Featured Opinion
Li’s visit may be as good as it gets for China ties
Dialogue is vital. But the reality for Labor’s “stabilisation” is that the strategic environment will continue to breed black swans and black elephants crises in the Sino-Australian relationship.
Geopolitical analyst
Why JobKeeper may be part of our productivity problem
An anxious Reserve Bank of Australia is hoping for a pick-up in labour productivity this year to help alleviate the economy’s inflation problem.
Economics editor
Central bankers doing their best to silence rate cut hopes
Investors are responding to high rates with a novel investment strategy – keeping the bulk of their money in cash and using the rest to punt on AI stocks.
Columnist
Mookhey’s NSW budget misinformation
The truth is NSW doesn’t have a revenue black hole. It has a problem with limiting the size of government.
Editorial
Prepare for yet another big EV adoption hurdle
Apartment owners and strata managers are unprepared for the costs and complications of securing building insurance for blocks with electric vehicle owners and charging facilities.
Columnist
Albanese elevates diplomacy over the drum beat of war
Few can doubt the success of ‘stabilisation’ for the Australia-China relationship, but how might it work when applied to the region?
International editor
Five reasons to give first home buyers access to super
If a person owns their house it is equivalent to having sufficient superannuation to service rent for the rest of their lives. Thus, far from eroding superannuation, it is a core part of retirement savings.
Finance academic
The RBA is refusing to act like inflation is a problem
Apparently the Reserve Bank thinks raising rates would trigger a technical recession, so don’t expect our inflation-driven cost-of-living crisis to end soon.
Economics professor
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To list or not to list? IPO may not fly for next Virgin Australia boss
There are plenty of big questions for the airline’s next chief executive – including what the carrier will look like, and how it will be owned, in the long run.
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- Ayesha de Kretser
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How the market lost its mind over the Guzman y Gomez float
The reaction to the fast-food group’s IPO has startled many market watchers. But strip away the memes, hoodies, bulls and bears, and it’s all about valuation.
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- James Thomson
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- The AFR View
End the nuclear ban. Don’t stop renewables
There is a case for considering zero emissions nuclear power but as part of a technology-neutral energy approach to generating reliable baseload power and firmed wind and solar generation.
- The AFR View
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- Nuclear energy
Dutton is ready for a fight over his crazy-brave nuclear play
You only have to consider the political context in which the nuclear power pledge was made to understand the Coalition feels it is a risk worth taking.
- Phillip Coorey
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- Nuclear energy
Dutton’s high-stakes nuclear gamble
The opposition leader is betting big on nuclear power, and Labor is delighted to take on his challenge.
- Jennifer Hewett
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Nuclear debate healthy, shame about the timing
It turns out Peter Dutton is deadly serious about sparking an energy debate. But is this really about nuclear? Big business is scratching its head.
- Anthony Macdonald
- Opinion
- Chanticleer
Why Nvidia’s rise is stunning – and scary
It’s no surprise Nvidia has become the world’s most valuable company, but it’s 43 per cent surge in just a month suggests emotion is driving the stock – and the broader market.
- James Thomson
- Opinion
- Culture wars
The educated elite is destroying America
Progressive culture has spread from the universities to national life, triggering a backlash that benefits political populists such as Donald Trump.
- David Brooks
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- Monetary policy
Fed needs to cut interest rates sooner not later
The delay by the US central bank in easing monetary policy could jeopardise a soft economic landing.
- Mohamed El-Erian
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- Style
Instagram and TikTok are threatened, so fashion is switching channels
Snap, Pinterest and Substack are poised to pick up where other social media platforms once dominated.
- Lauren Sams
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- Income tax
How to cut tax if you have an employee share plan
Don’t assume the taxman won’t come knocking – this is how it works and what you can do to soften the blow.
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Yesterday
- Opinion
- Interest rates
Bullock tiptoes through a political minefield
The Reserve Bank governor has been trying to avoid blaming Canberra and state government budgetary blowouts for fuelling inflation.
- Karen Maley
- Opinion
- The AFR View
RBA holds, but has it done enough?
Even with this tightening bias, the longer inflation remains above target, the more the Reserve Bank’s credibility is challenged.
- The AFR View
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- Chanticleer
RBA’s narrow path is getting narrower. Blame the housing market
The RBA’s concern is that rising household wealth – thanks in large part to strong house price growth – could keep inflation stickier than it wants.
- James Thomson
- Opinion
- NSW budget
Mookhey may need a wages miracle to land this budget
NSW is sucking extra tax out of the asset-rich, property-owning class that has enjoyed a massive asset price boom, to spend more on government services, housing and public sector employees.
- John Kehoe
- Opinion
- Chanticleer
‘I don’t think you can trust me at this point’: CEO’s startling call
Brett Woods has a new plan from the Stokes family playbook and some solid market tailwinds at his back. But it will take time to win Beach Energy investors back.
- James Thomson
- Opinion
- World elections
Le Pen or Melenchon? France faces a bleak choice
Razor-edge polls and tenuous alliances of political convenience point to a fragmented French electorate, volatile politics and uncertain economics.
- Lionel Laurent
- Opinion
- Australian economy
SA donation ban will cut off grassroots democracy
By pushing debate into third-party organisations, South Australian Premier Malinauskas’ proposed election laws would force politics to move to the extremes.
- Adam Stoker
- Opinion
- IPO
What past IPO disasters tell us about Guzman y Gomez’s $2.2b float
The Mexican fast-food chain float has split opinions among Sydney’s investing community, and revealed the deep scars inflicted by failed floats of the past.
- Jonathan Shapiro
- Opinion
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15 ASX stocks that can win from a new capex ‘supercycle’
The twin peaks of population growth and Baby Boomer spending have insulated sharemarket investors against rate hikes. Now a new tailwind is emerging.
- James Thomson