Skip to navigationSkip to contentSkip to footerHelp using this website - Accessibility statement
Advertisement
AUDUSD0.6516
0.0002 (0.03%)0.03%
SPI 2007,829.00
7.00 (0.09%)0.09%
S&P/ASX 2007,770.60
-11.40 (-0.15%)-0.15%
All Ords8,026.30
-18.30 (-0.23%)-0.23%
NZX 504,558.85
23.94 (0.53%)0.53%
Hang Seng16,499.47
-363.63 (-2.16%)-2.16%
Nikkei40,888.43
72.77 (0.18%)0.18%
View all

Are you elevating customer experience to new heights? Enter the Customer Champions List. Nominations close April 4.

Enter now

Former Victorian premier Jeff Kennett has backed Amelia Hamer to run for the Liberal Party in the seat of Kooyong.

Liberals to ‘get behind’ new Kooyong candidate Amelia Hamer

The 31-year-old Oxford graduate won the preselection on Saturday for Josh Frydenberg’s former seat of Kooyong; Putin vows all perpetrators of the Moscow attack will receive “a just and inevitable punishment”. Follow updates here.

Key Posts

Last updated 8 mins ago

Liberals to fall short of majority in Tasmania poll

The country’s only Liberal government is tipped to win more seats than Labor, but not enough to govern in their own right as voters appear set to snub both major parties.

Rudd and Trump

Rudd’s backroom strategy for Trump

In behind the scenes meetings, the former prime minister is working on an unlikely plan to make himself indispensable to the former president if he wins again.

Moscow seeks to blame Kyiv for Islamic State attack on concert hall

Russian officials and state media have made little reference to IS’ claim, and Vladimir Putin did not mention it or Islamist terrorism in his first remarks.

King, Prince Harry show support after Princess Kate reveals cancer diagnosis

Statement from the prince and the Duchess of Sussex says: “We wish health and healing for Kate and the family, and hope they are able to do so privately and in peace.”

It’s time to look beyond the ASX’s large caps to make money

There’s so much talk of the S&P 500 being dominated by the “magnificent seven”. But Australia has one of the world’s most concentrated benchmarks in its backyard, writes Arian Neiron.

Why good intentions are no match for housing’s grim reality

Big house price gains in 2025 and 2026 look likely as Australia’s housing supply crisis gets worse.

Advertisement

Edition

AFR Magazine – fashion issue

Jimmy Choo’s sneaker move | Lululemon, a company with stretch goals | Dior relaunches a classic watch | The brand so hot it banned phones from its Paris show

WEEKEND READS

The world has experienced spectacular prosperity, resulting in new problems.

How our era of plenty could lead to human extinction

Our success in creating a more prosperous, informed, and secure world has, unexpectedly, generated a whole new set of planetary challenges.

Defining legacy: Brisbane’s messy path to the Olympics

It will be a long haul to transform the QEII stadium to Olympic standard. That’s just one of the hurdles for Queensland.

ECB president Christine Lagarde reiterated this week that the bank would make decisions based on the latest data and keep rates high as long as needed to reach its inflation goal.

The week the world’s central bankers started smiling

They faced widespread criticism and ridicule for failing to predict the worst inflationary outbreak in a generation but the tables are now turning.

United in grief Israelis and Palestinians find power in empathy

A Melbourne-based trauma psychologist says her work is more important than ever, amplifying the lived experience of those who choose respect over revenge.

Good luck finding a table: How F1 gave Melbourne its mojo back

Melbourne’s premium hotels and restaurants are near or at capacity this weekend ahead of the Australian Grand Prix, which is enjoying a boom as women and young people stream in.

SMART INVESTOR

The Fed has allowed core inflation to grow at a pace significantly above its 2 per cent goal for three consecutive years.

Central banks may be repeating their pandemic errors

Central banks delayed rate increases after the pandemic on the basis they could not forecast the future, but now use rubbery projections to rationalise rate cuts.

The average amount spent on an engagement ring is $6000.

How much should I spend on an engagement ring?

In a stroke of 1930s marketing genius, De Beers convinced men they needed to spend at least a month’s salary on a diamond engagement ring. But is that really a good rule of thumb?

Risk sits at the heart of financial markets but trying to pin it down can be maddening.

How investors get risk wrong

Contrary to popular wisdom, more volatile stocks do not outperform.

Why super isn’t supposed to make you super rich

There were opportunities in the past to make exceptionally large contributions to tax-advantaged super accounts, but those days are over.

What if the 1pc aren’t getting that much richer?

A new understanding of the US economy suggests members of the 99 per cent are a lot wealthier than they look.

Features include the ability to save articles, dark mode and real time notifications.

Get the latest business news on the go with the AFR’s new iOS app.

Find out more

Companies

Star boss Robbie Cooke.

Star CEO departs as embattled casino owner cleans out exec team

Staff were informed of the departures of CEO Robbie Cooke and other top execs on Friday afternoon after the market closed.

