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    Dutton promises back-to-basics economic plan

    Peter Dutton says the coalition would seek to extend asset scheme write-offs of up to $30,000 and change the definition of a casual worker in a wide-ranging policy speech on Saturday.

    Protesters and pro-China supporters on the front lawn of Parliament House ahead of a visit from Chinese Premier Li Qiang on Monday.

    Why our spooks and economists are teaming up to manage China

    Treasury Secretary Steven Kennedy and chief spook Andrew Shearer are leading a new economic security regime that will have far-reaching consequences for business and investors.

    Paul Moyses at a coal mine in Collie.

    What Australia’s busiest sleepy town really thinks about nuclear

    From a failing coal mine being propped up by the WA government to keep the lights to Australia’s biggest battery being built by Brookfield takeover target Neoen there is a lot going on in Collie.

    Global ambitions a dangerous trap for overzealous local giants

    “An organic approach to world domination is a better way to do it,” says Allan Gray’s Simon Mawhinney. A string of failures shows he’s on the money.

    Favourite demographer of market gurus predicts catastrophe

    History says something really ugly is coming, according to Neil Howe. Investors need to be ready.

    The gambler: Dutton bets it all on nuclear

    The opposition leader is hoping his energy wager could return the Coalition to government. But if it all goes badly wrong, his dream of becoming prime minister could be lost.

    Grong Grong (population 150) does its bit to solve the energy crisis

    Small-scale solar farms like that at Grong Grong can fly below the radar but represent a large opportunity to plug renewable power into the system. 

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    weekend reads

    Universities have been “disingenuous” about how much overseas student revenue is spent on research.

    ‘Very wealthy’ unis ‘disingenuous’ about foreign student fees

    Universities are richer than they claim and spend less of their overseas student revenue on research than they say.

    Sydney university friends Chloe Linstrom, Gerard Buttigieg, and Rose Donnelly say students are spending more time working and less on campus amid growing cost of living pressures.

    Online lectures at double speed: what uni is really like in 2024

    Domestic students are being held back and international students aren’t getting what they need, says one expert. Universities know this. Why aren’t they doing more?

    Palestinians evacuate dead and wounded in the Israeli bombardment of the Gaza Strip earlier this month.

    Why Israel doesn’t care what the world thinks

    The international community thinks Israel is fighting a war of choice. Israel doesn’t see it that way, says US writer and author Bret Stephens.

    How China became a scientific superpower

    From plant biology to superconductor physics, the country is at the cutting edge.

    Over budget and plagued with delays: UK nuclear lessons for Australia

    The big challenges facing nuclear power in Britain, both for large reactors and SMRs, are not technological or economic, but largely administrative and logistical.

    smart investor

    Can I do anything to maximise my tax return this close to June 30?

    Though the end of the financial year is just days away, there are still some last-minute ways small businesses can reduce their tax liabilities.

    Super fund customers are on track for strong returns this year.

    How much your super fund is expected to grow this financial year

    The expected returns were driven largely by strong performances from overseas equities, Chant West found.

    Protesters hold banners during a demonstration against the far-right and racism in central Paris, France, on Saturday, June 15.

    Attention investors: the risk of a sovereign debt crisis is back

    The financial market volatility induced by the political dramas in France show the world is moving into a new risk regime, writes Christopher Joye.

    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.

    My $1.25m super fund can’t pay me enough income

    An 84-year-old is facing liquidity problems with minimum annual pension payments – but there are solutions.

    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

    Westpac chief executive of institutional banking Nell Hutton. “When I thought about where I could have an impact, it made sense to think about the big four [banks].”

    From Goldman Sachs to Westpac, Nell Hutton is climbing the ladder

    Having reached the top of the Wall Street giant by her mid-40s, the career banker has big plans to turn around Westpac’s once-dominant institutional bank.

    ASIC boss Joe Longo and John Karantzis, founder of payments company iSignthis.

    Federal Court rules iSignthis misled the market

    A Federal Court judge says payments company iSignthis and its former managing director John Karantzis misled the market, but ASIC had failed to prove that the boss knew about performance milestones and deliberately structured revenue to trigger share bonuses.

    Mexican food chain Guzman y Gomez tore the bandaid off the IPO market with a listing that valued the company north of $3 billion.

    The bank at the heart of Project Jalapeno was not Barrenjoey

    The founder of Guzman y Gomez, Steven Marks, had been working with one Wall Street giant for years to get the Mexican chain’s $3 billion float off the ground.

    Steven Marks.

    Gen Z demand makes Guzman y Gomez the hottest retail stock

    About 30 per cent of all shares traded on Superhero, a popular online platform, were in the Mexican restaurant group on Thursday. Still, demand is falling.

