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    Opposition Leader Peter Dutton and his climate and energy spokesman, Ted O’Brien, on Monday.

    Dutton’s climate gamble carries domestic and global risks

    Peter Dutton’s climate switch will do nothing whatsoever to help win back the teal seats which he needs to form government, writes Phillip Coorey.

    Israeli forces free four hostages in Gaza assault

    Israel rescued four hostages held by Hamas in a raid in Gaza that Palestinian officials said was one of the single bloodiest assaults of the eight-month-old war.

    Friends of Almog Meir celebrate outside the Sheba Medical Centre after he was rescued.

    For many Israelis, freeing of hostages was a reason to celebrate

    Jubilant crowds gathered spontaneously, cheering, singing and waving Israeli flags outside the homes of the four freed hostages.

    Silence is not golden when it comes to Defence

    Defence’s culture of secrecy can sometimes cause more trouble than it’s worth. It became obvious again this week, writes Andrew Tillett.

    Domestic violence leave has been law for a year. Almost no one uses it

    Employers are being urged to do more for victim survivors of domestic violence after a survey revealed new leave entitlements were hardly being used.

    A win for democracy as Modi’s BJP is taken down a peg

    The surprising result should put to bed claims that India’s democracy is under threat, says former high commissioner Barry O’Farrell.

    The buyers jumping into Australia’s housing market

    Even with 16 straight months of gains and repeated records for house prices, buyers appear willing to take their chances. The question is why.

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    Weekend Reads

    Sir Gerard Brennan of the High Court

    The man who made ‘saintly’ judge lose his cool

    A biography of Sir Gerard Brennan reveals the family man who will be remembered for his Mabo judgment.

    Malala Yousafzai makes her acting debut in “We Are Lady Parts” season 2.

    The creative force who persuaded Malala to appear in a comedy show

    The creator of “We Are Lady Parts’, a show about an all-girl punk band, wants people to see Muslim women as more than trauma victims.

    We played fast and loose with the facts, particularly regarding Donald Trump.

    How Donald Trump was created by a reality TV show

    The Apprentice was an American fraud that ballooned beyond its creators’ wildest imaginations, one of the producers of the show says.

    Long walk to treaty resumes in a fractured federation

    The Albanese government has backed away from a promise to strike a treaty with Indigenous Australians. In a federal policy vacuum, some states are picking up the baton.

    A win for democracy as Modi’s BJP is taken down a peg

    The surprising result should put to bed claims that India’s democracy is under threat, says former high commissioner Barry O’Farrell.

    smart investor

    AFR

    Nine tips for creating a successful family dynasty

    Most dreams of creating a family dynasty are dashed within decades but a solid succession plan can save money and grief.

    Capital city home buyers now need a deposit of at least $100,000.

    $100,000 may be the new norm for city home deposits

    With a standard 20 per cent deposit, Australians need to have saved a median of $100,000 to enter the property market in capital cities.

    The tax on super above $3 million would be on top of the standard 15 per cent tax that is generally paid on tax-concessional contributions by most people.

    Why the proposed new $3m super tax is simpler than you think

    But the devil is in the detail, so the potential for complexity lies in how the “proportion” and “earnings” amounts are worked out.

    The zombie corporate apocalypse has arrived

    Nothing is OK about the rate of delinquencies in Australia and overseas. And it is only going to get much worse as rates stay high.

    First home buyers have two weeks to score $12,000 tax break

    Advisers say borrowers would be mad not to take advantage of the First Home Super Saver Scheme, but perceived complexity is turning them off.

    Get the front page and latest edition of the Financial Review as it was printed, delivered to your inbox every morning.

    Sign up for the Today’s Paper newsletter

    Companies

    ANZ’s suspected market manipulation could have cost taxpayers $80m

    As part of its investigation, regulators have interviewed executives and traders about unusually large profits from a $14 billion transaction in April last year.

    Nine board meets hours after Costello incident with journalist

    Nine Entertainment’s board met on Friday morning to discuss an altercation between its chairman and a journalist the night before.

    Qantas has made much of upgrading its aircraft cabins on Project Sunrise flights, with more first class options and roomier economy seats.

    Selling Sunrise: Inside Qantas’ 22-hour ultra-long-haul flight

    Can Qantas boss Vanessa Hudson pull off her predecessor’s dream of non-stop travel between Sydney, Melbourne and London? Getting this right will be key.

    Merrricks Capital’s Adrian Redlich.

    Fortunes to be made as the private credit boom is going public

    Once a cottage industry, private credit is now attracting billions of dollars, reshaping the financial system and minting new fortunes.

    Households cut into mortgage repayments as family budgets tighten

    Existing mortgages are blowing out amid broader pressure on household spending and little indication that the Reserve Bank will lower rates.

