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Lowy’s lament: ‘I know how insidious antisemitism can be’

Sir Frank Lowy experienced hatred against Jews first hand in Hitler’s Europe, and is shaken by what he now sees “leaking out of decent people” in Australia.

Greens senator Nick McKim is pushing for the cap on the government’s proposed super wealth tax to be lowered to $2 million.

Greens demand $2m threshold for super wealth tax

The Greens have a new list of demands in exchange for their support on Labor’s new tax on high balance super accounts.

Fund managers say the lack of surprises at this week’s Macquarie Australia Conference could mean the economy is showing signs of stability.

Confession season kick-off fails to derail ASX run

Fund managers say this year’s Macquarie Australia Conference was among the least eventful in recent memory – and that may be a good sign for investors.

Bonza in talks with six buyers despite owing $100m and losing planes

Creditors of the collapsed budget airline were told that it owed more than $100 million to backers, customers and staff after going under late last month.

There’s a bigger story behind Perpetual’s sad break-up

The break-up of Perpetual is a story of mismanagement, but it also speaks to the structural changes sweeping across Australia’s financial sector.

RBA board split in doubt as Libs dig in

The impasse between Jim Chalmers and Angus Taylor means the new RBA interest rate setting board will not be up and running by its planned start date of July 1.

Energy pushes ASX higher, Life360 falters

Shares lift; Suncorp homeloans up; QBE premium increases help results; Helia in $100 million share buyback, Upbeat outlook for St Barbara. Follow updates here.

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review

Silicon Valley Bank failed in March last year.

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.

  • 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.

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.

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

Anglo American Platinum is part of the mining giant that would be spun off under BHP’s proposal.

Investors urge caution as Rio Tinto eyes BHP’s $40b Anglo bid

Rio Tinto should not challenge BHP for control of Anglo American, and should instead target smaller lithium and copper producers, a major investor says.

Life360 co-founder Chris Hulls and chief financial officer Russell Burke are preparing the tracking company for the US IPO.

Life360 reheats plans to target US investors with Nasdaq listing

The ASX-listed, San Francisco-based family-tracking app does not expect to raise more than $US100 million. It had considered a similar move in 2021.

Anglo American’s Woodside project in the United Kingdom has been in development for several years. The final cost could be as high as $US9 billion.

BHP’s Anglo American bid clouds Rinehart-backed potash project

The miner had been in talks about selling a big stake in the fertiliser development amid a plunge in prices linked to higher exports from Russia and Belarus.

Tesla chargers

Tesla slashes jobs in Australian charging team

The company’s global cuts have come to Australia, with staff laid off and at least one charger location cancelled.

Stokes’ anti-AFR price rise could breach competition law: Samuel

Billionaire Kerry Stokes has faced political criticism – and calls for an ACCC investigation – for forcing The Australian Financial Review print edition out of his home state of WA.

Gold Road’s takeover grip on $2.3b De Grey loosens

Gold Road’s grip on Australia’s best undeveloped gold mine will loosen after it bought only a portion of its rights in De Grey to keep alive a rival deal.

QBE pumps up Aussie premiums but squeeze slows

At the insurer’s AGM, QBE revealed growth in all commercial markets, including in Australia where premiums went up by 11 per cent, the lowest in 12 months.

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Markets

More than 450 Australians invested about $US41 million ($62 million) in products offered by NGS Crypto.

Crypto miner spruiked 16pc returns for five years without a licence

A Gold Coast cryptocurrency miner was authorised to provide financial services for less than seven months despite operating for six years.

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.

Investors are hoping for more policy support from the Chinese President.

Iron ore’s big China property problem isn’t going away

Pockets of strength in the Chinese steel market have boosted the raw material after a plunge below $US100 a tonne early last month but investors are cautious.

Bank of England boss ‘optimistic’ 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

RBA’s credibility at risk as central banks confront interference

Alleging neutrality while considering lifting rates seems contradictory.

GST and gas show a government that’s still out of tune

A huge GST handout to WA and a report that gives a free pass to the state’s gas industry show how far parochial toadying in the west will go.

Laura Tingle

Columnist

Laura Tingle

China’s grim pattern in South China Sea needs a collective response

A quiet tussle is going on over China’s ambitions to control all of its neighbouring seas. Affected countries need to unite before China miscalculates.

