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    The securities regulator is investigating ANZ over its bond trading.

    ANZ probes ‘$54b’ in inflated bond trades

    The bank overstated the value of government bonds it traded by over $50 billion in a year, boosting its chances of winning lucrative mandates to issue Commonwealth debts.

    Wall Street.

    ASX to rally, Nvidia helps pace megacap advance

    Australian shares are set to open higher. The S&P 500 topped 5600 points for the first time. All three US benchmarks gained. Iron ore slumped.

    Shipping crises ‘spanner in works’ for inflation fight

    Australian consumers and retailers are facing long delays and higher prices for goods from Europe and Asia amid an international shipping crisis that could stoke local inflation.

    Pelosi presses Biden for decision, Clooney says he must leave

    Momentum within the Democratic Party for Joe Biden to step aside continues to build with two key allies encouraging the president to rethink his plan.

    House price growth to ease under 5pc as affordability bites

    Some of the heat is finally coming out of the market’s remarkable rebound as the burden of servicing mortgages weighs more heavily on prospective buyers.

    Australia’s ‘Xennials’ earn 67pc more than their parents

    Australians have an easier time moving up the income ladder than workers in Scandinavia, the US, France and the UK, and new research shows two-thirds of people in their 40s earn more than their parents at the same age.

    Australia will have 400,000 new millionaires by 2028. Are you one of them?

    Buoyed by property and super, Australians have become the second-richest people in the world, on paper at least.

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    Companies

    Part of the $2.3 billion EnergyConnect transmission line being built between South Australia and NSW.

    Downer EDI pitches in on flailing EnergyConnect construction

    The troubles at the cable project are being closely watched because its failure would imperil the entire build-out of the transmission grid, sources say.

    We believe there’s been a creeping commercialism of Anzac Day … to the detriment of the importance of the day”: NSW Premier Chris Minns.

    Anzac Day shopping ban restricts choice, retailers say

    Retail trade will be banned on Anzac Day in NSW, giving the state some of the nation’s most restrictive rules in a move to counter “creeping commercialism”.

    Fortescue executive chairman and founder Andrew Forrest.

    Forrest says he was kept in the dark about spying on ex-employees

    Fortescue’s executive chairman Andrew Forrest is considering sacking the company’s external lawyers who presided over the surveillance of former employees.

    The open-pit copper mine at Prominent Hill, now owned by BHP. The mine’s future rests on underground expansion.

    BHP enlists OZ Minerals copper veteran amid cost blowout fears

    BHP’s mine manager has warned of cost and schedule challenges for a near $1 billion expansion project at the Prominent Hill copper mine.

    Seppeltsfield buys up as Australian Vintage offloads two vineyards

    The ASX-listed producer behind McGuigan and Tempus Two will exit one property in NSW and sell another in South Australia to its privately owned rival.

    ‘Wholly inadequate’: Non-bank lender pinged by new rules

    Firstmac has become the first financial outfit pinged by new regulations designed to ensure suitable products are promoted to customers.

    Veteran banker Jon Gidney joins Cettire board

    The former investment banking heavyweight has joined the luxury goods platform, which is yet to appoint any female directors.

    Companies in the News

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    Markets

    Tribeca’s Ben Cleary, David Franklyn from Argonaut, Sam Berridge from Perrenial, and Matt Langsford from Terra Capital.

    The mining stocks fundies think may outrun BHP and Rio

    The rout in the ASX’s largest mining companies this year has created a “screaming” buy for some of the sector’s biggest investors.

    Brokers at Macquarie have turned bullish on ASX real estate stocks.

    Macquarie says it’s time to buy real estate stocks before rate cuts

    The broker has warned that the “best” phases for ASX returns is behind us and is urging investors to buy more defensive companies amid signs that returns are starting to falter.

    Adrian Orr, governor of the Reserve Bank of New Zealand.

    New Zealand eyes August rate cut after ‘dovish pivot’

    Market pundits have ramped up bets that the RBNZ may cut interest rates as soon as next month after the central bank said it was confident that inflation will return to target.

    Wall Street’s big run has investors trying to pick the top

    The No.1 question is: when will the remarkable run come to an end? Another nine days of gains (out of the past 10) only makes it more fascinating.

