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HMAS Stuart is moved off the syncro lift as the ship is docked at BAE Systems Shipyard at Henderson WA, in preparation for the Anti-Ship Missile Defence (ASMD) upgrade. Shipbuilding Photo: Department of Defence

Weapons plan to keep local ship, drone and ammo makers in business

Defence will become more interventionist in how it manages projects to help preserve local know-how in shipbuilding, production of munitions and development of autonomous systems.

ASIO Director-General Mike Burgess said he had exposed the foreign spy unit as part of “a real-world, real-time disruption” operation.

Ex-politician ‘sold out Australia’: spy chief

Delivering his annual security threat assessment, ASIO chief Mike Burgess has declassified details of a foreign intelligence service’s activities in Australia.

Voters want state governments to pursue a mix of energy sources.

Voters back energy cost relief over emissions reduction: poll

Growing cost-of-living pressures are pushing Australians to prioritise lowering the price of their power bill over the source of their electricity.

Toyota urges Labor to put brakes on clean car plan

The country’s top-selling car brand, Toyota, has urged the Albanese government to slow the pace of new car emissions standards, saying it is too ambitious.

$500m raising to turn unloved hotels, offices into rental housing

Fund manager and hotel developer Pro-Invest Group is in the midst of an equity raising to fund the development of 10 co-living apartment towers with 2000 units.

Business ‘nauseated’ as federal agencies back WFH deal

The four largest federal government agencies have voted overwhelmingly to end mandatory work-from-office rules as part of an 11.2 per cent pay deal.

Former Liberal Party strategist CT Group embroiled in forgery claims

The former Liberal Party strategist, CT Group, has been accused in the UK’s High Court of offering up forged bank documents in the family legal dispute of a deceased Israeli diamond dealer.

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Companies

Flight Centre branch in Queen Street Mall, Brisbane.

What we learnt: Flight Centre, Worley, Clinical Labs and Kelsian

Flight Centre rides the friendly skies, Worley cauterises a wound, Clinical Labs backs rival’s blood test move, and Kelsian delivers a miss.

Guzman y Gomez co-chief executives Hilton Brett and Steven Marks.

Guzman y Gomez pushes back IPO plans as losses widen

The Mexican-themed restaurant chain is backed by Barrenjoey and TDM Growth Partners. Global sales soared 30 per cent in the first half of the financial year.

Rob Adams, chief executive of Perpetual, which has been under pressure to generate value for investors.

Perpetual frustrates analysts with no update on demerger

Perpetual CEO Rob Adams says he understands the frustrations about the lack of detail surrounding plans to break the company up.

Worley boss Chris Ashton

Worley writes off Ecuador claims as interim net profit rebounds

Worley CEO Chris Ashton says the global engineering group could pursue claims for work done in Ecuador through the South American country’s courts after a $58 million write-down.

Irish giant CRH’s $2.1b bid wins over Adbri

The independent directors of cement maker Adbri have agreed to the $3.20-per-share offer from NY-listed Irish group CRH.

Woodside heads for fresh clash on climate as profits slide

The oil and gas producer’s pursuit of growth projects met with criticism from activist shareholder groups as benchmark profit dropped 37 per cent.

First woman to lead Racing NSW after controversial exit

Deputy chairman Saranne Cooke was appointed after a difficult period for the governing body, which has faced questions over its governance.

Companies in the News

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Markets

Construction costs are offsetting price falls in goods prices.

Inflation holds steady at 3.4pc in January

Ongoing price pressures in the housing market offset outright price declines in pantry staples such as beef and seafood in January.

Fifteen years after the March
2009 low, the S&P 500 is up a staggering 7.5 times.

Morgan Stanley tells investors to rethink exposure to Wall Street

The bank’s wealth unit says the outperformance of US equities, in part due to the surge in the Magnificent Seven, has left global markets imbalanced.

Adrian Orr, governor of the Reserve Bank of New Zealand, is more confident about the inflation outlook than previously.

RBNZ surprises with toned-down rate rise talk

The Kiwi dollar fell sharply after New Zealand’s central bank surprised with a policy pivot, saying that the risks to the outlook for inflation were now more “balanced”.