Jennifer Parker

Defence expert

Jennifer Parker

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

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.

Sue Mitchell

Columnist

Sue Mitchell

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

Western Australia’s Treasurer and deputy Premier Rita Saffioti has blamed record migration for a surge in government spending.

‘Unprecedented’ migration blamed for unexpected jump in WA spending

WA’s population is tipped to exceed 3 million next year, with the state’s treasurer blaming record migration levels for unexpected increases in government spending.

Minister for Immigration Andrew Giles.

High Court hands Labor rare win on immigration detention

Immigration Minister Andrew Giles welcomed the ruling in the case of the man known as ASF17, who says he would face persecution if he was sent back to Iran.

The budget that could be make or break for Labor

Jim Chalmers is gearing up for his third and most important budget. If he spends too much and stokes inflation, he knows he’ll own the next rate increase.

Energy funding chopped under weight of Victoria’s debt

Experts say this week’s state budget shows the Victorian government has prioritised major transport projects over the energy transition.

This tree symbolises how Victoria became a financial basket case

After 300 years of withstanding the elements, the River Red Gum in Bulleen forced the North East Link to be redesigned as the cost of the project blows out by billions of dollars.

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World

A tanker arrives in Darwin Harbour to deliver an LNG cargo to Inpex’s Ichthys LNG export project.

Japan’s energy giants applaud Australia’s ‘clear’ gas plan

Japanese energy giant Inpex said the Albanese government’s new gas strategy shows Australia’s role as a “reliable and trusted” partner.

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

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

Former President Donald Trump walks to the courtroom following a break in his trial at Manhattan criminal court on Thursday.

Trump’s long week in court as election looms

Stormy Daniels’ allegations of a sexual encounter with Trump set the courtroom alight this week. How they play into his election chances is unclear.

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.

Why Australia’s long-suffering renters are not alone

Rents are soaring not only in Australia but also in the US, UK and Canada, preventing inflation from declining closer to central banks’ targeted levels.

Property

AFR, 40 Hudson Parade, Clareville, NSW
Supplied 10th May 2024

Simon and Catriona Mordant shoot for record with $16m trophy weekender

The Sydney power couple have listed their Clareville waterfront, which is expected to reset the suburb record.

Liberman family to sell $17m Toorak ‘treehouse’

A glass and steel modernist retreat designed by Robin Boyd has joined Toorak’s prestige market with a guide of $15.9 million to $17 million.

Scentre CEO Elliott Rusanow.

Westfield Bondi owner says shoppers are back after horror attack

Scentre chief executive Elliott Rusanow said the mall operator had increased security spending as it returned to a “different” normal after the fatal attack.

Why Australia’s long-suffering renters are not alone

Rents are soaring not only in Australia but also in the US, UK and Canada, preventing inflation from declining closer to central banks’ targeted levels.

NSW, developers at loggerheads over infrastructure contributions

Scrapping two new developer levies in NSW would clear the way for at least 50,000 extra homes over five years, according to the property industry.

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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

Farmers’ software start-up raises $11m with profitability promise

The Funded blog is the home for news on the tech deals that are done in Australia, as soon as we hear about them.

Why everyone’s mad at Apple’s new iPad ad

Apple’s crushing of human creativity has sparked backlash, but its new iPad Pro ad has also inspired some surprising video responses.

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.

Work & Careers

Telstra boss Vicki Brady

Why so many top executives start in accounting, consulting

BOSS delves into the career paths of the senior executives at Australia’s 20 biggest companies to discover where they started – and the critical skills and experience they gained.

Love or money? What to tell kids about career choice

Do you tell them to do what they love or urge them to become a doctor, accountant or a lawyer because it will provide financial security?

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Life & Luxury

This luxury spa in India costs $17k for five nights. Is it worth it?

We road-test celebrity magnet Ananda Spa in the Himalayas.

xx

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.

International Energy Agency executive director Fatih Birol.

The world’s wiliest climate warrior? It’s not who you think

International Energy Agency boss Fatih Birol, a lifelong bureaucrat with roots in the oil industry, has made the net zero transition a personal mission.

Cult tailor Patrick Johnson opens stupendous new Sydney showroom

Ballroom blitz: A grand building, and a touch of dirty pink, has resulted in a suitably spiffy new CBD space.

“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.

From the gallery