    Miners drag ASX lower; Insignia falls 7pc; Bell Financial jumps

    Shares decline at the closing bell; Incitec Pivot stops sale negotiations for fertilisers business; Bell Financial forecasts 47 per cent profit jump; miners fall as iron ore futures lower. Follow updates here.

    Opinion

    Tariffs, inflation, debt: The economic hits of a re-elected Trump

    Trump’s first term tariffs did not crater the US or world economies. The same cannot be said for his far more ambitious plans the second time around, writes Richard Holden.

    Richard Holden

    Economics professor

    Richard Holden

    Inside the Democrats’ fight over Biden

    Hosting the NATO summit was supposed to help the US president demonstrate unity within the Democratic Party. But it is tearing itself apart.

    Asian allies key to our cyberdefence against China

    Japan and South Korea have for the first time joined Five Eyes allies led by Australia in directly calling out Chinese cyberattacks, but more can be done.

    Alastair MacGibbon

    Cybersecurity expert

    Alastair MacGibbon

    It’s an energy race between the implausible and the impossible

    Peter Dutton has come up with a nuclear-powered cost of living wedge to expose Labor’s overreach on renewables and sustainability.

    Matthew Warren

    Energy expert

    Matthew Warren

    Ukraine remains NATO’s pressing test of global relevance

    The shadow that hangs over NATO’s 75th birthday is a strange brew of populism that now endangers the alliance’s claim to modern strategic relevance.

    The AFR View

    Editorial

    The AFR View

    Why we need ‘wickedly hard’ reform in Australia

    Such measures, however, would have to first wrestle the biggest policy reform chiller of all – vertical fiscal imbalance, write Karen Chester and Helen Silver.

    Karen Chester and Helen Silver

    Economist

    Reports

    Sustainability Leaders

    The list celebrates Australasian companies that are making real progress in tackling sustainability challenges – and delivering business value along the way.

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    Politics

    Australia’s Deputy Prime Minister Richard Marles arrives at an event commemorating the 75th anniversary of NATO this week.

    New ‘alliance’ calls out China’s bad cyber behaviour

    Months of behind-the-scenes work helped convince Japan and South Korea to join an Australian-led statement slamming China over cyberattacks.

    Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and Chinese Premier Li Qiang in Canberra last month.

    Cheaper kitchen sinks as Canberra dismantles tariff barrier to China

    While Australian lobster remains off the menu in Beijing, the Albanese government is removing tariffs on Chinese-made kitchen sinks.

    In early 2022, Malcolm Turnbull was having discussions in Paris with French President Emmanuel Macron about getting the French nuclear submarine contract back on track.

    Revealed: Turnbull’s Paris option to revive French subs deal

    Former prime minister Malcolm Turnbull paved the way for Australia to renegotiate the French submarine contract when Labor came to power, but there was silence from the new government.

    CFMEU deal helps add 10pc to apartment costs

    The CFMEU’s latest wages deal for NSW will increase labour costs by up to 19 per cent in the first year alone, a new analysis finds.

    Cattle farmers go to war with Labor over class action

    Cattle farmers have accused Attorney-General Mark Dreyfus of launching an appalling, contemptuous and “outrageously misleading” attack on them.

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    World

    US President Joe Biden stands with fellow NATO leaders during a group photo at the NATO 75th anniversary.

    Europeans use NATO summit to meet Trump officials

    European delegations to a NATO leaders’ summit in Washington this week are holding meetings with foreign policy associates of Donald Trump, as nervousness rises inside the military alliance regarding President Joe Biden’s re-election prospects.

    Donald Trump at the Miami rally: “I don’t think Kamala Harris’s California socialism is going to go down well with the people of Doral, the people of Miami or the people of Florida.”

    Trump steps up attacks on Harris, stays silent on running mate

    The former president accused Vice President Kamala Harris of working with other Democrats to cover up Joe Biden’s alleged mental acuity issues.

    Samsung workers outside the company’s semiconductor plant in Hwaseong, South Korea, on Monday.

    Samsung workers strike ‘indefinitely’ in global chip risk

    The union of 30,000 workers will go on strike in action that may snowball to trigger similar responses across a recovering tech and chip industry.

