Skip to navigationSkip to contentSkip to footerHelp using this website - Accessibility statement
  • Advertisement
    AUDUSD0.6611
    -0.0002 (-0.03%)-0.03%
    S&P/ASX 2007,626.40
    -39.20 (-0.51%)-0.51%
    All Ords7,896.10
    -39.60 (-0.50%)-0.50%
    NZX 504,420.59
    -18.60 (-0.42%)-0.42%
    Hang Seng18,477.01
    -344.15 (-1.83%)-1.83%
    Nikkei37,881.48
    -675.39 (-1.75%)-1.75%
    View all

    Australia’s 10 richest people revealed

    Gina Rinehart has broken through the $40 billion barrier, topping the Rich List for the fifth time. The 10 wealthiest are worth $223 billion in 2024, up $7 billion from last year.

    BHP’s Mike Henry and Duncan Wanblad, his Anglo American counterpart.

    Inside BHP’s failed tilt for Anglo – and what comes next

    The post-mortems are underway, but two things are already clear: the tight time frame was never going to be enough and BHP’s inability to win over Anglo shareholders eventually killed the deal.

    Thames Water’s big stink: Is Macquarie to blame?

    The crisis in England’s water sector is coming to the boil. Macquarie, with more than $3 billion invested and its UK reputation on the line, will be feeling the heat.

    ASX drops as sell-off deepens; Elders rises after beef ban lifted

    Australian shares open lower in line with losses in New York. Catapult Sports rallies on results. BHP tracks miners lower. Follow here for more.

    China lifts ban on Australian beef exports

    Five major beef exporters will be able to resume exporting meat to China with immediate effect; Immigration Minister Andrew Giles defends his position; Ukrainian president urges Australia to attend peace summit.

    Israel seizes control of Gaza border with Egypt, cutting off Hamas

    Israel said it has secured control of Gaza’s southern border with Egypt and discovered numerous smuggling tunnels, in moves that raised tensions with its neighbour.

    Former PwC partner sues firm for allegedly linking him to tax scandal

    Richard Gregg alleges people have shunned and avoided him because of an implication by PwC that he was involved in the tax leaks scandal, when he was not.

    Advertisement

    rich list

    More than half of the debutants on the 2024 Rich List are already billionaires.

    More than half the 11 new Rich Listers are already billionaires

    Two cryptocurrency giants, an under-the-radar mattress mogul, a former mechanic and an ex-NRL player are among 17 new and returning faces on this year’s Rich List.

    How the Turner women are creating a legacy beyond Flight Centre

    Graham Turner may have turned Flight Centre into a household name, but wife Jude and daughter Jo have a different approach to business.

    What Rich Listers think about money – and what they teach their kids

    Nine of Australia’s wealthiest people reflect on their journey with money and whether material success leads to a rich life.

    Rich Lister Terry Snow steps away from the cockpit

    At 79, the Canberra property dynamo behind Canberra Airport is finally stepping down from active roles. His son Tom will now chair the airport board.

    Rich Lister Wes Maas’ three rules for business decisions

    The former NRL player has built a billion-dollar company through hard work and diversification.

    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

    Duncan Stewart entering Melbourne Magistrate’s Court on Wednesday.

    Kidman Resources boss ‘likely’ source of insider information, court hears

    The corporate cop claims Martin Donohue “is the most likely source” of inside information relied on by his brother-in-law Duncan Stewart to buy shares in the firm.

    At Westpac, ANZ and NAB, about six out of every 10 new mortgages come from the broker channel.

    Don’t believe the banks, mortgage brokers are a good deal: Jefferies

    Jefferies analyst Matthew Wilson argued that “the proverbial genie was let out of the bottle” and “we doubt banks can successfully in-source this craft”.

    Guzman y Gomez co-founder quits board as it pursues IPO

    The Mexican-themed chain has recently lured new investors at a $1.73 billion valuation and is backed by TDM Growth Partners and Barrenjoey Capital Partners.

    Gran Samuel CEO Damien Elias.

    Grant Samuel recruits ex-Goldman Sachs banker for Hong Kong expansion

    The investment bank’s chief executive, Damien Elias, believes Asia is ripe for disruption because the region houses fewer boutique advisory shops.

    News Corp unveils major restructure, with editors shown the door

    The restructure is aimed at saving up to $65 million, will likely result in north of 100 redundancies, in one of the biggest overhauls of the Murdoch family’s publishing and broadcast empire in decades.

    CEOs to Labor: Cut taxes and tech investment will ramp up

    Dennison Hambling of security monitoring company IMG says Australia is five to 10 years behind other countries and a corporate tax rate cut would free up capital to make bolder investments.

    Fisher & Paykel leaves pandemic behind as respirator demand grows

    Earlier this year, Vertium Asset Management’s Jason Teh put the New Zealand-based group on his list of turnaround prospects. Issues at its rival are helping.

