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    A reduced appetite by some of the major banks to lend to indebted businesses and to commercial real estate has created an opening for private credit.

    Private credit jumps $45b in five years and is threatening banks: Citi

    Risk-averse major lenders have created a “structural” change in the market by staying away from indebted companies and commercial real estate, analysis says.

    Premier Jacinta Allan in Box Hill on Monday.

    Allan snubs Melbourne Airport rail for SRL

    Premier Jacinta Allan says Melbourne Airport Rail faces at least a four-year delay before construction begins and has instead prioritised the Suburban Rail Loop.

    Broker UBS says it prefers base metals copper and aluminum over iron ore and lithium.

    Copper a better bet than iron ore and lithium

    UBS is tipping copper over other commodities after prices climbed nearly 4 per cent in a week, amid signs of a tighter market for the industrial metal.

    Vested interests at play in the chronic disease explosion

    A search for good nutrition opened a Pandora’s box of snake oil salesmen and crackpot solutions. It also provided clues to the surging levels of chronic disease, writes Tony Boyd.

    How to play higher interest rates for longer in equities

    Our super funds made two things clear: rates are likely to be higher for longer and equities are back in fashion. We ask some stock pickers to name their calls.

    The untold story of the most chaotic NATO summit ever

    Donald Trump’s hijacking of the 2018 NATO summit marked the biggest turning point in the history of the alliance that has guaranteed European security since 1949.

    Mediaweek publisher to ‘step back’ amid workplace misconduct claims

    Formal complaints about alleged behaviour of Trent Thomas, owner of the trade media publication, lodged by two people and investigated by external firms.

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    MONDAY MEDIA

    Mediaweek’s Trent Thomas

    Mediaweek rocked by sexual harassment allegations

    Trent Thomas, who owns and runs Mediaweek, was found by an internal HR investigation to have sexually harassed and bullied staff.

    ‘We know nothing’: Media blasts information void in privacy reform

    Uncertainty about the Albanese government’s new privacy laws threatens billions in advertising, with one data firm urging clients to pause online targeting.

    Former tennis champ Todd Woodbridge is hosting Tipping Point Australia.

    Todd Woodbridge and the jackpot quiz thwarting Seven’s news offensive

    The former tennis star and Nine presenter is upending the 6pm news ratings battle because of the unlikely success of the game show he hosts at 5pm.

    Airtasker bets $10m stake on radio, outdoor media surge

    Airtasker founder Tim Fung has signed two deals in two weeks with media companies to promote its gig economy platform.

    Network Ten wavers on turning off broadcast across swath of WA

    The regional signal – a joint venture between Seven West Media and WIN Corporation – will remain on air only after more funding from the federal government.

    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

    Investors ‘hung out to dry’ as NDIS housing schemes fail

    Investors had been pitched double-digit “government-backed” returns. But there are no signs of those and, without tenants, there is little choice but to liquidate.

    ARLC chairman Peter V’landys and NRL chief executive Andrew Abdo are getting ready to dramatically change Australia’s flagship rugby league competition.

    Can the NRL pull off its biggest ever expansion?

    The NRL is deciding whether to expand to a 20-team competition. The rewards could be huge, but the clubs aren’t so confident.

    HMC Capital managing director David Di Pilla has big plans for the company’s climate strategy.

    HMC Capital chooses battery storage for first climate investment

    David Di Pilla’s asset manager will pay up to $50 million for a controlling stake in StorEnergy, which is headed by a former Spark Infrastructure executive.

    Scyne CEO Richard Gwilym wants the firm to be profitable by the end of this financial year.

    Sold for $1, Scyne claws back a third of PwC’s revenue

    Scyne, spun out of PwC a year ago, is heading towards $200 million in revenue, rebuilding a third of the roughly $600 million earned by its predecessor firm.

    Foreign start-ups swarm Australia, ‘buying time’ to show profits

    Australia offers a gateway to Asia, a skilled commercial workforce and cultural commonality with the US, but its wealthy customer base is an even bigger prize.

    Could this be the country’s stupidest public policymaking debacle?

    From a regulator which has declared it can’t do anything to a company – PEXA – transparently trying to keep its monopoly, there’s not much that can compare, writes Kylar Loussikian.

    Palmer accuses CITIC of contract breach with 3000 jobs in balance

    The Chinese conglomerate has dismissed Clive Palmer’s claims as absurd in the latest twist in a bitter legal battle over an $18 billion WA mine.