    China’s consumer price growth weakens ahead of key summit

    Factory deflation eases but Beijing’s reliance on exports and industrial output is stoking trade tensions.

    Macron coalition talks shaky as left ‘behaves like children’

    While French leftists demand the premiership, the president faces fissures in his own camp.

    Property

    Hedge fund manager’s Perth mansion sells for $25 million

    A contemporary mansion in Mosman Park has sold for $25 million in Western Australia’s biggest residential deal so far this year.

    The investor survival kit for property taxes

    Property investors, particularly in Victoria and NSW, face what seems to be an ever-increasing regime of extra costs and charges. Here are some tips to stay the course.

    Young Rich Lister splashes $19m on 1950s waterfront home

    Founder of streetwear label Geedup Co. Jake Paco and his mother Debbie have emerged as the buyers of sprawling waterfront estate in Sydney’s Sutherland Shire.

    PGIM hops on private credit boom with $750m fund

    The global fund manager’s first local private credit fund has raised $300 million and received an additional $300 million in commitments so far.

    Jon Adgemis’ Paddington pub housing El Primo Sanchez up for sale

    The move follows a complex refinancing effort of Mr Adgemis’ Public Hospitality empire involving Deutsche Bank, Muzinich and Archibald Capital’s Ben Madsen.

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    Wealth

    Mutual Trust chief executive Phil Harkness says the trick to a successful wealth transfer is to get the kids in early (and give them chocolate).

    The workshop that teaches young rich kids to manage huge fortunes

    During family retreats, kids start learning about managing money and donating to charity from an early age.

    This fledgling asset class is generating double-digit returns

    Investors are earning attractive returns from land lease communities, which can generate an annuity-style income.

    We inherited dad’s house in the UK – where to pay capital gains tax?

    Sisters who moved countries find tax and administration penalties could eat into their inheritance.

    Technology

    Meet Samsung’s new Ring, Watch Ultra and not-so-new folding phones

    At its biggest gadget launch of the year, Samsung finally launches its Galaxy Ring health tracker, and a new outdoors-oriented Galaxy Watch.

    With its new wearables, Samsung goes toe-to-toe, ear-to-ear with Apple

    Samsung has finally released its long-awaited Galaxy Ring fitness tracker, but it’s not coming to Australia until later this year.

    Microsoft, Apple walk away from OpenAI board

    The ChatGPT maker plans a strategy to engage with its crucial partners as regulatory scrutiny of the sector increases.

    Work & Careers

    Master Builders Queensland chief executive Paul Bidwell says the industry wants the government to introduce more flexibility in the conditions.

    CFMEU conditions risk pushing up Queensland build costs by a third

    Restrictive CFMEU conditions on Queensland sites risk dragging out work and making apartment buildings up to 33 per cent more expensive to build, a new analysis says.

    A beginner’s guide to surviving a business conference

    “Making new connections”? If you don’t know why you’re at an industry gathering, you need to come up with a strategy.

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    Life & Luxury

    Joy Krige at Vans Cafe in Cottesloe, Perth. Krige likes to exercise in the morning, which she says is her time.

    What this CEO eats depends how bad the last meeting was

    Joy Krige, CEO of Cranecorp Australia in Perth, grazes from her snack drawer during the day, rather than eat a formal breakfast or lunch.

    Grace Kelly, sunglasses queen, shortly before her marriage to Prince Rainier of Monaco in 1956.

    How Grace Kelly inspired this season’s stylish sunglasses

    Sunglasses are a shield from the shy, a friend to the tired and hungover, and don’t require the wearer to be a certain dress size.

    Feel the need for Speed as Bentley unveils its most powerful vehicle

    With a hybrid V8, the Continental GT Speed will be available as a coupe or convertible.

    Narelle King of Tar & Roses.

    What happens when an Australian winemaker ventures into Barolo country

    Narelle King has teamed up with a leading Italian producer to make the first barolo in the Tar & Roses range. And it’s lovely.

    This week’s pick of luxuries: haute headphones to fancy fedoras

    From sound tech to homewares and high jewellery, we have inspired suggestions for you.

    From the gallery