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Treasurer Josh Frydenberg delivers the keynote address to ACCI, at Parliament House in Canberra on  Wednesday 24 February 2021. fedpol Photo: Alex Ellinghausen

Optional pay rise with ‘flexible’ super

The Morrison government has opened the door to allowing workers to dip into retirement savings for housing and other expenses, in a possible trade-off for increasing the superannuation guarantee to 12 per cent.

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The survival guide to income investing

In a world of near-zero cash rates, minuscule bond yields and government hyper-stimulus, we highlight yield opportunities you may not have thought of.

Talks between Joe Biden and Justin Trudeau this week signal climate change will be at the top of the global agenda.

Australia will pay the price for not joining the climate club

Australian trade partners are gearing up for a low-carbon economy, and with a new EU impost looming, our biggest exports could be left out in the cold.

Tech stock rebound helps steady Wall St

A tech stock rally, albeit one that faded into the close, helped the Nasdaq end the week on a positive note, as panic selling in US bonds abated, and yields fell.

J&J’s one-shot vaccine receives FDA advisers’ backing

Experts advising the US Food and Drug Administration voted 22-0, with no abstentions, that the benefits of the vaccine outweigh its risks in adults 18 and older.

Cabinet minister accused of rape

The Australian Federal Police and police in South Australia and NSW have been told about historical allegations of rape against a member of cabinet in the federal government.

How Facebook and Australia became friends again

Remembering the tortuous dealings of the National Energy Guarantee, Josh Frydenberg was determined to reach a better outcome in his negotiations with Mark Zuckerberg. But it came down to the wire.

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Companies

AGL chief executive Brett Redman is working on a new business model.

AGL faces an existential crisis

Winning in the Australian energy market used to be about matching consumers to coal and gas-fired power. AGL Energy shareholders are making the painful discovery it is all about alternative technologies.

A floating gas facility in China.

LNG players shrug off carbon threat with $15b spend

Australia’s LNG producers are well aware of proposed carbon tariffs but still see a robust outlook for gas underpinning their large new projects.

Huon Aquaculture's Frances and Peter Bender together own about a 66 per cent stake in the company.

Takeover suitors circle salmon farmer Huon

Huon Aquaculture has appointed advisers as part of a strategic review after fielding unsolicited takeover offers.

Francesco De Ferrari: “We’re in the second year of heavy lifting that will allow us to get most of the legacy issues behind us.”

De Ferrari left with AMP’s ‘rump’

AMP chief executive says calling it the ‘rump’ undersells the company’s unloved superannuation, wealth and banking divisions, and pledges heavy lifting to overhaul what’s left of the 172-year-old-company.

Seven requests removal of expert in cricket rights feud

Seven West Media has fired off a letter to the Chamber of Arbitrators asking for the removal of the independent expert appointed to decide the fate of the network’s dispute with Cricket Australia over television rights.

It rained dividends but bold investments on the back foot

Earnings season has shown many companies doing better than expected in the pandemic recovery. However, there’s still a view that this isn’t the moment to spend big or shift strategies because of the opportunities.

Buy now, pay later sentiment sours on concerns about costs, valuations

Sentiment sank on buy now, pay later stocks on Friday, with Afterpay shares plunging 10 per cent when they came back on to the market after a $1.5 billion cap raising.

Markets

Growth bubble: Investors are unprepared for the sharp rise in yields, which is mirrored by a rally in commodity prices underscoring the reflationary impulse.

Bond yields take wrecking ball to equity markets

A sharp rise in bond yields ignited a dramatic swing in risk sentiment on Friday, with a sell-off in global equities that toppled the Aussie from its three-year high.

Alarm bells ring over Australia’s 10-year interest rates.

Worst bond bloodbath since 1994

A critical question is why Australians are being battered by interest rate movements more than anyone else, writes Christopher Joye.

The International Energy Agency, which China isn’t part of, recommends that countries have enough crude to cover at least 90 days of net imports.

China’s oil reserves are close to reaching storage capacity

The build-up follows a push by Beijing to buy crude for its reserves last year when prices crashed due to the coronavirus pandemic.