    Companies in the News

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    Markets

    The Aussie dollar’s furious rally could continue into the second half of 2024.

    Why the Aussie dollar rally could just be getting started

    It’s a good time for Australians to be heading overseas, with the currency’s surge to a six-month high likely to extend into the second half of this year.

    Australian shares are poised to start the week with a modest opening loss.

    ASX slips as iron ore sell-off extends; BHP, Rio Tinto fall

    Australian shares edge lower. Core Lithium rallies as other lithium miners fall. Iron ore extends Friday drop.

    Robert Gregory of Glenmore Asset Management.

    Meet the fund manager doing it better than everyone else

    In a market completely saturated with Aussie equity funds, Robert Gregory, a one-man band, has come out on top thanks to some cracking stock bets.

    Michele Bullock’s next rate call will be one of the toughest

    The RBA governor faces one of the hardest calls any central banker has ever had to make. The chances of getting it wrong are higher than ever, and so are the costs, writes Jonathan Shapiro.

    Investors chasing the rally should get ready for an ‘upswing’

    Investing will remain difficult as we go through the final stages of the slowdown, but this is the time where you can also find stocks that are not yet priced for an improving backdrop in the bargain bin.

    Opinion

    Our larrikin egalitarianism is more appealing than tribalism

    This is another critical time for this nation’s multiculturalism. Anthony Albanese must lead the case against sectarian identity politics that might unsettle it.

    Tanveer Ahmed

    Columnist

    Tanveer Ahmed

    The one reason swing states are turning back to Trump

    Joe Biden is still betting big he can move key swing states his way, but Arizona was shifting back to Trump well before that debate.

    This is the new normal of office life

    Flexible working patterns in a decent place that makes it easy to do the job you’re paid for is a basic recipe for success in a post-pandemic world.

    Pilita Clark

    Columnist

    Pilita Clark

    Macron the gambler wins the right to play kingmaker

    The French left’s best chance of power is to follow the Keir Starmer strategy of breaking with the extremists and reuniting with the centre.

    Lionel Laurent

    European political commentator

    Lionel Laurent

    How to invest in the golden age of health disruption

    Investing in healthcare in today’s market combines exposure to two key drivers – structural demand growth and disruptive innovation.

    Andrew McAuley

    Managing Director at UBS Global Wealth Management Australia

    Andrew McAuley

    Reject injecting political Islam into Australia

    The British general election has underlined the dangers now facing Australia’s political and social cohesion.

    The AFR View

    Editorial

    The AFR View

    Reports

    Law partnership survey

    After a period of caution following a pandemic-era peak our Law Partnership Survey shows firms have roared back, with growth near its COVID-era record.

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    Politics

    Japan’s Prime Minister Fumio Kishida, right, greets Philippines President Ferdinand Marcos jnr in December 2023.

    Japan, Philippines sign defence deal amid China tensions

    Japan and the Philippines sign deal to boost security; New housing loans fall in value by 1.7 per cent to $28.8 billion. How the day unfolded.

    Attorney-General Mark Dreyfus will announce the overhaul on Monday.

    Labor reveals personal bankruptcy overhaul

    The threshold for involuntary bankruptcy will rise to $20,000 and Attorney-General Mark Dreyfus will also launch consultations for a mini-bankruptcy regime.

    The Federal Court has done what many thought impossible.

    Federal Court allows class action contingency fees

    Law firms will be able to run class actions off their own balance sheets in the Federal Court and share in damages awards.

    Australia might blink at AUKUS cost, fears Trump’s ex-Pentagon chief

    A former top security official under Donald Trump says AUKUS would be safe under a Trump administration but he is more worried Australia could baulk at the hefty cost.

    Voters will ‘resist the poison from Canberra’: WA premier

    Roger Cook says WA voters will resist the introduction of sectarian politics to Australia, warning against “poison” from Canberra coming into his state. 

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    World

    A Boeing 737 MAX aircraft on the assembly line in its Renton, Washington state, factory.

    Boeing to plead guilty to fraud for violating deal on 737 Max crashes

    The guilty plea marks a low point in the company’s century-long history after years of turmoil sparked by two crashes.

    French voters react to projected results after the second round of the legislative elections.

    France left with hung parliament after left-wing surge

    President Emmanuel Macron’s gamble has only partly paid off: he has put the populist right back in its box, but left France with an intractable hung parliament.

    Joe Biden with Bishop Ernest Morris at Mt Airy Church of God in Christ in Philadelphia.