    Companies in the News

    Search companies

    View stories and data from an ASX listed company

    Markets

    Another hot inflation print has economists worried the Reserve Bank of Australia may need to raise rates again.

    No rate cuts until December 2025 as inflation stops falling

    Investors have pushed back the timing for the RBA’s first cash rate cut after inflation edged higher for a second straight month.

    Another hot inflation print has economists worried the Reserve Bank  may need to raise rates again.

    RBA ‘one bad inflation report’ away from hiking, say economists

    Yields rose and equities sank on Wednesday, after another hot inflation print fanned rate rise worries among Australia’s traders and economists.

    The US sold $US44 billion of seven-year notes at 4.650 per cent — above the pre-auction level of 4.637 per cent, Bloomberg reported.

    What happened overnight? US bond yields rose and hope for rate cuts further faded

    All three main US equity benchmarks closed lower though Nvidia extended its rally. A third auction of US debt this week failed to inspire enthusiasm.

    Why the big four banks keep wrong-footing the market

    Investors are asking whether analysts jumped the gun by advising clients to sell bank stocks, as the lenders continue to defy bearish views on their valuations.

    How to set up your portfolio for the next decade, according to Goldman

    The traditional 60:40 portfolio has rallied off its deathbed thanks to surging stocks and bond yields. But Goldman Sachs says what comes next might look very different.

    Opinion

    Investors find little to celebrate as focus shifts to US election

    Investors are becoming increasingly anxious that massive US government deficits and increasing tariffs represent a dangerous inflationary cocktail.

    Karen Maley

    Columnist

    Karen Maley

    Banks are at war with each other, not mortgage brokers

    The major lenders’ market share is not being “taken” by the mortgage broking industry. It is being taken by more than 100 other lenders in the market, writes Anja Pannek.

    Anja Pannek

    CEO of Mortgage & Finance Association

    Anja Pannek

    Taxpayers are poorer without a carbon tax

    Instead of imposing a carbon levy on polluters to fund big personal income tax cuts, governments are gambling taxpayer money on climate and energy projects, writes John Kehoe.

    John Kehoe

    Economics editor

    John Kehoe

    Why we commemorate D-Day 80 years on

    The Red Army did most of the dying and killing necessary to smash Hitler’s Wehrmacht but the Normandy landings were the decisive military event of war in the West.

    Max Hastings

    Contributor

    Three reasons the Trump train is unstoppable

    Halting the former US president is proving very difficult for Joe Biden as the rivals head towards November’s election.

    Edward Luce

    Columnist

    Edward Luce

    Global expansion vision survives Lendlease exit

    It’s a myth that Australian companies don’t do well overseas. Yet, it is hard not to be disappointed at this ebbing of an Australian company with vision in its blood from the start.

    The AFR View

    Editorial

    The AFR View

    Reports

    The future of financial advice

    This special report looks at options to make financial advice more accessible and affordable, including robo-advice, as well as tips for the new financial year.

    Sponsored

      by CommBank
    Advertisement

    Politics

    The exporters included large operations in south-east Queensland and NSW.

    China drops most Australian beef export bans

    Just two Australian beef exporters remained locked out of the Chinese market, the latest thawing in the long-running trade dispute between Beijing and Canberra.

    It is “curious” and “illogical” to consider capping super funds’ ASX holdings, Karen Chester says.

    ‘Radical, illogical’ cap on super ASX stakes would cost savers

    Instead of helping Australians buy ASX shares, a cap as proposed by Andrew Bragg would just help foreign capital own more of the market, industry experts warned.

    Palestinians fleeing from the southern Gaza city of Rafah during an Israeli ground and air offensive in the city on Tuesday, May 28, 2024.

    Greens will demand Palestinian statehood if there’s a hung parliament

    As political skirmishing over the Israeli-Palestinian conflict continued, immigration officials revealed more than 60 per cent of visa applications by Gazans are being rejected.

    Chalmers wrong on Husic’s corporate tax call: experts

    Business leaders and tax watchers say overdue changes to corporate rates could be a good place to start a major reform push.

    Competitive tensions abound on policy and ambition

    Jim Chalmers wants to be Labor leader one day. Cabinet colleague Ed Husic’s public intervention on company tax policy this week shows he’ll have to work for it.

    SPONSORED

    World

    Donald Trump at his hush-money trial.

    Trump trial jurors end first day of deliberations without verdict

    The former president compared himself to a saint as he left the court earlier in the day: “Mother Teresa could not beat these charges. These charges are rigged.”

    Donald Trump has praised billionaire Elon Musk.

    Trump mulls ‘advisory role for Musk’ if he wins White House

    The pair have held talks on a possible advisory role for the Tesla billionaire in a Trump presidency, a sign their once-frosty relationship has thawed.