The bond market’s GameStop moment, in reverse

Investors betting on a speedy global recovery have triggered a sell off in bonds that market watchers likened to the GameStop rally in reverse.

Copper crunch set to ease with more supply heading to China

The amount of concentrate expected to reach China in March could be 60pc greater than February, one analyst forecasts.

Opinion

The dark irony in Scott Morrison’s letter

It’s a very black irony that in a building full of lawmakers, the police have to write to those lawmakers to point out that if a crime has been committed, they need to report it.

Laura Tingle

Columnist

Laura Tingle

Junk politics break the surface once more

After a year when government outperformed, the loss of majority and distracting scandals are obscuring what is important.

The AFR View

Editorial

The AFR View

Political pile-ons could get in the way of vaccine rollout

The point-scoring over vaccination bungles risks undermining confidence in the program we are relying on to get the economy back to normal.

Phillip Coorey

Political editor

Phillip Coorey

Slogan-led strategy isn’t working

Australia’s tough line on China could be easily undermined by Beijing - and by our own allies, too.

Alan Joyce looks up, up and away

The Qantas chief is trying to persuade state and federal governments that the vaccine rollout means it is time to keep state borders open and plan for international travel by October. Will it work? 

Coates shows why he is the master of Olympic politics

A lifetime of plotting, scheming and flattery by the Australian Olympic Committee president has paid off.

Aaron Patrick

Senior correspondent

Aaron Patrick
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Politics

Once the vaccines are out in the real population, the numbers could turn and both could end up at 88 per cent, says professor Skerritt.

Why Australia’s medical regulator is happy to have the AstraZeneca jab

Against a background of debate suggesting the Pfizer vaccine is superior, John Skerritt explains why he’s happy to be getting the AstraZeneca jab.

Scott Morrison, VISY executive chairman Anthony Pratt and member for Lindsay Melissa McIntosh visit the VISY Glass Factory in Penrith.

Pratt draws on tax break for recycling boost

Anthony Pratt will tap the $27 billion accelerated depreciation scheme to kick-start a $2 billion investment in domestic recycling over the next decade.

A new national survey shows the number of Australians willing to be vaccinated against coronavirus remains at 76 per cent, despite government efforts to bring the number closer to its aspirational target of 95 per cent.

After early bungles, vaccine rollout set to gain pace

More than 120 doses of the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine were destroyed in Victoria on Friday, after private operator Aspen Health could not verify if the vials had been kept at the correct temperature.

Don’t expect Melbourne to snap back, Premier warns

Major Melbourne corporates are urging their employees back to the office from Monday, after Premier Daniel Andrews lifted office capacity to 75 per cent and removed a requirement to wear masks.

Fraudster Caddick’s death may make it easier to recover stolen funds

The decomposed remains of missing fraudster Melissa Caddick have been found on a NSW south coast beach three months after she vanished following a police raid on her home.

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World

Under China’s forex rules, individual citizens can exchange foreign currencies equivalent to $US50,000 each year.

Forget politics – foreign investors are flocking to China

Foreign capital is pouring into China at record rates as investors ignore geopolitical tensions in their search for yield, bolstering Beijing’s plans to become a financial superpower.

Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.

Saudi crown prince approved operation to capture or kill Khashoggi

The crown prince approved of the plan that led to the murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi in 2018, according to a declassified US intelligence assessment.

Iranian Revolutionary Guard General Qassem Soleimani.

Biden’s first military attack should wake up Iran

President Joe Biden has now demonstrated that he can walk and chew gum at the same time.

Iceberg larger than New York City breaks off the Brunt Ice Shelf

The iceberg is large, about 20 times the size of Manhattan, but not as huge as the iceberg that in 2017 calved from the Larsen C Ice Shelf.

The paradox of pandemic partisanship

While a substantial number of voters don’t believe Biden has the right to be running the country, they effectively approve of the way he’s running it economically.

Property

Just about every state is thinking about their strata pet laws partly because well-behaved, properly trained pets (and owners) can enhance a sense of community.

Dogged determination leads to pet-friendly strata laws

Owners corporations in NSW will not be able to unreasonably deny permission for residents to have pets – just as soon as MPs have agreed on the definition of “unreasonable”.