The very good news that markets are ignoring

A reliable indicator of better economic and earnings growth has been flashing for months. It just might help keep the global equity melt-up running.  

Big tech’s profit machine eases fears of rally reversal

A robust US earnings season has underlined for investors that the big technology trade is here to stay.

Opinion

Dunkley byelection is about nothing but politics

A lot will be read into the implications of Saturday’s poll because it’s essentially a purely political horse race short on substantial policy ambition.

The AFR View

Editorial

The AFR View

Report card on the REITs: mind your debts

Lessons from earnings season: retail property surprised on the upside, logistics cooled a tad, office continued to lag, and housing inquiry rose.

Robert Harley

Contributor

Robert Harley

Data centres are hot property - and not just for the returns

Macquarie Technology CEO David Tudehope says data centres are not just good investments, they will allow Australia to participate in the entire AI value chain.

Tax carbon, but don’t gamble on green energy ‘superpower’

A carbon levy is required, but the money should be returned to households, not bureaucrats trying to pick ‘green’ winners, writes John Kehoe.

John Kehoe

Economics editor

John Kehoe

Australia’s defence plans are a charade

The announcement on Australia’s new ships doesn’t pass the pub test. Like its predecessors, this government isn’t serious about the threat it consistently talks about.

James Curran

International editor

James Curran

Board seats for super raise governance issues

Paul Keating’s 80th birthday interview raises the under-discussed issue of the impact of the $3.6 trillion union-influenced superannuation funds on the nation’s capital markets.

The AFR View

Editorial

The AFR View

Reports

Wealth: Turbocharging your retirement

This series of articles looks at the options for retirement income, the best asset mix heading into retirement, and what you need to know to retire overseas.

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Politics

Anthony Albanese in question time on Tuesday.

Albanese rethinks Mardi Gras decision ahead of Dunkley poll

Anthony Albanese is reconsidering attending Sydney’s Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras on Saturday night. The reason given is security concerns, not poor optics.

Spanning transactions from Liechtenstein, Luxembourg Monaco and Switzerland, CT Group has been accused in the UK’s High Court of offering up forged bank documents in a bitter legal dispute.

Former Liberal Party strategist CT Group embroiled in forgery claims

Spanning transactions from Monaco to Switzerland, CT Group has been accused in the UK’s High Court of offering up forged bank documents in the family legal dispute of a deceased Israeli diamond dealer.

NSW Rural Fire Service freifighters prepare at base camp in Ballarat on Wednesday morning.

Victorians stay to protect homes ahead of catastrophic fire warning

Victorians under threat from bushfires have largely fled before catastrophic conditions descend, but others are staying to protect their homes.

Sydney builder sidesteps $23m tax debt

A formwork subcontractor that worked on government projects collapsed owing $23 million to ATO, then continued its work through a related entity.

Poor university teaching ‘a drag on productivity’

The Productivity Commissioner says there are no incentives inside universities to lift their game and no way for students to know what they are signing up to.

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World

A protest against Joe Biden by pro-Trump supporters.

Biden suffers strong protest vote in primary win

The US president easily won the Democratic primary in Michigan, despite significant defections by voters in his party angry at his support for Israel’s war in Gaza.

Ukrainian soldiers help a wounded comrade into an evacuation vehicle near the front line in Bakhmut, Donetsk.

Wider Ukraine war ‘inevitable’ if NATO sends troops, Kremlin warns

Moscow’s warning comes after France’s Emmanuel Macron opened the door to sending Western forces to the war. But Germany’s leaders poured cold water on the idea.

A rendering by UK car lease company Vanarama of what the Apple Car could have looked like, based on patent filings.

Apple cancels work on electric car, ending decade-long effort

The decision, which Elon Musk welcomed, means the iPhone maker is abandoning one of the most ambitious projects in its history.

Your dinner party guide to the US election

Will the November vote be a rematch between Joe Biden and Donald Trump? With primaries and caucuses in full swing, and candidates dropping like flies, here’s the lowdown.

McKinsey ‘advised Chinese agencies’ in row over Beijing work

The consultancy giant, facing calls to be barred from winning US contracts, said claims it had advised the central Chinese government were “inaccurate”.

