Skip to navigationSkip to contentSkip to footerHelp using this website - Accessibility statement
Advertisement
AUDUSD0.6519
0.0002 (0.03%)0.03%
SPI 2007,951.00
0.00
S&P/ASX 2007,896.90
77.30 (0.99%)0.99%
All Ords8,153.70
80.10 (0.99%)0.99%
NZX 504,605.54
36.00 (0.79%)0.79%
Hang Seng16,541.42
148.58 (0.91%)0.91%
Nikkei40,369.44
201.37 (0.50%)0.50%
View all
Global trade patterns have changed radically in the past 50 years.

Lessons from a fund that has beaten the market for 50 years

Since 1973, Capital Group’s New Perspective Fund has ridden the shifting tides of world trade. With deglobalisation taking hold, will the strategy hold up?

Donald Trump, blasphemous bible thumper

On this holy weekend, one man is taking the Resurrection personally, writes Maureen Dowd.

Why EVs are such a big geopolitical deal

Policy changes in the US will have ramifications that will be felt far beyond the autoworkers of Detroit, Michigan.

Lendlease locks in $1.7b Melbourne win in race to repatriate capital

Chief Tony Lombardo is under pressure to deliver quickly on a turnaround plan, which involves refocusing efforts on Lendlease’s Australian business.

Netanyahu faces rising fury over orthodox draft exemption

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s coalition is facing a crisis about whether ultra-Orthodox Jews should be required to join the Israeli army.

Concerns grow as Meta’s news exit nears

Australians who use Facebook as their main source for news will have to look elsewhere for stories as Meta shuts down its news tab in early April.

Keating succumbs to Chinese ‘grey zone’ influence: Taiwan

One of Taiwan’s top diplomats says former prime minister Paul Keating fell victim to Chinese “grey zone” influence.

Advertisement

SMART INVESTOR WEEKEND

Family offices do asset allocation very well, Josh Derrington says.

Inside the Queensland family office making 15pc

Meet a mango farmer managing billions who will back anything except private equity.

We asked 11 experts where they would invest $1 million.

Where to invest $1m right now

We asked 11 experts where they would invest $1 million to earn serious returns; then we asked them to nominate an indulgence spend.

Financial strategies involving trusts which merely result in the payment of less tax are not evidence, on their own, of a dominant purpose of tax avoidance, the court found.

$60b in trust payments under cloud following ATO court loss

The court warned the ATO cannot dictate to taxpayers how they should arrange their affairs.

Why invest in a house when you can get a 5pc yield on a laundromat?

The exodus of investors from the housing market is fuelling demand for small commercial properties like laundromats offering higher returns and sticky tenants.

Stock pickers at near record levels of underperformance

More than 75 per cent of all Australian large-cap equity fund managers underperformed the ASX200 benchmark for 2023.

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

Westpac plans to invest in its technology systems.

Westpac plots multibillion-dollar tech overhaul to fix decade lag

The project will unite more than a hundred separate systems that have bloated costs since the acquisition of St George during the global financial crisis.

Seer’s co-founder (from left): George Kenley, Dean Freestone and Mark Cook.

From startup star to near collapse at the ‘next Cochlear’

Seer Medical was feted from its inception in 2017, after developing a groundbreaking wearable device for epilepsy. Then it met the Victorian government.

Alva Beach. The Great Barrier Reef has had five mass coral bleaching events in the past eight years.

How the McLaren F1 team is helping save the Great Barrier Reef

British Formula One race team McLaren deployed engineers to help the Great Barrier Reef Foundation speed up its coral spawning program.

Qantas’ Frequent Flyer program is getting a run for its money

The airline is on the verge of unveiling the biggest change to the popular loyalty scheme in years, but savvy customers are increasingly shopping around.

Mine prospecting booms among cashed-up explorers

Prospecting data shows the strongest December quarter since 2013, revealing a high appetite for risk in the market.

China removes punishing tariffs on Australian wine trade

Beijing says the restrictions, which had devastated local winemakers, will be removed on Friday, and big producers have applauded the change.

Vanguard guilty of greenwashing in ASIC’s first major court win

The funds management giant could be on the hook for millions of dollars in damages, though the court rejected aspects of ASIC’s case.

