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Who are the supermarkets supposed to be ripping off? Farming ain’t what it used to be.

Rise of the corporate farmer changes the supermarket game

Who is growing our food? An influx of institutional capital into farmers and growers suggest the game has changed.

Uber’s barrister has begun its defence against accusations it deliberately set out to harm GoCatch.

Uber was exposed, then it blew the lid off dysfunction at rival

Nobody expected a clean fight when GoCatch called out Uber for huge damages, but startling details in the first week of the trial have left both sides wounded.

It’s Hanwha against the hawks in race for shipbuilder Austal

The Korean conglomerate has made the news plenty of times before and not always in a positive light. Now it wants Australia’s largest defence group.

Iran tells US to step aside so it ‘doesn’t get hit’

US officials in Washington and the Middle East said that they were bracing for possible Iranian retaliation for the Israeli airstrike in Damascus, Syria.

Why Wall Street banks have got it wrong on lithium

Sydney fund manager Ethical Partners says their own modelling shows the battery metal has moved “rapidly back” into balance after last year’s collapse, that will continue to support prices (and the sharemarket).

Judge delivers withering review of Auerbach cameo

Justice Michael Lee didn’t see any “noble” intent on the part or the former Spotlight producer.

British petrol station billionaires face Australian nightmare

Mohsin and Zuber Issa spent $1.7 billion to buy hundreds of Australian petrol stations in 2018 - but are now looking to sell.

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smart investor weekend

The existential test for asset prices will be the next US inflation print.

Next US inflation print could make or break 2024

Investors in aggressively long equities, real estate, junk bonds and private debt have been fervently punting on the likelihood of deep rate cuts this year to bail them out of a heavy procyclical slump.

Is it worth getting a Qantas home loan for the points?

It’s no good getting a ‘free’ one-way ticket to France but having no money to buy yourself a decent pain au chocolat.

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Small caps are ripe for a comeback. Here’s how to pick winners

The life-changing capital gains on offer make the small-cap sector attractive to investors, but success stories are rare among the thousands of companies that bite the dust.

What if my late wife’s pension pushes my super above $3 million?

Reversionary pension law gives surviving spouses time to sort out their super.

What SMSFs need to know as ATO cracks down on illegal access to super

More than $630 million has been accessed illegally from SMSFs. Here’s what you need to know to stay on the right side of the law.

weekend reads

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

Has Netanyahu reached the end of the road?

He is the great survivor of Israeli politics but the killing of seven aid workers in an airstrike this week has drawn heavy flak from normally staunch allies.

In much of the developed world, the attitudes of young men and women are polarising.

Why young men and women are drifting apart

Diverging worldviews between the sexes could affect politics, families and more.

Taylor Auerbach outside the Federal Court in Sydney on Friday.

Seven paid for Lehrmann’s story. Now it is the story

The television network’s pursuit of an interview with the accused rapist has put its tactics on trial.

On NATO’s 75th birthday, old certainties are gone

For Washington and all its allies, the anniversary should involve difficult thinking about ends and means.

How to make money being Paul Keating

Thank god for writing royalties, says Jonathan Biggins, who reckons politics is stuck on repeat and the new puritanism is hard to poke fun at.

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.

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Companies

Lendlease is under pressure to scrap all its international projects.

Lendlease calls in banks as it mulls structural change

The global property developer is facing calls from its major shareholders to carve off its international division. Its advisers are now exploring its options.

Inside the battle for Armaguard and the future of cash

The high-stakes negotiations over the financial future for the cash transit monopoly reached a crescendo over Easter, and became clearer this week.

PwC.

Police investigated sexual assault allegation against PwC employee

A woman is suing PwC Australia under workplace laws. Both parties agreed on Friday to attend mediation.

Santos has won a legal case allowing it to proceed with its Barossa project, close to the Tiwi Islands.

Santos pursues environmentalists that bankrolled Barossa gas protest

The gas producer wants four activist groups to hand over documents that could show who funded litigation against its offshore project north of Darwin.

Allan Gray will disregard proxy advice and back Goyder at Woodside

The investment firm is a big shareholder in the oil and gas giant. It is supporting its climate strategy in the face of opposition from environmentalists.

Rise of the corporate farmer changes the supermarket game

Who is growing our food? An influx of institutional capital into farmers and growers suggest the game has changed.

Richard Goyder’s plight is worth watching

It’s a surprise to see a proxy adviser take on Woodside Energy chairman Richard Goyder. But it is another timely reminder of the way capital markets are headed.

