Skip to navigationSkip to contentSkip to footerHelp using this website - Accessibility statement
  • Advertisement
    AUDUSD0.6639
    0.0004 (0.07%)0.07%
    S&P/ASX 2007,750.10
    -45.90 (-0.59%)-0.59%
    All Ords7,991.60
    -48.30 (-0.60%)-0.60%
    NZX 504,414.50
    -18.77 (-0.42%)-0.42%
    Hang Seng17,906.34
    -122.18 (-0.68%)-0.68%
    Nikkei38,677.59
    81.12 (0.21%)0.21%
    View all

    Matt Kean to lead Climate Change Authority

    Nuclear power would have bankrupted NSW, says Kean; authorities struggle to close down avian flu outbreak; big retailers face multibillion-dollar fines. Follow live updates here.

    Latest Posts

    Last updated 24 mins ago

    The ASX 200 is set to open lower.

    ASX falls as consumer stocks weigh; ResMed, Star shares plunge

    Shares lower; Star appoints interim chief executive; Myer explores merger with Premier’s Just Jeans, Jay Jays; Cettire issues profit warning; ResMed sinks as Ozempic fears resurge. Follow updates here.

    Nvidia chief executive Jensen Huang keeps delighting the market.

    It’s bubbles like AI that make the tech world go around

    From telegraph fever to the first internet bust, irrational over-investment creates profitable technology businesses that wouldn’t have been possible otherwise.

    Wall Street’s record rally built on ‘shaky foundations’

    The AI-powered surge in the US sharemarket has lifted the S&P 500 by 32 per cent from its October lows, but equity strategists warn not everything is so rosy under the hood.

    Myer outlines plan for massive expansion with Just Jeans, Jay Jays buy

    The department store has proposed acquiring several brands owned by Solomon Lew’s Premier Investments, its largest shareholder, in a bid to find growth.

    $11b swoop on ASX building giants leaves James Hardie the lone prize

    The CSR, Boral and Adbri buyouts come at a low point in the construction cycle, with better times expected from mid-2025 once interest rate cuts arrive.

    High-roller exodus rolls on at struggling Star casinos

    Star says its main gaming floors are attracting customers, but not enough to offset dramatic declines from its premium gaming rooms.

    Advertisement

    MONDAY MEDIA

    AMP’s former head of advice Anthony ‘Jack’ Regan.

    AMP’s royal commission executive sues The Australian newspaper

    AMP’s former head of advice, “Jack” Regan, claimed an article imputed he misled ASIC and admitted to misleading ASIC during the Hayne banking royal commission.

    Scott Purcell, co-founder of men’s lifestyle site Man of Many, says traffic to his website could drop by 50 per cent if Google’s AI Overview was introduced.

    Publishers fear this new Google AI feature will kill their traffic

    Google’s ‘AI Overviews’ has rolled out in the US. Its AI-generated results push links down by a full page, a new study has found.

    The Telegraph is on sale for the second time in one year.

    A very British paper is forced to cover a scandal: its own

    The discovery of $500 million missing from The Telegraph newspaper marks the end of the owners’ two decades of influence over British politics.

    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.

    Financial Review Australia’s most trusted newspaper brand

    The Australian Financial Review has again been ranked the nation’s most trusted newspaper brand, as overall trust in the media declines across the board.

    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

    Cettire’s shares slumped on Monday after a big profit miss.

    Cettire plunges on 40pc on profit downgrade as luxury pinch strikes

    Cettire blamed a challenging environment in online luxury fashion for a big earnings miss that sent its share price tumbling.

    A cash injection of $50 million will keep Armaguard afloat for at least another year.

    Armaguard secures deal with supermarkets, banks to save cash

    Months after a bailout collapsed, the eight largest customers of Linfox’s Armaguard have agreed to a $50 million injection to keep cash circulating.

     Michael Zawadski, Blackstone, CIO of global credit.

    Blackstone’s mega private credit deal is a sign of the times

    Private credit funds are the solution for private equity’s problems. But can the good times last for Wall Street’s hottest sector? Blackstone thinks they can, writes Jonathan Shapiro.

    Neoen’s global boss Xavier Barbaro says the takeover by Brookfield will provide capital to fund growth.

    Renewables investing ‘not for everyone’, says Brookfield-target Neoen

    Neoen global boss Xavier Barbaro says the capital intensity of the renewables industry is impacting investor appetite.

