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    Going down? Jerome Powell looks set to cut rates in September.

    Fed will cut in September but beware ‘rate cuts equals rally’ mood

    First Australia dodges a rate hike, now the US is set to cut rates. Markets are rallying, but history says investors should be careful. 

    Local shares are set to open higher.

    ASX to rise as Fed signals cuts to come, oil gushes higher

    Australian shares are set to rise. Nvidia leaps 13pc. Meta rallies after its results beat expectations. War risks bolster crude. Follow updates here.

    Jessica Fox is a world beater.

    The day Jess Fox became the world’s best

    The Aussie canoeist just can’t stop winning, but the medals dried up for our swimmers and the Matildas were bundled out. Here’s what you missed overnight.

    Iran’s leader orders ‘direct strike on Israel’ for Hamas chief killing

    Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, has ordered retaliation after a humiliating security failure, raising the risk of a region-wide conflict.

    Fed says September rate cut is ‘on the table’

    Jerome Powell said “a reduction in our policy rate could be on the table as soon as the next meeting in September” as the Federal Reserve held rates steady.

    Rex needs a buyer willing to spend big on planes

    The government is downplaying its interest in a bailout, but may have no choice but to stump up to help keep the regions connected.

    Chalmers won’t rule out government taking equity stake in Rex

    Jim Chalmers says government considering all Rex options; Man accused of plotting September 11 attacks to plead guilty; How day five of the Games unfolded. Follow live updates.

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    Mollie O’Callaghan and Shayna Jack embrace after their disappointing finish in the race

    Chalmers takes silver but gold rush dries up in pool

    Zac Stubblety-Cook and Kyle Chalmers had to settle for silver, while hot favourite Mollie O’Callaghan missed the podium altogether.

    Triathlete Sophie Linn makes it out of the Seine in one piece.

    ‘Like a video game’: How it felt to race in the Seine

    These Aussie triathletes have been all over the world, competing in all sorts of conditions. But they’d never seen or done anything like this.

    From left to right: Adam Hunter, Paris performance analysis hub manager, senior biomechanist at the Australian Sports Commission Mitchell Mooney,   Sarah Taylor, intelligence lead at Athletics Australia, Jake Scheide, skill acquisition support at Paralympics Australia and Ian Morrow, head of performance at Swimming Australia.

    Meet the data junkies helping the Aussie team succeed

    They aren’t Olympians or even in Paris, but this team is critical to Australia’s success.

    Memory of her dad gives McKeown ‘superpower’ to retain gold

    Kaylee McKeown’s furious final lap to win the 100m backstroke earned her a fourth Olympic gold medal and kept Australia at the top of the swimming competition.

    ‘It sucks’: Distraught Aussie women walk away from rugby empty-handed

    The sevens team came into the Games set for gold, but against Canada and then the US they watched a medal almost literally sprint away from them.

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    Companies

    Why Rio Tinto wants a bigger presence in lithium and copper

    ‘I couldn’t care less about what the lithium price is in the next 12 months,’ says chief executive Jakob Stausholm.

    Rio boss dismisses Jabiluka uranium ‘extortion’

    Jakob Stausholm says precious cultural heritage at Jabiluka made it a no-go zone and advocates for a uranium mine were engaging in “extortion”

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    Eraring output at five-year high as coal dependence persists

    Origin Energy lifted provisions on plant sites by $235 million and warned of a big jump in coal costs for the generator.

    David Jones CEO Scott Fyfe is investing over$250 million in revamping the chain with owners Anchorage Capital.

    Customers seeking more discounts than ever, says David Jones chief

    Although shoppers remain cautious, Scott Fyfe and Anchorage Capital are hoping their $250 million revamp will keep consumers spending.

    Elecnor blames earnings slump on SA-NSW high-voltage cable project

    EnergyConnect’s Spanish contractor has recorded a provision of $13.98 million for losses on its Australian projects in the six months to June 30.

    Nickel boss says Indonesia trying to distance itself from China

    Nickel Industries managing director Justin Werner says Jakarta wants to attract more Western investment to an industry dominated by China.

    NZ regulators probe banks over government bond trading

    As ASIC’s investigation into suspected manipulation in the government bond market heats up, New Zealand’s corporate watchdog is making its own inquiries.

    Companies in the News

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    View stories and data from an ASX listed company

    Markets

    Reserve Bank governor Michele Bullock will meet to discuss interest rates next week.

    Relief rally sweeps market after cool inflation tempers rate fears

    Shares had the best day since 2022, the Aussie dollar fell, and bond yields tumbled after core inflation prompted traders to rapidly start pricing in a rate cut in Australia.

    Wall Street.

    What happened overnight? Nvidia surged higher, Fed held

    Australian shares were set to rise. Techs mostly rebounded, paced by Nvidia’s near 13 per cent gain. Meta beat with quarterly results. The US oil price leapt 5 per cent.

    Satya Nadella says AI demand is outstripping capacity.

    Microsoft’s $334b sell-off is a sign of healthy AI doubts

    Microsoft smashed analysts’ forecasts in the June quarter, but it still wasn’t enough to please a market that has bet too heavily on the AI revolution. 

    Traders gird for ‘dangerous’ 48 hours in markets

    There’s a lot riding on the next few days, with Australia’s quarterly inflation report and the US Federal Reserve’s interest rate decision. Anything less than consensus could rile markets.