    How the land rights game changed with Juukan Gorge

    Since the destruction of Juukan Gorge by Rio Tinto in 2020, there is a higher bar for native title agreements and increased approval times.

    Bernie Brookes’ retail business emerges from administration

    The ex-Myer boss owns Colette and The Daily Edited. Just two months ago, his business was tipped into voluntary administration, but has emerged a much smaller group.

    Companies in the News

    Search companies

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    Markets

    Traders on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange.

    Strong US jobs growth dashes hopes of interest rate cut

    Wall Street stocks ended slightly lower after stronger-than-expected US jobs data prompted traders to slash bets on an interest rate cut in September.

    US President Joe Biden speaks about manufacturing jobs at a computer chip factory in Michigan last November.

    US adds far more jobs than expected in sign of economic health

    US employers added a vigorous 272,000 jobs in May, as the economy showed resilience that will prove a boost to President Joe Biden.

    Christine Lagarde, president of the European Central Bank.

    ECB’s inflation worries have traders fearing a rate cut go-slow

    The European Central Bank dropped interest rates to 3.75 per cent after saying the inflation outlook had improved markedly. But, it was stickier than expected.

    ASX caps best week of 2024 as ECB cuts, commodities gain

    Benchmark rallies 2pc over the week. Life360 hits Nasdaq boards. GQG lifts FUM. IDP Education rebounds. ECB cuts rate.

    Poll toll: election shocks stun investors from India to Mexico

    After surprises in elections around the world, nervous traders are looking to the UK and US where pre-vote polling has also been unpredictable.

    Opinion

    ANZ has a lot at stake as ASIC crawls over its bond trading activities

    The rumblings in the market are that the investigation is making those on all levels of the bank uneasy. If it isn’t, it really should be, writes Jonathan Shapiro.

    Jonathan Shapiro

    Senior reporter

    Jonathan Shapiro

    New age of war hangs over D-Day memories

    If the democracies want to avoid the kind of sacrifices endured by the D-Day generation, then they need to show more resolve than they have.

    The AFR View

    Editorial

    The AFR View

    Why cryptocurrencies are surging again

    Crypto enthusiasts believe bitcoin could soon eclipse its previous record high of close to $US74,000 amid growing cheer about interest rate cuts and hopes of looser regulations.

    Karen Maley

    Columnist

    Karen Maley

    Greens a danger to Australian multiculturalism

    If left or right is allowed to politicise multiculturalism for completely cynical reasons, then it starts to unravel.

    The AFR View

    Editorial

    The AFR View

    Why the RBA won’t copy Canada’s interest rate cut

    The economic and interest rate cycle in Australia is quite different to our Canadian cousins, despite the similarity in the structure of the resources-rich, medium-sized economies.

    John Kehoe

    Economics editor

    John Kehoe

    The politics behind the bipartisan U-turn on international education

    Slashing international student numbers will devastate the business models for universities and many other international education providers.

    Reports

    Driving an electric future

    This Insights Report looks at the benefits and remaining hurdles of broadscale EV adoption from a business and consumer perspective.

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    Politics

    Reserve Bank of Australia deputy governor Andrew Hauser.

    RBA won’t be influenced by Europe and Canada on rate cuts

    “It is probably fair to say that there is some secret sauce here that it is worth being particularly protective of,” says deputy governor Andrew Hauser.

    Trips to Tokyo Disneyland are being offered to NDIS participants

    Revealed: The shady industry taking a holiday on the NDIS

    Unregistered disability service providers are marketing holidays worth up to $20,000 that the taxpayer ends up funding, exposing a fundamental weakness in the NDIS.

    Immigration Minister Andrew Giles had revoked Direction 99.

    Giles junks Direction 99, seeks end to immigration saga

    The opposition says the changes to Ministerial Directive 99 do not go far enough and is vowing tougher action if elected.

    Queensland Labor’s infrastructure bill soars to $107b

    Treasurer Cameron Dick has flagged cost blowouts amid increased infrastructure investments ahead of next week’s state budget.

    The man who made ‘saintly’ judge lose his cool

    A biography of Sir Gerard Brennan reveals the family man who will be remembered for his Mabo judgment.

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    World

    D-Day has been remembered in Normnady.

    Biden warns of new war as D-Day remembered

    This might be the last significant D-Day anniversary to involve living veterans. But it’s the first to be overshadowed by a European territorial war.

    s

    These banks hold the most money in Singapore’s $3.4b scandal

    The last of those arrested for their involvement in Singapore’s biggest laundering case have pleaded guilty, paving the way for the next steps in the scandal.

    Denmark’s Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen was attacked by a man on Friday.

    Danish prime minister attacked, man arrested

    Mette Frederiksen was assaulted by a man in Kultorvet public square in the centre of the Danish capital Copenhagen, local media reported.