Companies in the News

Search companies

View stories and data from an ASX listed company

Markets

Enthusiasm around the outlook for AI investment and adoption has fuelled stellar gains for megacap tech stocks.

How the world’s top fundies are navigating the AI boom

From the early backers of Nvidia to those that have recently jumped on the bandwagon, Wall Street is betting the AI rally has further to run.

“We don’t need to be in a hurry to cut,” he said.

No need for Fed to rush rate cuts: Powell

Still, the Federal Reserve chairman said February’s latest inflation data, released on Friday, was “pretty much in line with our expectations”.

Policymakers anticipate three rate cuts this year. Financial markets expect the first rate reduction in June.

US monthly inflation slows; consumer spending surges

Core inflation increased 2.8 per cent year-on-year in February, the smallest gain since March 2021, after rising 2.9 per cent in January.

The US economy’s resilience is now undeniable

In an economy that has consistently outperformed and is constantly being scoured for cracks, it’s hard to find any faults in the latest data.

How economists interpreted US inflation data

The Federal Reserve’s key inflation metric mostly met expectations for February, leaving economists as divided as ever on the timing of a rate cut.

Opinion

Bidenomics is making China angry. That’s OK.

Biden’s China policy is so tough that it makes me, someone who generally favours a rules-based system, nervous.

Paul Krugman

Contributor

Bankers cheer as the frozen IPO market shows signs of heating up

Local bankers are celebrating as the US public listing market heats up, but is this simply another sign of a US sharemarket bubble.

Karen Maley

Columnist

Karen Maley

Bank bosses who speak the truth on reform

Tax reform is the cornerstone of rebooting national economic performance because its benefits are so pervasive. Business leaders are rightly taking up the conversation.

The AFR View

Editorial

The AFR View

Why the GST fiasco won’t be fixed

Fights about the distribution of GST revenue aren’t just about the money – they also reflect the political death of major tax reform. It’s a policy fiasco.

A Kennedy might be about to help Trump into the White House

Robert Kennedy jnr’s third-party candidacy could split the vote in key swing states. Polls give him between 2 and 15 per cent of the vote in a three-way race, writes Edward Luce.

Edward Luce

Columnist

Edward Luce

Disgrace turns into love on the cross

Easter offers divine love beyond shame. God, it turns out, is far less judgmental than we are.

Michael P Jensen

Faith leader

Michael P Jensen

Reports

AI’s brave new world

Artificial intelligence is being used by hackers to create ever more convincing fakes, but the technology is also giving our leading companies an edge.

Advertisement

Politics

SA uncorks support to bolster wine exports to China

South Australian winemakers are being urged to re-engage with China after the country lifted tariffs on Australian wine that inflicted pain on the local industry.

Rebuilding wine sales in China to take time: minister

Assistant Trade Minister Tim Ayres welcomed China’s removal of tariffs on Australian wine but said rebuilding the $1.1 billion trade will take time.

Senators Jacqui Lambie and Tammy Tyrrell have parted ways.

Tammy Tyrrell goes solo, quits Jacqui Lambie Network

Senator Tyrrell made the shock resignation announcement late on Thursday, citing a rift between herself and party leader Jacqui Lambie.

China can be a democracy: Scott Morrison

The former PM has dismissed the idea that China is unable to become a multiparty democracy, saying there is no “anti-democratic” instinct in the Chinese people.

Business fears Fair Work intervention in power closures

Business groups fear Labor’s Net Zero Transition Authority legislation will expose them to union-initiated disputes as coal- and gas-fired power stations close.

SPONSORED

World

UN peacekeepers hold their flag, as they observe Israeli excavators attempt to destroy tunnels built by Hezbollah near the border in 2019.

Blast hits Australian UN observer patrolling in Lebanon

Israel denied responsibility for the shell that exploded, injuring the UN observers and their interpreter, who were patrolling the southern Lebanese border.

Evan Gershkovich, 32, became the first US journalist arrested on spying charges in Russia since the Cold War.

‘Every day is hard’: One year since Russia jailed Evan Gershkovich

Since his arrest, the 32-year-old journalist for the Wall Street Journal has been held in the notorious high-security Lefortovo prison in Moscow.