Lang Walker presses ‘go’ on $3b Adelaide housing estate

The launch of the 12,000-house Riverlea estate, potentially South Australia’s largest ever-such housing project, comes amid a broader wave of post-COVID-19 investment in the economy.

Domain’s senior research analyst tipped this weekend would break the record again.

Sydney median auction house price hits record high

It’s reached $1.68 million in stunning activity across the city amid fierce buyer competition during a record month of clearance rates.

Roc Private Equity makes higher offer for Vitalharvest Trust

Roc Private Equity has offered $1.08 per unit to acquire all the units of the berry and citrus trust or $314.8 million to buy all the assets - both higher offers than the Macquarie’s proposal.

Housing boom lifts homemaker centre landlord Aventus

Visits to homemaker centres owned and operated by Aventus hit a record high of 44 million in 2020, benefiting tenants like Bunnings, Harvey Norman and JB Hi-Fi.

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Wealth

“It’s a feeding frenzy,” says Melbourne buyer’s agent Emma Bloom.

How to make a knock-out bid before auction

A big spike in pre-auction sales means buyers need to be ready to make an offer the vendor can’t refuse. Experts give their tips on how to seal a deal.

Sony valuation ‘undemanding’ even after share gains

The multinational conglomerate is focusing on higher-margin and recurring sources of revenue, with content – music, movies and games – as the key driver.

Dogged determination leads to pet-friendly strata laws

Owners corporations in NSW will not be able to unreasonably deny permission for residents to have pets – just as soon as MPs have agreed on the definition of “unreasonable”.

Technology

Lexer co-founder Chris Brewer (left), founder Aaron Wallis and co-founder Dave Whittle.

Made in Melbourne customer data platform raises $33.5m

Lexer’s clients include Optus and Billabong, but it’s eyeing offshore growth.

Twitter has named Peiter Zatko, widely known by his hacker handle Mudge, to the new position of head of security, giving him a broad mandate to recommend changes in structure and practices.

Twitter’s new feature could earn you money

The subscription option could attract more influencers, who have become accustomed to earning revenue from their content on other platforms.

Facebook’s Australian news ban threatens the viability of small independent producers reliant on the site for promotion.

The massive challenge of regulating Big Tech

As countries take on the growing political and economic power of the tech giants, the focus is moving beyond breaking them up to tougher rules around privacy protection and ownership of data.

Work & Careers

To avoid parental guilt, make a plan to ‘do something’ one-on-one

The key to spending quality time with your kids is breaking free of the daily routines – and ditching their siblings, if you can.

The 150-year making of Netwealth

The Heine family has a long history of exploiting the zeitgeist. Now, they are in pole position to profit from the wealth management industry’s royal commission reckoning. 

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Life & Luxury

George Blake in 1992. He didn’t feel British enough to betray Britain: “To betray you first have to belong. I never belonged.”

The many lives of Cold War double agent George Blake

I was beguiled when I met the notorious British spy in Moscow, but the charm wore off fast when I considered the man’s life.

“There needs to be more points of view contributing to the conversation”: Que Minh Luu, director of content (ANZ) at Netflix, at Cornersmith cafe in Annandale, Sydney.

‘Someone who looks like me should be on screen’: Netflix’s local content boss

Que Minh Luu’s appointment is a sign of the streamer’s desire for more Australian content – and her lunch request for a specific type of journalist signals an intent to shake up a white-bread media.

An artist’s illustration of hydrocarbon pools, icy and rocky terrain on the surface of Saturn’s largest moon Titan.

Could there be life under the seas of Saturn’s largest moon?

The eyes of humanity might be focused on Mars right now, but many scientists believe that life could exist beneath the methane oceans of Titan.

Researchers in Norway used infrared photography to analyse the mysterious words scrawled on Edvard Munch’s ‘The Scream’.

Final secret of Edvard Munch’s ‘The Scream’ revealed

A barely legible phrase scribbled on a modern masterpiece gives new insight into the private thoughts of one of the world’s great painters.

The first examples of the Bacalar will be delivered late this year.

Car makers obsess over detail for top 1pc

The attention to detail at the top of the car market can be astounding, as technicians chase that last edge in refinement, style or personalisation.

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