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WA budget

WA infrastructure spending goes ‘up another gear’

Premier Roger Cook has vowed to shift infrastructure spending “up another gear” as the state splashed billions on cost-of-living and housing, to absorb the record 95,000 people who moved west last year.

The ASX is set to open up.

ASX to rise, QBE to report, S&P 500 retakes 5200 mark

Australian shares are set to open higher, boosted by further gains in New York. BoE boss stokes June rate cut hopes. Follow updates here.

ASX CEO Helen Lofthouse told staff earlier in the year she was making some “hard decisions” to prioritise the most “strategic and efficient” outcomes for the company.

Cabal of industry super funds, led by investors, weighed ASX takeover

The ASX is an essential piece of infrastructure, and has a quasi-monopoly position, a description that would fit Sydney Airport, for instance, which went private in a $23.6 billion takeover.

Australia doesn’t need nukes: International Energy Agency boss

The global energy tsar says Australia should play to its strengths in renewables. But the net-zero champion also backs carbon capture, and the role of gas.

Labor goes to war with Meta in far-reaching inquiry

Zuckerberg and Musk could face parliament; Wong undecided on UN Palestine vote; PM backs Victoria’s most expensive road. Follow updates live.

Business loan demand spikes, keeping inflation fears alive

CBA, the country’s largest lender, says a strong labour market is driving “robust” demand from companies, which could push up prices, economists warn.

Trump asked oil CEOs for $1.5b donations in exchange for favours

The former president demanded $US1 billion in donations to get re-elected and offered to overturn environmental rules and policies to help the oil industry.

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  • Analysis
  • EU
Europe’s far right is becoming mainstream.

Europe’s far right is becoming mainstream

Anti-immigration parties with fascist roots, and an unclear commitment to democracy, are emerging as Europe’s new leaders, the New York Times reports.

Former US president Donald Trump enters the Manhattan Criminal Court this week.

Campus protests may help Donald Trump win

History suggests the intellectual conformism sweeping university life could trigger a popular backlash that ends in conservative rule.

Benjamin Netanyahu at a ceremony marking Holocaust Remembrance Day at Yad Vashem, the World Holocaust Remembrance Centre, in Jerusalem on Monday.

Can the ICC actually arrest Benjamin Netanyahu?

The International Criminal Court is entitled to judge Israeli and Hamas officials, writes one of its former presidents.

Good banks today want to be seen as boring

Regional US financial institutions are promoting themselves as stodgy, stuffy and dull in response to industry failures.

Big US companies are pulling back diversity policies

Facing a legal, social and political backlash, America’s diversity, equality and inclusion industry is starting to reassess and rebrand.

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

Households are increasingly optimistic about their financial position. But retail spending remains weak.

Shares smashed as optimistic shoppers prove no match for retail weakness

JB Hi-Fi and Baby Bunting were among stocks to slide amid disappointing earnings. But new Barrenjoey analysis suggests that the worst may have passed.

The PSC deal was struck on Wednesday.

PSC takeover delivers $350m payday for insurance broker

Analysts say Ardonagh’s offer of $2.3 billion for the Melbourne-based insurance broker represents an “attractive multiple” as chairman Paul Dwyer realises a huge windfall.

Mining titan Evy Hambro says it’s time to buy, rather than build

One of the world’s most influential mining investors, BlackRock’s Evy Hambro, has signalled he is open to M&A as BHP hunts Anglo American.

Orica Kooragang island facility

Federal government backs gas imports to southern states

The extra gas will need to be delivered from the northern states from a retooled national gas network or LNG import terminals.

Half-priced detergent every few weeks? Shoppers can smell a rat

Deep food and grocery discounts have become increasingly popular with consumers, but the cost is unfairly borne by suppliers, prompting calls for change.

Orica says lower input costs offsetting fall in revenues

The commercial explosives maker has reported a 10 per cent increase in earnings, beating analyst estimates.

Perpetual backer Soul Patts says board got a good price out of KKR

The investment company, which holds nearly 15 per cent of Perpetual, believes the trust and wealth businesses have been traded for more than it was ever willing to pay.

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Markets

The biggest overall winner from the magnificent seven’s recent rally is Amazon founder Bezos, who netted about $US8.5 billion unloading stock over less than two weeks in February.