Companies in the News

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View stories and data from an ASX listed company

Markets

Wall Street.

Wall St extends rally after stronger-than-expected jobs data

All three US benchmarks closed higher as traders opted to focus on the economy’s strength, rather than the fading probability of a June rate cut.

Pilbara Minerals’ lithium mine in Western Australia. The company has warned that a fall in lithium price means shareholders shouldn’t expect a dividend in the first half of the year.

Why Wall Street banks have got it wrong on lithium

Sydney fund manager Ethical Partners says their own modelling shows the battery metal has moved “rapidly back” into balance after last year’s collapse, that will continue to support prices (and the sharemarket).

Larry Fink.

‘Unequivocal failure’: Activist fund tries to unseat Larry Fink

Bluebell Capital Partners is proposing to oust the BlackRock founder as chairman of the world’s largest asset manager.

BHP, Rio weigh on ASX shares; oil jumps, GQG gains on rising FUM

Shares pare losses. Middle East spooks investors. GQG lifts FUM. Ripple plans stablecoin launch. APM finds new suitor. Dow drops on Kashkari rates cloud.

Iron ore to end 2024 near $US100 a tonne: Capital Economics

Global steel prices are on “shaky ground” and there’s little reason to expect an increase in demand, according to the London-based firm.

Opinion

Israel must listen to its friends, not defy them

Israel has to show that it is better than the terrorists of Hamas. That means being accountable for its own behaviour.

The AFR View

Editorial

The AFR View

Australia must uphold international law, starting with Israel

We have been too quick to make excuses for Israel, and too slow to push the first principle of adherence to the law.

Laura Tingle

Columnist

Laura Tingle

Next US inflation print could make or break 2024

Investors in aggressively long equities, real estate, junk bonds and private debt have been fervently punting on the likelihood of deep rate cuts this year to bail them out of a heavy procyclical slump.

Tax review to avoid an ‘intergenerational tragedy’

Incremental change is a waste of time. Ken Henry says someone has to grab this thing and get on with it.

The AFR View

Editorial

The AFR View

Are we on the brink of an Asian currency war?

As tensions over China’s push into high-tech manufacturing flare, analysts warn that it’s only a matter of time before China follows Japan’s lead in competitive currency devaluations.

Karen Maley

Columnist

Karen Maley

Reports of China’s demise are exaggerated

The popular theory of “peak China” is based on a misreading of data. And many of its problems are more cyclical than analysts are allowing for.

Geoff Raby

Columnist

Geoff Raby

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.

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Politics

Insurers have made no money on home insurance policies in four years, as the industry warns premiums will continue to soar and put upward pressure on inflation.

Home insurance premiums are up 56pc, but insurers are making a loss

Insurers have made no money on home insurance policies in four years, and the industry warns premiums will continue to soar as natural disasters become more frequent.

Australian aid worker Zomi Frankcom was one of seven workers killed in an Israeli air strike in central Gaza while helping to deliver food.

Israeli officers fired over ‘bungled’ strike that killed aid workers

The Albanese government is unsatisfied with information provided by Israel after a probe into the drone strike that killed Australian aid worker Zomi Frankcom.

Negotiations are continuing between the federal government, major banks and retailers over the future of cash-carrying company Armaguard.

Chalmers reassures on cash supplies after Armaguard meeting

The government wants Armaguard, together with the banks and major retailers, to deal with the challenging economics of the cash distribution industry.

The plan to build the next Who Gives a Crap

Businesses helping deliver social good in the community will get extra help finding critical capital investment, the federal government says.

Internal Labor group chides Plibersek on nature-positive ‘vacuum’

A Labor green group says reforms to environmental laws are an Albanese “election commitment” on an issue Labor members have campaigned for nearly a decade.

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World

Fed chairman Jerome Powell said Wednesday that labour supply and demand have come into better balance, nodding in part to more immigration.

US jobs roar again, probability of June rate cut falls

Nonfarm payrolls advanced 303,000 in March, the most in nearly a year, led by faster hiring in health care, construction, as well as leisure and hospitality.

US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen.

Yellen criticises China over ‘coercive’ moves against US firms

The US Treasury Secretary is at the start of a visit to China that could shape US policy towards the country ahead of the presidential election.

Rupert Murdoch.

Rupert Murdoch relists NYC penthouse at lower price

The triplex in New York’s Flatiron district is priced at $58.5 million, almost 38 per cent lower than when it was first put up for sale in 2022.