    Democratic politicians join calls for Biden to step aside

    More Democrats in Congress are expected to voice their concerns that the president step aside, but others are mounting efforts to stand by him and refocus.

    France heads back to its postwar era of ungovernability

    France seems to be turning the clock back to the 4th Republic, the volatile postwar period when the presidency was weaker and a raucous parliament was supreme.

    How it all went wrong for Le Pen’s National Rally

    The second round of the election was framed as a referendum for or against the hard right party, and the French clearly came out against.

    Property

    Redcape has sold a trifecta of hotels, including Eastwood Hotel (pictured) for a combined $136 million. 

    Redcape sells trio of pubs for $136m to meet priority redemptions

    Redcape managing director Chris Unger said the group will pay out priority redemptions and provide $40 million of liquidity over the next year.

    The one-bedroom apartment with no car park at 29 Lander Street in inner-southern Sydney’s Darlington sold for $995,000.

    One-bed unit, no car park – the price? Almost $1m

    There were not many takers for this nice, but expensive, property. But one buyer valued it differently – and was prepared to pay for that.

    John Walker.

    Foreign land buyers take class action against Victorian surcharge

    It’s the latest step in a debate between those who argue taxation based on nationality is discriminatory and state governments that say it’s about revenue.

    Winter chill, school holidays cut auction volumes

    Buyers and sellers are cautious about the interest-rate outlook, but are still willing to pay strong prices for good homes – when they can find them.

    Office deal flow still a trickle despite 60pc increase

    Office deal activity will not ramp up quickly as due diligence processes are taking as much as four times longer due to concerns about the sector.

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    Wealth

    UniSuper’s investments boss John Pearce jumped on the AI boom early.

    Time to buy into tech stocks has passed, says UniSuper

    Soaring technology stocks helped increase the retirement savings of the fund’s customers last financial year, but it’s hitting the pause button on further investment.

    Aware Super cashes in on tech, healthcare bias to return 11pc

    Aware follows several other super funds with high global equities exposure reporting returns of more than 11 per cent for 2023-24 as tech stocks soared.

    Heavy office tower exposure drags down Cbus’ annual returns

    But the construction industry super fund stood by its heavy allocation to the asset class, even as its financial year returns fell below rivals.

    Technology

    Mark Zuckerberg surfs to celebrate Independence Day.

    Zuckerberg shows he is, like a teen, desperate to be cool

    The man who has everything is still stung by criticism and anxious for validation online, proving his critics right about Meta’s effects on mental health.

    Kolin Burges holds up a placard in protest in 2014 after more than 700,000 bitcoins went missing.

    Mt Gox repays ‘forced’ bitcoin holders years after its collapse

    Japanese bankruptcy lawyers have begun repaying thousands of creditors of collapsed crypto exchange Mt Gox, including some Australians.

    Tim Rossanis, boss of international car hire start-up Turo.

    Foreign start-ups swarm Australia, ‘buying time’ to show profits

    Australia offers a gateway to Asia, a skilled commercial workforce and cultural commonality with the US, but its wealthy customer base is an even bigger prize.

    Work & Careers

    Selective schools may not offer the long-term advantages they appear to offer.

    Sending kids to selective schools doesn’t pay off: study

    Demand for selective public high schools far outweighs places, but a new study casts doubt on whether they live up to their promise.

    Work-free Friday nights ‘unrealistic’ for CEOs

    British Prime Minister Keir Starmer says he tries not to work past 6pm on a Friday. Some of Australia’s top CEOs say that wouldn’t fly in their world.

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    Life & Luxury

    Kimbali Harding, CEO of the Australian Youth Orchestra.

    The all-in-one physical, mental and emotional workout

    Kimbali Harding began learning piano as a toddler. The hobby has not just guided her career choice – she can’t imagine her life without it.

    The upgraded Tesla that’s cheaper than its predecessor

    The new Model 3 Performance delivers a power boost and driving modes that range from Chill to Insane.

    The secret to ageing may lie in AP-1

    Australian researchers appear to have uncovered a crucial master controller that governs the activity of human genes as we develop and age.

    Enjoying every day

    Why you probably need to rethink your bucket list

    Rather than grand plans, small actions every day are the key to achieving happiness and a sense of worth.

    ABxSC campaign stills.

    Why Sofia Coppola is so enamoured by this particular lip balm

    Such is her dedication to European brand Augustinus Bader, the movie director has helped it create three tinted versions.

    From the gallery