Bezos, Zuckerberg lead magnificent seven insider stock sales

Almost a dozen executives and directors at the firms recently boosted their share sales, earning more than $242 million since late 2023.

Wall Street.

What happened overnight? Wall Street extended its rally

Australian shares were set to edge higher as US equities lifted, helped in part by solid demand for the sale of 30-year government bonds.

Maple Brown-Abbott Garth Rossler, Vertium Asset Management Jason Teh, Lazard Aaron Binsted and Atlas Funds Management’s Hugh Dive.

Stock rally ‘too good to be true’, warn CIOs

Investment chiefs say the market looks too expensive given the uncertain economic backdrop and that there’s good reason to be cautious for the rest of this year.

Bank of England boss ‘optimistic’ that interest rate cuts are coming

The BoE left its benchmark unchanged at 5.25 per cent but the UK economy is looking ripe for a rate cut.

New Bridgewater chief ‘rewires’ world’s largest hedge fund

Nir Bar Dea says he had overhauled the firm after just a year in charge, in a bid to restore investment performance and mark a break from founder Ray Dalio.

Opinion

Budget week is time for Dutton to roll a few Jaffas down the aisle

In the same week Peter Dutton went in to bat for the koalas, Labor flew the flag for gas.

Phillip Coorey

Political editor

Phillip Coorey

Sad halting of the press in WA

The Australian Financial Review has built a publishing model based on premium digital subscriptions. But it is still sad that from May 22, no one in Western Australia will be able to read a hard copy version.

The AFR View

Editorial

The AFR View

No place for antisemitic incitement on campus

The protests that reduce the complex history of the Middle East to simplistic anti-Zionist slogans hardly align with universities’ founding institutional mission.

The AFR View

Editorial

The AFR View

Labor locks gas firmly into energy transition

The Future Gas Strategy reaffirms a strong role for gas, but despite the title it is light on ideas to get there.

The AFR View

Editorial

The AFR View

Why Albanese is going all in on gas

The Labor government has infuriated climate activists by insisting that gas will play a crucial role in the energy transition for many decades to come. Big producers like Woodside will wait to see what that means.

We will need new sources of gas

Australia is committed to reaching net zero emissions by 2050, and we will need gas to get there.

Madeleine King

Resources Minister

Madeleine King

Reports

BOSS Best Places to Work

The awards celebrate the achievements of the best small, medium and large organisations and nine sector winners.

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Politics

Resources Minister Madeleine King has always argued internally that there can be no energy transition without gas as a firming fuel,

New gas projects receive support amid Labor unease

Resources Minister Madeleine King has backed the development of the Narrabri gas field in NSW, and the Queensland Labor government has given the green light to four new projects in the Bowen Basin.

Meta chief executive and founder Mark Zuckerberg will not renew deals with publishers worth more than $210 million over three years.

Labor goes to war with Meta in far-reaching inquiry

Facebook boss Mark Zuckerberg and X owner Elon Musk could be called on to face federal parliament, as part of a new inquiry into social media algorithms.

Investment in business is expected to  slow down in the near term.

Budget tips business investment to slow

The recovery in business investment is tipped to slow markedly in federal budget forecasts, as a cooling economy forces firms to reassess capital expenditure plans.

Behind the PM’s $3b ‘bailout’ of Victoria’s most expensive road

Experts blame a $10 billion blowout for the North East Link on CFMEU disruptions, a failed tender process and crazy design decisions to pander to community groups.

Federal government backs gas imports to southern states

The extra gas will need to be delivered from the northern states from a retooled national gas network or LNG import terminals.

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World

Biden told Netanyahu last month, following the killing of World Central Kitchen aid workers in an Israeli strike, that ongoing US support for the war would depend on new steps to protect civilians.

‘We’ll fight with our fingernails’: Netanyahu hits back at Biden

The Israeli prime minister said the country was prepared to stand alone if necessary if it attacks Rafah to further its destruction of Hamas.

Israeli soldiers work on armored military vehicles at a staging ground near the Israeli-Gaza border.

Biden says US will not supply weapons for attack on Rafah

The US president’s ultimatum is aimed at trying to deter Israel’s planned operation in Gaza.

America’s largely unified political left is sustaining momentum.

