates, and getting mixed responses from tenants.

Auction clearance rates in Sydney have remained relatively stable in the recent period, at a bit above 60 per cent.

Sydney property bounces back

The Reserve Bank had some good news for the Sydney market on Friday, declaring a "strong bounce-back" in auction rates and listings returning to normal levels.

Avi Anger, fund manager for Charter Hall Long WALE REIT.

The property fund spared by COVID-19

Charter Hall's Long WALE REIT has so far navigated the pandemic well, with the value of its properties ticking higher by $96 million.

The 25-year-old YouTuber who just bought a $9m home in Sydney

The Tamarama house redesigned by architect Peter Stronach sold to former Gilbert+Tobin intern Elliott Watkins, now known to his 9 million fans as gamer Muselk.

REA warns of Melbourne lockdown hit

The company behind realestate.com.au has reported an earnings dip of 5 per cent in its final results as its total national property listings dropped 12 per cent from the previous financial year.

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Wealth

Lack of engagement with your body corporate could come at considerable cost.

Sneaky strata decisions made under cover of COVID-19

Beware rushed electronic approval on matters affecting your apartment block, as some will be more expensive than you realise and could take years to unpick.

How to stop togetherness from driving your family apart

Adult offspring and older parents sharing homes is an increasing cause of expensive court cases to resolve bitter financial disputes.

Sharemarket operator Euronext's deal-making rewards investors

Thanks to recent takeovers, post-trade revenue will be a key contributor.

Technology

Atlassian co-CEO Scott Farquhar.

Atlassian lets its staff stay at home forever

The Australian tech giant says it will 'measure outcomes, not clock hours' and hire talent from anywhere in the world, as it commits to a permanently flexible workforce.

Deepfake video of Mark Zuckerberg

How deep fakes could ruin your business

Author Nina Schick says Western democratic systems and freedoms that should protect you from misinformation could make you more prone to the 'infocalypse'.

Donald Trump has issued orders to block TikTok in the US.

Trump orders WeChat, TikTok ban in US

The popular Chinese-owned social media apps will be banned in the United States starting in 45 days after the President called them a 'significant threat' to US security.

Work & Careers

Teacher assessment to boost year 12 exams in Victoria

The Victorian government says year 12 students studying their final year exams will be individually assessed this year to compensate for adverse effects of the coronavirus.

Bernard Collaery: A warrior for democracy

Veteran lawyer at the centre of the sensational Witness K trial over allegations Australia bugged East Timor's government tells of his fight against the creep of 9/11-era national security laws.

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Life & Luxury

Detail from the cover of "Bill Cunningham: On The Street, Five Decades of Iconic Photography".

The man who captured every day style in the Big Apple

New from a legendary New York photographer's archives: five decades of street style.

Jakob Dylan, left, with Tom Petty.

Why the Beach Boys are up there with Mozart

In 'Echoes from the Canyon', Bob Dylan's son Jakob explores the legacy of the thriving music scene in LA's Hollywood Hills during the mid '60s.

Why women are posting black-and-white selfies

Questions have been raised about the practicality of a new Instagram campaign that uses black-and-white images of women in an effort to promote female empowerment.

Peter Noble, owner of Byron Bay Bluesfest.

Bluesfest owner sees red on profiteering

The booking agents for some Australian acts are trying to capitalise on a lack of foreign competition, veteran promoter Peter Noble says.

Kelly Atkinson and Richard Poulson are the brains behind the platform.

Australian designers join forces to win Chinese hearts

Luxury e-tailer Showroom-X brings together the best of fashion, beauty and art from Down Under.

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