Dubber CEO Steve McGovern

ASIC bans Dubber CEO from leaving Australia

The corporate watchdog has banned Dubber boss Stephen McGovern and lawyer Mark Madafferi from leaving Australia.

At least six inquiries are probing the market power of supermarket giants Coles and Woolworths.

Rebel union splits with labour movement on Coles and Woolies break-up

The Retail and Fast Food Workers Union says a Greens-led plan to break up firms abusing market power should be made law.

Incoming Myer executive chairwoman Olivia Wirth was previously head of loyalty at Qantas.

How loyalty saved Myer from the retail graveyard

In 2019 Myer’s loyalty scheme was terminal. Five years later, it is central to driving sales at the recharged department store.

Brisbane-based Tritium receives delisting notice from the Nasdaq

Fast charger company Tritium has received a second delisting notice from the Nasdaq after the underperformance of its stock.

Glencore abandons coal production cap as another climate pledge fails

Five years after it promised to cap annual coal production at 150 million tonnes, Glencore has withdrawn the policy.

From scandals to Team Australia: a decade of the AFR Banking Summit

The Summit is in its 10th year. We’ve had a courtside seat to the drama as a tarnished sector recovered during COVID.

Companies in the News

Search companies

View stories and data from an ASX listed company

Markets

Wall Street.

US rally stalls as strategists debate correction potential

Wall Street closed mixed with signs that some investors are starting to pocket profits from the stunning rally to start 2024.

Supporters at a rally for former President Donald Trump.

Trump Media merger wins investor approval

The deal clears a near-final hurdle for Trump Media & Technology Group and a potential windfall for the former president.

The Swiss National Bank has eased policy months before global peers may follow suit.

Rally in global stocks kick up a gear after surprise rate cut

The Swiss National Bank overnight has potentially started a much anticipated global rate easing cycle, sparking hope that its major central bank peers will soon follow suit.

Reddit IPO leaps on AI pitch, but not everyone believes the hype

The stock ended its first day of trading up 48 per cent, but investors say it’s more Snapchat than Meta, despite its deal to provide AI data to Google.

BoE keeps interest rate unchanged despite ebbing inflation

Echoing the US and Australia, the Bank of England says “things are moving in the right direction” but rate-setters “need to be sure” before making cuts.

Opinion

Penny Wong’s week of new foreign policy reality

The foreign minister is repairing relations with China while unsentimentally hedging against its military might. Eruptions from Paul Keating and Donald Trump are simply part of that reality.

The AFR View

Editorial

The AFR View

Green policy car crash complicates Labor’s election outlook

A series of competing and interlinked priorities are colliding in Labor’s Senate, where all eyes are turning to the next election.

Jacob Greber

Senior correspondent

Jacob Greber

The Wang-Wong doctrine: embrace and fight at the same time

China and Australia’s foreign ministers are both adept at the art of making frenemies. It’s working for now, but for how long?

Cleaner cars a politically charged driving test for Chris Bowen

The climate change and energy minister should be cut some slack. He is in the minority attempting hard and unpopular reform, such as the new clean fuel policy.

Phillip Coorey

Political editor

Phillip Coorey

Central banks may be repeating their pandemic errors

Central banks delayed rate increases after the pandemic on the basis they could not forecast the future, but now use rubbery projections to rationalise rate cuts.

Why good news for jobs is bad news for rates

The government is celebrating robust jobs figures and a fall in unemployment. But Labor and the Reserve Bank will be quietly worried that this is only going to delay any cut in interest rates this year.

Reports

Women to Watch 2024

Meet the next generation of leaders across five key sectors of the economy.

Advertisement

Politics

Some borrowers are experiencing a negative cash shortfall.

Borrowers can cope with higher interest rates: RBA

Borrowers and businesses are defying gloomy predictions and are servicing their debts, giving the Reserve Bank more cover to fight inflation.

Defence Minister Richard Marles (centre) with Foreign Minister Penny Wong, UK Foreign Secretary David  Cameron, South Australian Premier Peter Malinauskas, UK Secretary of State for Defence Grant Shapps and US ambassador Caroline Kennedy in Adelaide on Friday.

‘Dangerous world’: AUKMIN talks call out Chinese coercion

Security in the Indo-Pacific and the Euro-Atlantic regions are inseparable, Australian and British ministers say.

At least six inquiries are probing the market power of supermarket giants Coles and Woolworths.

Rebel union splits with labour movement on Coles and Woolies break-up

The Retail and Fast Food Workers Union says a Greens-led plan to break up firms abusing market power should be made law.

Rule Britannia: How Australia’s military future relies on one UK firm

In naming BAE Systems as the builder of Australia’s submarines, the Albanese government is putting its major shipbuilding eggs in the British defence giant’s basket.

Keep emergency interest rate power, Chalmers told

The treasurer should not scrap the extraordinary power to override the Reserve Bank, the Coalition and Greens have recommended in their reviews of the bank’s overhaul.