How the US Supreme Court became a political organisation

When judges make decisions that should be left to politicians, they undermine democracy.

Russia not looking for global power clash: Putin

Vladimir Putin now casts the war as part of a holy struggle with the West, which he says has forgotten the role played by the Soviet Union in defeating Nazi Germany.

‘Show leadership’: Palestinian plea ahead of key UN vote

The Albanese government is being lobbied heavily over whether to support a symbolic vote upgrading Palestine to full membership of the UN.

Property

The lower end of the housing market could get even more competitive in the coming months according to experts.

Why $800,000 homes are in hot demand

Competitive pressure is building up in this segment of the market as investors and first-home buyers return in droves.

CEO Greg Goodman.  The China market is weaker.

Goodman’s data centre push gathers speed

Occupancy across Goodman’s China portfolio was 93 per cent over the March quarter, compared with 98 per cent across its overall portfolio.

Holding up construction: Australia has too few workers to build the homes it needs. But it also has a productivity problem, economists say.

Government’s $91m tradie plan only ‘modest’ boost for home building

Australia’s target of 1.2 million new homes is a crisis of surging demand and a construction workforce facing its own demographic challenges.

Dutch pension fund giant puts $700m into Sydney build-to-rent start-up

Apt.Residential has won the backing of PGGM, which has committed $700m to the rollout of 2500 apartments.

Cotton On CFO lists Melbourne mansion with a contemporary twist

Cotton On CFO Michael Hardwick and his wife Diana have put their Melbourne mansion on the market guiding up to $13.75m after a major renovation.

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Wealth

ASIC’s Simone Constant says super funds found evidence of fees being charged but no service delivered.

ASIC finds super funds still charging fees for no service

Super funds are obliged to ensure members are only charged for financial advice they actually receive but not all are doing so.

A smarter way to tax high super balances

The government has tried to keep things simple, but in doing so fairness has gone out the window.

Coalition to oppose ‘sophisticated investor’ test overhaul

Labor is grappling with backlash from the start-up sector over calls to limit access to venture capital to investors worth more than $4.5 million.

Technology

While all countries will need to cut greenhouse gas emissions if the world is to limit global warming, many of the poorest are struggling with ever-stretched budgets.

The $13.6 trillion question: how do we pay for the green transition?

The private sector will have to provide about 70 per cent of climate finance globally, and the heat is building on governments to deliver policies that do that.

Larry Marshall speaks at CEDA’s climate and energy forum.

Ex CSIRO boss would pick different ‘winners’ in $1b quantum push

Larry Marshall, former CEO of CSIRO, says taxpayer money should be targeted at points in the quantum computing supply chain, not the finished product.

Emma Foley is Uber’s new Australian managing director, while Ed Kitchen will run Uber Eats.

New Uber bosses to see through gig economy transition

There will be new heads of both Uber and Uber Eats in Australia, ahead of gig economy rules that threaten to significantly raise its cost of doing business.

Work & Careers

Former human resources executive Donna Young.

Accenture warned of ‘$40m back-pay risk’ for overtime

A former human resources executive claims she warned Accenture’s board it was at risk of having to pay up to $40 million to staff who worked excessive hours.

Why this executive uses generative AI every second hour

Microsoft says workers who use AI can be divided into four camps: sceptics, novices, explorers and power users, who get back more than 30 minutes a day in time saved.

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Life & Luxury

The colour of Copperstone’s exterior render is a nod to the local volcanic soil.

Byron Bay’s Lane family open doors to luxury equine estate

The line between Tom and Emma Lane’s passions – luxury estates and horses – are exhilaratingly blurred at their latest lavish retreat, Copperstone.

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How to host a business lunch

The lowdown on what to do – and what not to do – from three hosts who are legends in their own business lunch times.

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.

“Thanks to Dr Google, everybody thinks they’ve got ADHD,” says the ADHD Foundation’s Christopher Ouizeman.

Is it time to stop talking about mental illness?

I believe many young people are being encouraged to frame normal experiences as psychiatric conditions. There are even financial motivations.

FliteBoard

This week’s pick of luxuries: foiling surfboards to fancy chandeliers

For the sporty type to the redecorator or wardrobe refresher, we have inspired suggestions for you.

From the gallery