    Scared of resigning? An agency can take care of that

    Quitting agencies are springing up across Japan as workers say some companies try to bully employees into staying.

    UK tech tycoon Lynch cleared of HP fraud charges in $16.5b deal

    Entrepreneur Mike Lynch had been extradited to the United States to face a criminal trial over the sale to HP in 2011, ending a mammoth legal saga.

    Property

    The house has stunning views over Sydney harbour.

    Historic waterfront home sells for about $16m in Balmain record

    A historic home fronting Sydney Harbour has sold for about $16 million in Balmain East, making it the most expensive waterfront ever sold on the Balmain peninsula.

    The Light Brigade Hotel stands at the highest point in Paddington.

    Laundys add Sydney’s Light Brigade Hotel to pub empire

    Family patriarch Arthur Laundy says he knows the Light Brigade Hotel well, having ridden his scooter around it as child when his parents owned the nearby Woollahra Hotel.

    Investor loans rose in April at their fastest rate since the Reserve Bank started raising rates in May 2022.

    Investors rush into housing at fastest rate in more than two years

    Tight supply and rising yields – and expectations that will not change any time soon – are drawing investors back into the market.

    Brisbane’s biggest penthouse could beat the city’s $20.5m record

    The Riparian Plaza penthouse was bought off the plan for $7.37m in 2001 by John Pearce, soon after he pocketed $14m from the sale of Collection House shares.

    Apartment sales boom – in the $1 million-plus price range

    Soaring materials and financing costs are making most apartment projects unviable. But there’s a niche of the development market that is booming.

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    Wealth

    The means test is based on residents’ assets and income on the day they move into aged care.

    I have an older-style pension – has the government forgotten about us?

    While legacy income streams were not addressed in the recent federal budget, there are steps you can take to make them easier to work with.

    First home buyers have two weeks to score $12,000 tax break

    Advisers say borrowers would be mad not to take advantage of the First Home Super Saver Scheme, but perceived complexity is turning them off.

    The three types of people most likely to avoid high-end super tax

    A new study shows a quarter of high-income earners tweak their finances to minimise the tax they pay on superannuation, and they are mostly self-employed, trust beneficiaries and women.

    Technology

    Life360 chief executive Chris Hulls rings the opening bell as shares begin trading on the Nasdaq.

    Life360 boss hails ‘Goldilocks’ share price as it debuts on Nasdaq

    But shares in the San Francisco-based company, which makes the popular daily tracking app, closed flat overnight after raising $150 million with the listing.

    Bishop Mar Mari Emmanuel was stabbed during a live-streamed church service at a church in Wakeley in south-west Sydney.

    eSafety drops case against Musk’s X over bishop stabbing video

    The online safety watchdog has abandoned its court case against X after suffering a legal setback.

    X had to shut down searches for “Taylor Swift” in January because the site was flooded with so many faked porn images of the singer.

    Tough jail terms for deepfake porn peddlers under new laws

    The creators and sharers of non-consensual sexually explicit material will face up to seven years’ jail under the new rules, which also put pressure on tech firms.

    Work & Careers

    James Hwang says Japan promised great food and a fantastic culture in addition to cheaper prices than Europe.

    The Aussies fuelling a travel boom that’s defying the cost crunch

    Interest rates and inflation are up, but hundreds of thousands of Australians are still managing to holiday abroad this year – sometimes helped by mum and dad.

    Scared of resigning? An agency can take care of that

    Quitting agencies are springing up across Japan as workers say some companies try to bully employees into staying.

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    Life & Luxury

    The first boat in production by Sam Beck’s KARVE Marine.

    Can’t find the boat you want? For $2.3m, Sam will help you build it

    Property development isn’t always a 9 to 5 job, Sam Beck says, so he created a hobby business custom-building multimillion-dollar catamarans.

    Iris Smit, founder of The Quick Flick, says dupe culture threatens small businesses like her own, and the beauty industry in general.

    Better than the real thing? How beauty dupe culture took over

    Social media and young people hungry for luxurious cosmetics have led to a boom in cheap versions of expensive products. Companies are cashing in on the trend.

    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.

    Emma Lewisham: “Skincare often focuses on repair [but] we focus on prevention.”

    Emma Lewisham wants to fix your skin problems (and help the planet)

    The founder of the eponymous skincare brand left the tech world to create sustainable solutions, rather than just more beauty products.

    Westpac chief economist Luci Ellis having Lunch with the AFR at Regazzi in Sydney’s CBD.

    Westpac’s chief economist Luci Ellis’ sliding doors moment

    It is rare people can point to a single, pivotal, life-changing moment but two events, 30 years apart, have shaped her career.

    From the gallery