SPONSORED

World

A massive blaze is seen over the Crocus City Hall on the western edge of Moscow, Russia.

Russia arrests suspected attackers after shooting kills dozens

Eleven people, including four suspected gunmen, have been arrested in connection with a shooting rampage that killed 115 people in a concert hall near Moscow.

Residents returning to Khan Yunis have found entire buildings levelled.

Russia and China veto US-led ceasefire resolution

Three of the UN Security Council’s 14 members voted against the resolution, which had called for “an immediate and sustained ceasefire” in the Gaza Strip.

UK’s new tax slug could force expat Aussies home

Australians living in the UK for more than four years will lose the benefits of negative gearing and franking credits on their property and shares.

China scrutinises PwC role in $118b Evergrande fraud case

Authorities are examining the role of PwC in China Evergrande Group’s accounting practices after the developer was accused of fraud.

China turns on the charm with Australia. What’s behind the change?

Whether the new “balance” is truly bipartisan remains to be seen, as Canberra and Beijing still have serious questions to discuss.

Property

Point Piper and Sydney’s eastern suburbs remains one of the most densely populated with bankers.

Where Australia’s top investment bankers live

Privacy, prestige and access to the best schools in Sydney mean these suburbs are where deal makers call home.

The Bonython is full of lush tropical plants.

Singo sells famed Paddington complex for more than $30m

Annie Todd, the estranged wife of Atlassian billionaire Mike Cannon-Brookes, will take ownership of The Bonython office complex in Paddington.

Niddrie Central was bought by Fabcot, the property arm of Woolworths

Woolworths pays $51m for suburban mall in supermarket turf war

The supermarket giant’s property arm quietly snapped up the Niddrie Central mall in Melbourne’s north to maintain control of a key suburban site.

Mascot Towers sale set to proceed after threshold achieved

A minimum 75 per cent of unitholders in the Mascot Towers strata scheme have signed sales contract with purchaser Dowco Property Group.

We need land-less mortgages, Mirvac CEO Campbell Hanan says

Australia’s crippling housing affordability problem is shaking up postwar norms about ownership. It’s also prompting a rethink about financing.

Advertisement

Wealth

AFR

What to do with a big inheritance

Around $10 billion worth of shares, cash and property is bequeathed every month in Australia. Experts weight in on how to manage a windfall.

How investors get risk wrong

Contrary to popular wisdom, more volatile stocks do not outperform.

Australia’s highest-paid directors revealed

Women now account for more than 30 per cent of directors on ASX 200 companies – but they still don’t perform as well as their male colleagues in the money stakes.

Technology

The latest case marks the third time the Justice Department has sued Apple for antitrust violations in the past 14 years.

US accuses Apple of exploiting smartphone market

The iPhone maker is being accused of violating antitrust laws by blocking rivals from accessing hardware and software features on its popular devices.

Akin founder and CEO Lee Yearsley says the funding market for ambitious AI companies, led by women, is tough to crack.

There’s an AI funding boom - but Australia’s being left out

Venture capitalists are going all-in trying to back big winners, rather than spreading their funds around.

Federico Collarte and Cibby Pulikkaseril of Baraja at a CSIRO facility in 2018.

$300m to ‘zero’: Blackbird-backed start-up stalls

VC backers of Baraja have written down their investment on the polarising LiDAR technology for autonomous vehicles to nil.

Work & Careers

Australian Grand Prix Corporation boss Travis Auld.

How missing AFL’s top job drove the F1 Grand Prix CEO

Travis Auld, the former AFL chief financial officer-turned F1 GP chief executive, has big plans for the race to go more female and family friendly, to help attract record crowds.

Macquarie infrastructure bigwig retires

Grant Smith, who heads up Macquarie’s infrastructure and assets investment activities, is retiring after a hugely successful 28 years.

Advertisement

Life & Luxury

West Side Story presented by Handa Opera on Sydney Harbour.

West Side Story makes a splash on Sydney Harbour

Leonard Bernstein never really liked his 1961 smash hit musical - Friday’s Opera Australia production at the Fleet Steps proved his misgivings misplaced.

Mike Vacy-Lyle

CBA’s business bank boss explains why ‘saffers’ can be good CEOs

Mike Vacy-Lyle says his South African upbringing has instilled a can-do attitude and the confidence to take on any competition.

Andrea Vignali, Davide Bonadiman and Michelle Badek at Al Dente Enoteca in Melbourne.

Restaurant cancellation fees are everywhere. Here’s why

Fine dining venues in Sydney and Melbourne are charging between $50 to nearly $200 a head for last-minute cancellations amid sustained cost pressures.

This week’s edits of lovely little luxuries: party food to fast feet

From the return of John Wilson and his simply fabulous catering to Veja French sneakers getting serious about running: we have inspired suggestions for you.

Roast chicken and a knockout sauce: a chef’s best Sunday lunch recipe

Any random assortment of people can sit down around a roast chook and instantly become a temporary family, says Dave Verheul of Embla.

From the gallery