    Pilbara’s lithium growth plans immune to price pressure

    Lithium exporter Pilbara Minerals says it can triple lithium production in a value accretive way even if prices remain near current levels.

    The Jarden verdict on CBA’s digital home loan

    The new mortgage product is not a credible threat yet to mortgage brokers, analysts say.

    Skyrocketing gas prices intensify fears of shortage this winter

    There are growing fears the long-forecast shortage in supplies in the south-eastern states will emerge this winter, hitting manufacturers hard.

    Companies in the News

    Search companies

    View stories and data from an ASX listed company

    Markets

    The Commonwealth Bank building in Sydney. The bank is on its way to becoming the country’s largest listed company.

    CBA rally threatens to dethrone BHP as ASX top stock

    A 25 per cent rally in the country’s largest bank has placed it within striking distance of the miner, which has been Australia’s most valuable listed company for more than two years.

    Wall Street.

    S&P 500 slips, Nvidia paces semiconductor slide

    The S&P 500 ended modestly lower as semi stocks pared some of their advance. BofA broadly positive on China’s economic outlook.

    Putting nuclear back on the table in Canberra could have implications for ASX uranium explorers over the long term.

    Investors see uranium riches if Coalition’s nuclear plan takes off

    The country’s largest uranium developer could almost triple in value if Australia relaxed its restrictive position on the energy source, Morgan Stanley says.

    US jobless claims linger near 10-month high

    Applications for unemployment benefits have remained subdued over the past year, as the labour market showed resilience.

    BoE keeps rates at 16-year high despite inflation fall

    Policymakers held rates held at 5.25pc and signalled that policy would stay restrictive until the risk of inflation overshooting their target had dissipated.

    Opinion

    Attention investors: the risk of a sovereign debt crisis is back

    The financial market volatility induced by the political dramas in France show the world is moving into a new risk regime.

    Dutton’s climate poll surge evokes Fightback! saga

    The headline numbers confirm Peter Dutton is setting the agenda, but to stay on top he will need to prove how his nuclear plan will ease the cost of living.

    Laura Tingle

    Columnist

    Laura Tingle

    Nuclear election poses energy transition questions for both sides

    The Coalition’s nuclear option deserves a proper debate, not the puerile meme scare campaign that Labor is running.

    The AFR View

    Editorial

    The AFR View

    It’s time to revisit all those famous nuclear disaster movies

    With debate about nuclear energy firmly in the zeitgeist, the movie business would be wise to contemplate redux versions of some box-office classics.

    Rowan Dean

    Satirist

    Rowan Dean

    Why Australia needs to stop being PNG’s payday lender

    It might seem a good, neighbourly thing to do. But loans can be damaging as poorly tied aid. The alternative is subsidising direct Australian business investment.

    Dutton is prepared to take risks, but he is no onion eater

    The signature difference between what the Coalition unleashed on Wednesday and the debilitating climate fights of the past is that both parties are operating from the assumption that emissions need to be reduced.

    Phillip Coorey

    Political editor

    Phillip Coorey

    Reports

    Executive education - Microcredentials

    A growing number of employers are developing short, sharp courses known as microcredentials in collaboration with tertiary institutions.

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    Politics

    The squeeze on east coast gas supplies forced the Australian Energy Market Operator to issue a “threat notice” late on Wednesda.

    Skyrocketing gas prices intensify fears of shortage this winter

    There are growing fears the long-forecast shortage in supplies in the south-eastern states will emerge this winter, hitting manufacturers hard.

    Setka’s ‘obnoxious and rude’ CFMEU fined for wet wipes blockade

    The Federal Court has fined the CFMEU $109,000 for behaviour that a judge said was emblematic of the coercion that has plagued the construction industry for decades.

    Los Angeles-class submarine USS Annapolis arrives at HMAS Stirling in Western Australia.

    AUKUS nuclear waste no help for Dutton plan: Labor

    Any high-level dump for spent nuclear material from AUKUS submarines will be too late for an opposition energy plan, Defence Minister Richard Marles says.

    What Australia’s busiest sleepy town really thinks about nuclear

    From a failing coal mine being propped up by the WA government to keep the lights to Australia’s biggest battery being built by Brookfield takeover target Neoen there is a lot going on in Collie.

    Why parents are forking out $40k for their kids to live on campus

    Residential colleges used to be the preserve of county boarders and blue-blood families, but there’s a growing trend among parents who want their kids to have the kind of university experience they had.

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    World

    An aerial view shows the storage tanks for treated water at the tsunami-crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant in Okuma town, Fukushima prefecture, Japan.

