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    Featured Opinion

    A felon in the White House should raise alarm

    Donald Trump’s criminal conviction may not be fatal in America’s upside-down politics. But to the rest of the world it will matter a lot.

    The AFR View

    Editorial

    The AFR View

    It will be a miracle if American democracy survives this election

    Bit by bit, the United States is becoming like some Central American banana republic, where presidents who lose office expect to be jailed by their successors, writes Daniel Hannan.

    Daniel Hannan

    Contributor

    Modi’s authoritarianism will make relations with India harder to handle

    It would be a tragedy and have adverse implications for the West if India’s struggle for internal harmony were to founder on the rocks of majoritarian elective autocracy.

    John McCarthy

    Former Australian ambassador

    John McCarthy

    On the front line of Australia’s foreign student surge

    International students are in the sights of both a government and opposition looking to win votes. Who are these political pawns, and what is it like to teach them?

    Mark Mulligan

    World editor

    Mark Mulligan

    Hysteria over Husic’s call shows what’s wrong with tax debate

    If honesty were to play any part in tax policy, we would all be searching for a way to have a fulsome conversation about our tax system, and how its failing will negatively affect all Australians.

    Michelle de Niese

    Tax reform advocate

    Michelle de Niese

    Forget banks, it’s time to start buying mining stocks

    Money has flowed disproportionately to the big four and Wesfarmers, but headwinds are starting to turn into tailwinds for the resources sector.

    Paul Taylor

    Contributor

    Giles scandal shows we disdain bureaucracies until we need services

    Slashing the capabilities of government departments means that in the real world, dodgy characters escape scrutiny and genuine needs go unanswered.

    Laura Tingle

    Columnist

    Laura Tingle

    Trump’s court is now America’s polling booths

    A New York jury showed that no man is above the law. Their fellow Americans could over-rule that in November.

    Edward Luce

    Columnist

    Edward Luce
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    Boomers continue to cop flak from younger generations, much of it unfairly.

    Criticism of ‘stingy’ Baby Boomers misses the point

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    From 400 red buses in Melbourne to $400m a year and a $4b payday

    Bus company Kinetic is one of Australia’s unheralded success stories. In an industry full of family operators, no one has cracked it like Kinetic’s crew.

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    Sarah Abood of the Financial Advice Association Australia.

    The ghost of Dixon Advisory haunts planning industry

    Financial planners are up in arms about being forced to pay out tens of millions of dollars in compensation to victims of the conflict-riddled wealth management firm.

    • Jonathan Shapiro
    Bank of American analyst David Errington.

    What these veteran analysts focus on when valuing companies

    “Don’t fill my head up with irrelevant nonsense,” says David Errington who, like Brian Johnson and Charlie Green, is focused strictly on the big picture: cost of capital.

    • James Eyers
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    Robert De Niro created one of cinema’s iconic figures as Travis Bickle in Taxi Driver.

    ‘You talking to me?’ De Niro meets the Don on the streets of Manhattan

    Acclaimed actor Robert de Niro has never made a secret of his loathing for Donald Trump.

    • Rowan Dean

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    GYG co-founder and CEO Steven Marks: There will be plenty of interest in the fast-food chain’s IPO.

    Guzman y Gomez’s $2.2b float is a small-target bet on growth

    Much-hyped Mexican fast-food chain GYG has big long-term goals, but its near-term targets are more measured. The debate now will all be about valuation.

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    • James Thomson
    We expect the next official June quarter trimmed mean inflation data to print at least 0.9 per cent to 1 per cent.

    Opportunities aplenty for yield buyers

    There is a rich array of opportunities available for investors searching for relatively safe and liquid yields.

    • Christopher Joye
    Donald Trump and Joe Biden are set to face off again in this year’s presidential election.

    Trump, Biden to seize on verdict in bitter poll campaigns

    The verdict not only stands as a bellwether for how powerful such legal actions against Donald Trump are, but will also define strategies for both sides of politics.

    • Matthew Cranston
    Jack Gance and Mario Verrocchi are set to storm onto the ASX boards.

    Why Chemist Warehouse deal could create a ‘governance Frankenstein’

    The unique family business has a staggering level of related party transactions. How that will work in an ASX-listed company remains unclear. 

    • James Thomson
    Donald Trump has become the first former US president to be found guilty of a crime.

    Trump’s conviction compounds investor uncertainty

    It remains to be seen whether the market’s bullishness can continue now that Donald Trump’s conviction looks set to usher in a period of divisiveness in US politics.

    • Karen Maley
    Gerry Harvey, Jack Cowin and John Van Lieshout have been on the Rich List for decades.

    Ageing Rich Listers approach wealth dispersal watershed

    Forty-five of the 200 Rich List entries, holding about $140 billion in wealth, are aged over 80.

    • The AFR View
    BYD electric taxis at a charging station in Taiyuan, Shanxi province.

    How higher US tariffs are helping China’s competitors

    American tariffs on imports from China will redirect economic activity toward third-country suppliers considered allies.

    • Arvind Subramanian

    There won’t be a reshuffle until there is one

    To move Immigration Minister Andrew Giles, a close factional ally of the Prime Minister and member of his praetorian guard, could cause more problems than it would solve.

    • Phillip Coorey
    Anglo American’s Los Bronces copper mine in central Chile

    Why BHP’s pursuit of hot copper went cold

    The red metal is the new black. A rebuffed BHP has gone back to the drawing board to plot its next move after Anglo American rejected its request for more time.

    • Jennifer Hewett
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    Brookfield has moved on from its Origin experience.

    Brookfield says au revoir to Origin with French mega deal

    Brookfield’s $11 billion French deal will give it a big Australian renewable energy portfolio, just six months after it missed out on Origin Energy.

    • James Thomson
    The Ranger uranium mine in the Northern Territory, owned by ERA, stopped mining in 2012. Now it is a big and costly clean-up job.

    A Takeovers Panel application before a deal? It’s a jolt for Rio

    You can bet Rio Tinto doesn’t like being pushed around by some pipsqueak fund managers, but there’s a lot riding on this bombshell move.

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    Disappointed, but disciplined: BHP chief executive Mike Henry.

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

    The post-mortems are under way, 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.

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    There is a case for imposing a levy on carbon emissions.

    A carbon tax and dividend scheme could be the answer

    Readers’ letters on the pressing need for a carbon tax; why we shouldn’t fear AI; in defence of mortgage brokers; and the reality of climate change.

    In this year’s annual JPMorgan Chase address, Jamie Dimon focused on wars, geopolitics, technology and AI, with climate change only mentioned during question and answers.

    Business has bigger worries than ESG

    One explanation for the seeming decline in discussion about ESG is that it’s something that goes in and out of fashion according to economic conditions.

    • John Roskam