    Metcash’s hardware pain counters better than expected food result

    Households are cutting back on restaurant visits and hunting for food on special at the group’s IGA stores, but Total Tools is being hit by the housing construction slide.

    Grant King to succeed Jerry Maycock as Transgrid chairman

    The changeover at the helm of the NSW grid owner comes as the build-out of the transmission system has become a major stumbling block to the energy transition.

    Collapsed Dion Lee owes $20m to Levis family’s Cue

    An entity linked to Cue extended $20.3 million in working capital and funding since January 2022, making it Dion Lee’s number one creditor ahead of the Commonwealth Bank.

    Companies in the News

    Search companies

    View stories and data from an ASX listed company

    Markets

    US stocks have rallied nearly 15 per cent this year.

    Wall Street’s record rally built on ‘shaky foundations’

    The AI-powered surge in the US sharemarket has lifted the S&P 500 by 32 per cent from its October lows, but equity strategists warn not everything is so rosy under the hood.

    Geometrica’s James Bradley was only 23 years old when he co-founded the hedge fund.

    Why hedge fund Geometrica only wants to make ‘easy money’

    Fund managers James Bradley and Gary Hui go to painstaking lengths before they buy a stock like Nvidia or bet against one like The a2 Milk Company.

    Queensland Premier Steven Miles.

    Are state governments on the brink of a debt crisis?

    Victoria and Queensland have caught the infrastructure fever from NSW and have super-sized it. But financial discipline is in short supply.

    Favourite demographer of market gurus predicts catastrophe

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

    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.

    Opinion

    Why we need to get behind small business

    The true backbone of Australia’s entrepreneurial spirit and innovation lies within its small business sector, not just the tech giants.

    Luke Achterstraat

    Small business advocate

    Luke Achterstraat

    Mackenzie’s climate change

    It shouldn’t surprise to hear the head of a global oil company talking his own book. But it’s no use pretending that the decarbonisation transition is more difficult and more costly than many imagined.

    The AFR View

    Editorial

    The AFR View

    Supermarket crackdown avoids break-up overreach

    Yet what remains unexplained is how shoring up the bargaining power of incumbent suppliers will actually lower prices for families at the checkout or will have the unintended regulatory consequences of meaning higher prices.

    The AFR View

    Editorial

    The AFR View

    Putin to Xi: I have options in East Asia

    The Russian President’s visits last week to North Korea and Vietnam shows Russia’s residual capacity to stir trouble in East Asia.

    James Curran

    International editor

    James Curran

    Israel needs to get the hell out of Gaza

    The extremists in Benjamin Netanyahu’s coalition government have led a reckless act of economic, military and moral overstretch.

    Thomas Friedman

    Contributor

    Thomas Friedman

    Nuclear is unviable because of economics, not engineering

    Even if all that mattered was the cheapest possible energy that meets minimum levels of reliability and emissions, the Coalition’s plan fails.

    Reports

    Executive education - Microcredentials

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

    Advertisement

    Politics

    Labor has committed to all 11 recommendations in Craig Emerson’s review of the grocery code of conduct.

    Coles, Woolies face multibillion-dollar fines under new mandatory code

    Treasurer Jim Chalmers has agreed to adopt all 11 recommendations of Craig Emerson’s review into the Food and Grocery Code of Conduct.

    Election countdown: Labor has plenty of laws to pass before voting day

    With the election due within 12 months, Labor ministers privately concede that some policies could be pushed back into a likely second term.

    Paul Keating, known for his biting insults, issued his statement calling Dutton a “charlatan” a day after the opposition leader made a strikingly personal attack on Prime Minister Anthony Albanese.

    Keating labels Dutton ‘a charlatan and climate change denialist’

    The former prime minister accused the Coalition leader of seeking to “camouflage” his “long held climate denialism” in an industrial fantasy of nuclear energy.

    Pocock, Tink push for 10-year housing and homelessness plan in law

    Independent ACT senator David Pocock and teal MP for North Sydney Kylea Tink want a 10-year housing and homelessness plan enshrined in legislation to create certainty.

    Labor’s $40b renewables bid attracts massive industry support

    Energy Minister Chris Bowen will on Monday reveal the first auction for 6 gigawatts of renewable energy received bids from more than 100 projects covering more than 40 gigawatts of renewable energy production.

    SPONSORED

    World

    Chinese Coast Guard hold knives and machetes as they approach Philippine troops on a resupply mission in the Second Thomas Shoal.