New York area hit by biggest quake in 140 years

The preliminary 4.8 magnitude temblor was the strongest in the area since 1884. It occurred near Whitehouse Station, New Jersey.

Bowing to pressure, Israel agrees more aid to Gaza

The agreement came after Joe Biden threatened to alter support for Israel following aid worker deaths in Gaza, during a tense phone call with Israel’s prime minister.

Property

Billionaire Smorgon family to sell family farm Benwerrin

The Toorak-based Smorgons have listed a long-held family farm complete with five-bedroom luxury residence.

NSW Planning Minister Paul Scully in Sydney

The big plan to stop the Sydney exodus

The Minns government will push its zoning reforms, with or without councils’ blessing, as over 70,000 Sydney workers have left for more affordable pastures.

Selling agent Scott Peterson of McGrath said the Kearns’ acreage was one of the best he had seen.

Wallabies great snaps up rural retreat in impulse buy

The former Wallabies captain and his wife, Julie, have emerged as the buyers of a luxury rural retreat in the NSW Central West town of Orange.

Eastern suburbs’ elite sell their trophy mansions

Investors Mutual CEO Damon Hambly and wife Philippa Haydon have listed their Bellevue Hill home for $23 million, while Sue Ingham is downsizing in Darling Point.

Japanese giant to partner on $1.2b build-to-rent portfolio

Cedar Pacific and Sumitomo Forestry will join forces on a $1.2 billion portfolio of build-to-rent towers that will use plenty of timber in their construction.

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Wealth

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Small caps are ripe for a comeback. Here’s how to pick winners

The life-changing capital gains on offer make the small-cap sector attractive to investors, but success stories are rare among the thousands of companies that bite the dust.

The questions real estate agents avoid (but buyers must ask)

Be aware of the many hidden costs associated with buying a new home.

What SMSFs need to know as ATO cracks down on illegal access to super

More than $630 million has been accessed illegally from SMSFs. Here’s what you need to know to stay on the right side of the law.

Technology

Elon Musk gets in a car as he leaves the Tesla Gigafactory on March 13, 2024 near Gruenheide, Germany.

Musk denies axing entry-level Tesla in pursuit of a robotaxi

The promise of a fully autonomous vehicle has long been key to Tesla’s lofty valuation, which has tumbled more than one third so far this calendar year.

Cliff Obrecht: “All investors had the opportunity to sell and got the sell side fully met.”

Canva millionaires made as $US1.6b share sale completes

The design software giant has finalised the first tranche of a share sale it has signalled will reach $3.6 billion, with rich rewards for early staff and investors.

GoCatch co-founder Andrew Campbell arrives at Court on the first day of the trial on Tuesday.

Uber and GoCatch stagger out for round two of court case

Nobody expected a clean fight when GoCatch called out Uber for huge damages, but startling details in the first week of the trial have left both sides wounded.

Work & Careers

Jon Kerr, co-founder of the World Golf Competition, is a firm believer in both the hybrid work model and combining business travel with leisure.

Australians lead the world in business-leisure trips

Aussies are taking business trips nearly twice the length of the global average and Melbourne boss and golfer Jon Kerr is all for it.

Why this boss wants to help pay for childcare

In an Australian first, u&u Recruitment Partners will subsidise the costs of childcare up to ease the financial burden of returning to work.

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Life & Luxury

“Backstage looks different these days”: Frontier Touring chief executive Dion Brandt and chief operating office Susan Heymann

Forget sex, drugs and rock’n’roll: kale and kombucha take over touring

Frontier Touring has a new-look team, but it’s not the only thing in the music biz that has changed.

As prostate cancer surges, Australia breaks new ground

As low and middle-income countries await a surge in prostate cancer, Australia is driving ahead with cutting-edge treatments and new ways of solving old problems.

How to make money being Paul Keating

Thank god for writing royalties, says Jonathan Biggins, who reckons politics is stuck on repeat and the new puritanism is hard to poke fun at.

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.

Users on Chinese social media expressed anger that the Netflix adaptation of ‘The Three Body Problem’ Westernised aspects of the story, and said the show sought to demonise some of the Chinese characters.

The strange Chinese murder behind Netflix’s ‘3 Body Problem’

The billionaire with the film rights to the cult sci-fi novel was killed in a plot “as bizarre as a Hollywood blockbuster”.

From the gallery