Volodymyr Zelensky warns without aid it will have to retreat.

Zelensky warns Ukraine forces will have to retreat

Volodymyr Zelensky said in an interview that if Ukraine does not get promised US military aid blocked by disputes in Congress, its forces will have to retreat “in small steps”.

Israel hits Syria in heaviest raid on Iran proxies in months

Israel said it killed a senior Hezbollah commander in Lebanon, stepping up its campaign against Iran’s proxies in parallel with its war in Gaza.

Bankman-Fried’s jailing a warning shot to crypto industry

The 25-year sentence for the former crypto mogul sends a crucial message to an industry that’s still yet to complete the clean-up it sorely needs, writes Lionel Laurent.

Property

Developers find easy targets among cash-strapped golf clubs

They take up swaths of land and face big bills to renovate and keep courses in order. Could surplus golfing greens help solve the housing shortage?

Not a nimby in sight: Architect Andrew Maynard and developer Panos Miltiadou outside Slate House on Wednesday.

Melbourne’s medium-density housing miracle

A 14-apartment development won local approval by mimicking the scale of a local church building. Can it be repeated elsewhere?

The suburbs where every house sold delivered a profit

Profits from residential resales rose strongly in the December quarter, underscoring the improving profitability in the housing market.

Charter Hall swallows 15pc of pubs owner HPI

The property fund manager is already the country’s biggest pubs owner after taking charge of former ASX-listed landlord ALE Group in a $1.7 billion deal three years ago.

Dubai billionaire brings luxury hotel brand to Canberra in $200m deal

Ghassan Aboud will open the first Crystalbrook Collection hotel in Canberra in 2027 and is keen to take the Aussie-grown luxury brand overseas.

Advertisement

Wealth

Two Chinese women living in a rented London mansion, trying to launder cryptocurrency.

The mystery of the mansion and the $2.7b bitcoin haul

What were two Chinese women doing in a rented mansion in London with an astronomical amount of cryptocurrency?

Inside the Queensland family office making 15pc

Meet a mango farmer managing billions who will back anything except private equity.

Stock pickers at near record levels of underperformance

More than 75 per cent of all Australian large-cap equity fund managers underperformed the ASX200 benchmark for 2023.

Technology

Epic battle with Apple and Google heads into the wilds

In a light-hearted exchange, a Federal Court judge says a willingness to be shot at in a game may help you with installing the game in the first place.

iPhone will be ‘degraded’ if Epic wins court case, Apple warns

New laws in Europe mean iPhone users there are already facing all manner of new threats to their safety.

Australia has to take urgent action to discourage individual terrorists and state actors hacking into our cyber networks.

Leaked documents reveal Australia targeted by Chinese hackers

The revelations come as the UK sanctions a Chinese state-affiliated group that hacked into its Electoral Commission systems.

Work & Careers

KPMG Australia CEO Andrew Yates.

KPMG hands CEO Yates another three years

The board of KPMG Australia has extended the leadership term of Andrew Yates to June 2027.

Poor kids who choose the IB do better than rich kids who don’t: study

Jasmine Werneberg says the International Baccalaureate she did at high school was more academically rigorous than her business-law degree at university.

Advertisement

Life & Luxury

Billy Bourchier play Tony and Nina Korbe is Maria in Opera Australia’s re-staging of West Side Story on Sydney Harbour.

Seven must-see shows in April

From West Side Story’s Tony and Maria on Sydney Harbour to Tom Gleeson’s return to stand-up in Melbourne, entertainment options are hot next month.

Common hormones used for contraception linked to brain tumours

Experts say a new French study should be a timely reminder to women to review their contraceptive needs periodically.

This week’s edits of lovely little luxuries: faded leather to champagne

From a reimagined Hermès work bag to a clever way to transport your French champagne, we have inspired suggestions for you.

Think you know this week’s news? Answer these 10 questions

Have you been paying attention this week? Test your knowledge across politics, business and world news.

The lovely colonial cornices and world-famous hospitality have changed little in Raffles’ 137 years.

Here’s what you get in a $1700 butler-serviced hotel room

At Singapore’s legendary Raffles Hotel, butlers are expected to anticipate your needs.

From the gallery