    Why China is using axes, fists to fight border disputes

    Experts say that China’s use of simple weapons rather than firearms has been a tactical choice, but it may not always prevent escalation.

    Prime Minister Rishi Sunak speaks to journalists on the campaign bus.

    Growing ‘gamble-gate’ threatens to bury Rishi Sunak

    A fourth Tory staffer is being probed for betting on the timing of the election, in a scandal that has engulfed the PM’s party just two weeks from polling day.

    Tokyo Gas Company storage tanks in the Japanese capital.

    Japan using Australian gas to shore up regional influence

    Japanese energy companies are on-selling surplus Australian gas to allies in South-East Asia.

    Netanyahu says Gaza intense fighting close to ending

    The Israeli PM says the new stage would offer a chance to move forces to the north to where tensions with Lebanese militant group Hezbollah have been growing.

    Biden-Trump debate comes with great risks and rewards for both men

    In appealing to divided and often angry voters, the past and present presidents will need to navigate a minefield of perceptions and realities.

    Property

    The 810-square-metre corner site in an area with residential zoning for a 15-metre building at 11-13 Stevens Street in Gold Coast’s Southport sold by private treaty for $1.5 million. It was bought by the buyer of the neighbouring 15 Stevens Street site. 

    The 10-minute, $1.5m sale that was an afterthought

    An interstate buyer paid $835,000 for in investment block of land, sight unseen. When they did come to see it, they bought the neighbouring block, too.

    Artwork of Chiodo Corporation’s proposed $300 million Port Douglas resort.

    Keystone lent money to director’s $300m Port Douglas resort dream

    Keystone Asset Management, under ASIC investigation, lent money to companies associated with a director’s controversial plan to develop an “uber five-star luxury” resort in Port Douglas.

    This tiny Elizabeth Bay terrace sold to a Dubbo buyer for $425,000.

    Tiny Sydney studio sells for $425,000 as clearance rate slides

    A buyer from Dubbo snapped up one of Sydney’s smallest homes for just $425,000, but the city’s clearance rate fell to just 63 per cent, according to Domain.

    Aviation exec to sell Provence-style vineyard in the Adelaide Hills

    A $7 million luxury vineyard escape has joined the Adelaide Hills market complete with ornamental lake and Provence-style homestead.

    Fund manager Allan Fife pays $11m for 180-year-old Yass sheep farm

    The Fife Capital founder will add Dowan Hill to a farming portfolio that includes Stonehenge, a sheep farm in Tasmania he bought last year for $25 million.

    Advertisement

    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

    Ilya Sutskever is promising to build superintelligence safely.

    OpenAI co-founder’s new company promises safe ‘superintelligence’

    Last year, Ilya Sutskever tried to force out OpenAI boss Sam Altman. Now he has a new company, aiming to build a machine that is more intelligent than humans – safely.

    Grong Grong’s mini solar farm could be part of the solution to the energy crisis.

    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. 

    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.

    Work & Careers

    There is a balance between being career advancing and sounding like “The Office” character David Brent.

    LinkedIn’s ‘weird’ makeover is no laughing matter

    If the professional social network is now a place for personal posts, why isn’t it funnier?

    Nurses identify ‘$1.2bn’ in savings for 15 per cent pay rise

    Deloitte’s report for the NSW nurses’ union found the state government may have missed out on more than $3 billion in Commonwealth funding due to inaccurate data.

    Advertisement

    Life & Luxury

    A floral bustier at the showroom of Cadolle, a company that has been making custom lingerie for almost 140 years, in Paris

    Custom-made lingerie is an investment, that’s why the rich buy it

    Six generations of a Parisian family have been crafting undergarments that make everything else their clients wear look good.

    Just 250 Bugatti Tourbillons will be made.

    An electric Bugatti? The Tourbillon has landed

    In fact, it’s not all-electric. This supercar also has an 8.3-litre V16 engine capable of producing 1000 horsepower.

    Dean Miller (L) is interviewed by ex-NRL player Keegan Hipgrave about the importance of sleep earlier this year.

    A sleep scientist explains how to beat jet lag

    Sleep scientist Dean Miller is advising our Olympians about recovering faster from jet lag. Here’s what he will tell them before they head to Paris.

    Maria Callas in the 1960s.

    When Maria Callas went from diva to teacher

    By 1971, the celebrated soprano’s voice was worn out. This made for a febrile mood at her series of Juilliard masterclasses that year, now immortalised in a play.

    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.

    From the gallery