Property

Melbourne estate hits the market for $49m

More than a hectare of inner Melbourne is on offer, with the historic estate re-entering the market alongside a neighbouring property for $48.8 million.

Home of the cloud: Macquarie Park Data Centre owned by Macquarie Technology.

Data centres are hot property - and not just for the returns

Macquarie Technology CEO David Tudehope says data centres are not just good investments, they will allow Australia to participate in the entire AI value chain.

Ex-rental listings jump as more investors bail out

Higher mortgage costs and increasing regulation could spur more landlords to sell their investment properties, reducing the number of homes for rent.

Cbus could invest more than $500m in affordable housing: Wayne Swan

The boss of the industry super fund says it is comfortable with the risks of a new asset class and wants to play a role in resolving Australia’s housing crisis.

Singapore’s biggest money-laundering case tests weak property market

The arrest of China-born money-laundering suspects has spooked investors who have piled into a booming part of the island’s real estate sector.

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Wealth

Rebecca Pritchard of Rising Tide Financial Services.

How couples can narrow the gender pay gap in super

The gender pay gap and time out of the paid workforce mean women tend to retire with less superannuation, but there is a little-known strategy couples can use to even the score.

I bought Nvidia at $US200 and I’m not selling

My US equities portfolio, dominated as it is by Nvidia, returned over 100 per cent, a handsome gain.

Sisters take on extended family to win $13.5m inheritance dispute

A sharp rise in blended families is creating complex legal issues, particularly for inheritance claims.

Technology

A rendering by UK car lease company Vanarama of what the Apple Car could have looked like, based on patent filings.

Apple cancels work on electric car, ending decade-long effort

The decision, which Elon Musk welcomed, means the iPhone maker is abandoning one of the most ambitious projects in its history.

Atlassian co-CEOs Mike Cannon-Brookes and Scott Farquhar have agreed to pay the ATO an extra $US60.5 million.

Atlassian paid $284m tax before ATO deal

Over the past six years Atlassian’s Australian entity paid $283.8 million of tax locally before reaching an agreement to pay more tax.

Blackbird co-founders Niki Scevak and Rick Baker have plenty of investors’ money still to deploy.

Blackbird tours US hunting for Aussie deals abroad

Blackbird Ventures investment partners have picked up their search for the next Aussie-founded tech unicorns abroad, as bigger local deals dry up.

Work & Careers

Lurking in a Google doc without explanation. Can we help you?

20 microaggressions that should get you sent to HR

Increasing scrutiny of our workplace behaviour has put the spotlight on small acts that might cause offence. Here are some more to add to the list.

Poor university teaching ‘a drag on productivity’

The Productivity Commissioner says there are no incentives inside universities to lift their game and no way for students to know what they are signing up to.

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Life & Luxury

How Apple’s new goggles will rock your reality

2024 is already a huge year for technology, with Apple changing the VR headset game and generative AI redefining the way we use mobile phones.

Deborah Halpern’s ceramic and glass tile sculpture, Little Prince, c. 2010-2011, was one of the star lots in Deutscher + Hackett’s Tuesday night online auction, Works from a Private Collection, Melbourne. Carrying a pre-sale estimate of $3000 to $5000, it sold for $21,250 (including buyer’s premium).

The eyes have it: Little Prince makes big splash

Deborah Halpern’s boldly coloured bust smashed through its estimate as early season auctions get underway.

Julian Bale, an EV owner driving long distances in Australia, stops at a charging station in Alexandria.

Julian pays $450 for a car spot to charge his Tesla

Welcome to our weekly series where we speak to EV drivers who explain the highs and lows of electric life in Australia.

Better than the water cooler: meet-up spaces at Deloitte encourage interaction.

From a hot desk at Deloitte, the future looks bright

Over 14 floors of the award-winning Quay Quarter Tower, the professional services firm has created some of the most desirable workspace around.

Cono di Luce lights by Ron Arad: the light source is effectively part of the form.

These ‘cones’ of light are the latest in desirable design

Venice-based Lodes has been producing stylish lighting since 1950. Now it’s partnered with a top industrial designer to release something radically new.

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