    Japanese eye investment in Australian nuclear rollout

    Japan’s giant energy trading houses would actively consider helping to pay for a nuclear rollout in Australia in return for decades-long investment returns, industry insiders say.

    Bromance: Russia’s President Vladimir Putin, right, drives a car in Pyongyang, with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un on Wednesday

    Putin’s Asia tour seen as show of defiance to the West

    Analysts are scrambling to assess the significance of agreements struck by the Russian leader in North Korea and Vietnam.

    Palestinian children sit at the edge of a crater after an Israeli airstrike in Khan Younis.

    Israel pounds Gaza, killing dozens, as fighting rages

    Israeli tanks were forcing their way into the western and northern parts of Rafah, and troops were engaged in close-quarter combat with Hamas militants.

    American nuclear set for biggest overhaul in history

    A divided Congress has just agreed to speed up nuclear reactor development. The president will sign off on it next week.

    The English town where Australia’s latte left would feel right at home

    Brighton’s trendy centre has an unmistakable inner-city or Byron vibe – and the politics to match. But can the Greens resist voters who are seeing red?

    Property

    Power couple creates Brisbane’s most expensive family compound

    Prominent Brisbane couple Steve and Jane Wilson have bought the property next door to their recently restored landmark home Lamb House.

    Pointing down: Foreign purchases of Australian housing may be slowing again.

    Post-pandemic demand for Australian housing softens

    Overseas interest in Australian residential real estate softened in the six months to December, according to new Treasury figures of Foreign Investment Review Board applications.

    Rich List Snow family sets sights on Canberra’s next landmark

    It is the first major project launched by Capital Property, the owner of Canberra Airport, since Terry Snow stepped down from active management last month.

    Scentre’s bargain-hunting lands it $308m stake in Adelaide mall

    The Westfield owner has set up a fund with Barrenjoey to buy a half stake in Tea Tree mall, in a deal that was struck at a 12 per cent discount to book value.

    GreenFort Capital targets $800m land lease portfolio

    There’s a growing snowball of players and money rolling into the residential property play on one of Australia’s biggest demographic changes.

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    Wealth

    Can I do anything to maximise my tax return this close to June 30?

    Though the end of the financial year is just days away, there are still some last-minute ways small businesses can reduce their tax liabilities.

    Why avoiding Coles and Woolies will save you 25pc

    A basket of everyday groceries is $17 cheaper at Aldi, research by consumer group Choice shows, with little difference between the big two supermarket chains.

    Australia had more female fund managers seven years ago

    Industry efforts to hire more women in investment management have borne fruit. But the industry is struggling to get more women into portfolio manager roles.

    Technology

    Nine’s Mike Sneesby, News Corp’s Michael Miller and Seven West Media CEO Jeff Howard in Canberra on Friday.

    Calls to ban Facebook and Instagram in Australia

    The heads of major media organisations say Meta’s refusal to renew about $70 million in commercial deals with news outlets will likely lead to job losses and newspaper closures.

    UNSW’s Toby Walsh says workers who know how to use AI will replace those who do not.

    Need to get up to speed on gen AI? Here’s how

    Workers who know how to use AI are expected to eventually replace those who do not. Four experts explain how and where to level up your skills.

    COSRX’s Snail Mucin cream became the most popular beauty product on Amazon last year.

    Online shopping has become a giant fake-product machine

    TikTok is better than any other digital platform for turning cult favourites into global bestsellers – and making counterfeiters money.

    Work & Careers

    .

    Tax cuts will prolong rate pain: directors

    Economic uncertainty and the energy transition are among the top issues being debated in our biggest boardrooms.

    Skilled refugees could unlock $9b in extra GDP

    Maths graduate Wissam Chabo applied for 100 jobs before getting work in a local cafe. Research shows skilled migrants are badly underutilised, even during Australia’s skills shortage.

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    Life & Luxury

     Tash Oakley at Ursula’s in Paddington.

    The day everything changed for Young Rich Lister Tash Oakley

    For the 33-year-old who made her millions in swimsuits and Pilates, her business was literally her body, then suddenly it simply couldn’t take it any more.

    The under-the-radar watch brands worth your time

    Can’t get your hands on a Rolex, Patek Philippe or Audemars Piguet? Try one of these lesser-known timepieces as your next must-have.

    Do 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.

    Lexus NX450h+ F Sport

    Is Lexus’ plug-in hybrid the best NX on the market?

    A PHEV is either the perfect compromise or an expensive and unnecessary one, depending on your situation.

    People put two thirds of the weight they lost back on when they stop being prescribed jabs.

    How to keep off the kilos after stopping weight-loss jabs

    Until now, those prescribed the radical treatments have been warned that they may have to stay on the drugs for life – or revert to their former size.

    From the gallery