    Chickens outside the Orussey market, in Phnom Penh, Cambodia

    The disease detectives trying to keep the world safe from bird flu

    Frontline work in low-income countries is increasingly vital to a global system to detect viruses that jump between animals and humans, the way COVID-19 did.

    IMF lifts China growth forecast but warns on trade war

    The International Monetary Fund said it was raising its forecast for the country’s gross domestic product growth in 2024 to 5 per cent from 4.6 per cent.

    Key clients desert PwC China as big four rivals circle

    The accounting firm is under a cloud over audits of the distressed property developer Evergrande, and it faces severe penalties.

    Property

    Rich Lister Sam Arnauot’s Iris Capital has commenced building its V&A luxury tower at Broadbeach.

    Interstate buyers drive $600k rise in new Gold Coast apartment prices

    Interstate investors drove the average price of a Gold Coast apartment purchased off-the-plan to $1.73 million in the March quarter.

    Lendlease sells US construction business days after strategy reset

    The development giant had on Monday outlined plans to progressively offload its international construction and property assets as investor unrest mounted.

    The value of residential completions has fallen for two succesive quarters.

    Home construction activity nears two-year low amid tradie shortages

    Builders are struggling to find tradies to complete homes as new ABS data shows a second successive quarterly fall in the value of completed residential work.

    Rising house prices, mortgage stress spark short-term resale

    Recent home buyers are selling up their properties in droves to cash in on the recent windfall or to get out of financial trouble.

    Why Lendlease couldn’t grow like Westfield or Goodman

    The developers’ mantra “think global, act local” makes sense but too often the offshore investments, by Lendlease and many others, have lacked discipline.

    Advertisement

    Wealth

    Bonuses, the sale of shares or property and redundancy payments can push you into Division 293 territory.

    I’m a high earner about to encounter Division 293 tax. What can I do?

    The best strategy is to reduce your taxable income below $250,000 by claiming allowable deductions such as donations to charity.

    Why shopping centres are a good investment prospect

    Population growth, a robust employment market and rising incomes will stoke retail spending, and much of the extra money will end up in shopping centres.

    Baby Boomers are loaded. Why are they so stingy?

    Recent evidence has cast doubt on the notion that a spending splurge by those born between 1946 and 1964 is on the way.

    Technology

    Chatbots are already used in the airline industry.

    Why fake women are a popular use of our powerful new tech

    The author of a new book about artificial intelligence says AI is not evil, but has no moral compass.

    Leonardo Ai founder says his program will allow plenty of bad art to be made.

    Here are all the best AI uses from a day talking about it

    Will it be useful or “just cool”? Executives and industry insiders spent the AI Summit discussing how they are already using artificial intelligence in their work.

    OpenAI CEO Sam Altman is on the safety and security board dealing with

    OpenAI is training a model with human brain power

    The start-up said it expected the new model to bring “the next level of capabilities” as it strove to build a machine that can do anything the human brain can do.

    Work & Careers

    Ian Lilley has recently come back from parental leave.

    Why dads take less time off than mums

    Gender stereotypes are discouraging men from taking paid parental leave, a survey has found, making it harder for Australia to close the gender pay gap.

    CFMEU redundancy fund push sparks call for worker choice

    Builders are calling for workers to have the right to choose their own redundancy fund in response to a CFMEU push to oust a fund that returned thousands of dollars to workers.

    Advertisement

    Life & Luxury

    Broadway royalty Patti LuPone, known for her role as Evita, is bringing her ‘musical memoir’ to Australia.

    Seven shows you don’t want to miss in June

    From the original ‘Evita’ to Coppélia set in the Adelaide Hills, here’s our pick of the top performances and exhibitions around Australia.

    Mexican ceramicist Andrés Anza and his winning creation, ‘I only know what I have seen’.

    How this spiky sculpture got the fashion world swooning

    Among those stopped in their tracks by Mexican ceramicist Andrés Anza’s indefinable work was Pharrell Williams. But, in the end, it’s nothing, says the winner of the Loewe Craft Prize.

    Fashion designer John Galliano is a pathological exhibitionist.

    Movie review: High & Low – John Galliano is a breathless ride

    This documentary tracks the rise and fall and rehabilitation of the acclaimed fashion designer, whose grotesque extravagance was no impediment to success.

    Gabriel Jakob in action. “I train six times a week, with a combination of sprinting, gym training and high intensity interval-style workouts.”

    The CEO who’s also a seriously elite World Masters sprinter

    He’s 42 and took up sprinting only recently, but Hyper Capital’s Gabriel Jakob recently clocked 6.70 seconds over 60 metres.

    How much pasta should you eat?

    Do you have ‘portion distortion’? Here’s how big your dinner should be

    Our appetites and waistlines have been growing at an alarming rate over the past few decades. But there are ways to bring your dinners back under control.

    From the gallery