    Microsoft reports slower Azure cloud growth; shares drop

    Microsoft’s main growth engine in recent years, its Azure cloud-computing service, expanded revenue by 29 per cent against expectations of 31 per cent.

    Opinion

    Inflation helps government dodge interest rate bullet

    The June quarter figures were not good, but they also weren’t as bad as feared. That is likely to give the Reserve Bank breathing space to keep interest rates on hold next week.

    August reprieve but no interest rate relief yet

    Inflation remains sticky, well-above the 2 per cent to 3 per cent target band, and has basically moved sideways.

    The AFR View

    Editorial

    The AFR View

    Jabiluka was cancelled by edict from above

    The decision to mine the uranium deposit or not should have been taken by the parties involved, not through the high-handed intervention of an anti-nuclear government.

    Tony Grey

    Former miner

    Tony Grey

    Productivity is the key to taming inflation for good

    Either governments and business improve the supply side of the economy, or the RBA will have to keep squeezing demand indefinitely.

    Paul Brennan

    Contributor

    Paul Brennan

    Why the $3m super tax has turned into a mess

    It may seem hard to argue against making people with high superannuation balances pay more tax, but implementing it is a dog’s breakfast.

    John Kehoe

    Economics editor

    John Kehoe

    The real danger that Trump would pose for Ukraine

    Agreeing to Russia’s demand for a neutral Ukraine, as a new Republican presidency might, could leave the country at the mercy of Vladimir Putin’s long-term ambitions.

    Reports

    Cybersecurity and AI

    The federal government lays out plans to help boost the nation’s cyber defences, while experts outline steps to stay safe.

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    Politics

    Master Builders Australia Chief Executive Denita Wawn.

    Builders demand new CFMEU watchdog, but not deregistration

    The building lobby wants a new, more powerful industry watchdog, but agrees that deregistering the CFMEU would be counterproductive.

    British shipbuilder BAE Systems will build six Hunter-class frigates for the navy, down from a planned nine.

    The ‘criminal price tag’ for the navy’s new warships is $4b a pop

    A new fleet of frigates will cost almost $4 billion each, even before weapons are fitted, it can be revealed, making them the navy’s most expensive warship.

    Treasurer Jim Chalmers and RBA governor Michele Bullock will be breathing slightly easier after today’s inflation figures.

    Inflation stays sticky, but it won’t force RBA rate rise

    The consumer price figures were not as bad as feared, but inflation remains persistent and higher-for-longer interest rates will be required.

    Nuclear talk finally goes ahead after Holmes à Court criticism

    The engineer whose nuclear speech was cancelled the day renewable energy advocate Simon Holmes à Court objected to it has finally delivered the talk.

    This start-up’s invention is keeping coffee prices down

    Surging input costs forced Perth company Filament Coffee to rethink how it delivered its cold brew to customers.

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    World

    Middle East on edge after Israel assassinates Hamas chief

    All eyes are on Iran’s response after twin Israeli strikes targeted top officials belonging to the Hamas and Hezbollah terror groups.

    A phone light is used to check for damage from an Israeli airstrike in the southern suburbs of Beirut.

    Hezbollah confirms that a top commander was killed in Israeli strike

    The Iran-backed group said earlier that Fouad Shukur was in the building during the attack, and they were searching for him in the rubble to determine his fate.

    Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh has been killed while in Iran.

    Iran’s supreme leader vows revenge on Israel after Hamas chief killed

    Israel has been blamed for the killing of Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh in Tehran, a severe blow to the group that threatens to engulf the region in further conflict.

    The venture capitalists who made J.D. Vance

    Vance is the first prominent tech venture capitalist to win a spot on a major party presidential ticket, in a sign of the industry’s growing power.

    Trump, Harris launch multi-million dollar attack ads

    The presidential candidates are trying to land blows with costly advertisements as the election is reset with the new Democratic candidate.

    Property

    Deborah Coakley, QIC’s incoming real estate head.

    QIC property funds head quits

    David Asplin, a 12-year veteran of the firm, has left just days after Michael O’Brien quit as the real estate division head.

    Master Builders Australia Chief Executive Denita Wawn.

    Builders demand new CFMEU watchdog, but not deregistration

    The building lobby wants a new, more powerful industry watchdog, but agrees that deregistering the CFMEU would be counterproductive.

    This new CIP industrial estate in Campbellfield, Melbourne is 64 per cent leased.

    Record leasing, higher rents lift earnings at Centuria industrial fund

    Centuria Industrial REIT leased more than 20pc of its portfolio over FY24 and generated average increases of 43 per cent as rents were reset to market rates.

    The big switch: tenants take up more space in top towers

    The demand for better-quality space is helping make the business case for a new generation of office landmarks.

    Rich Lister’s $6b plan for 10,000 homes at master-planned city

    The Costa Family Office is the majority investor in a 909ha site near Murray Bridge that will be developed into a $6 billion project with almost 10,000 homes.

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    Wealth

    While it’s technically possible for someone to pay no income tax, it’s highly unlikely.

    Is it possible to pay no income tax?

    It is nonsensical to spend money just to get a tax deduction because you’re still out of pocket.

    What to do to with your SMSF if you’re moving overseas

    The Tax Office requires trustees to pass three tests if they wish to maintain tax benefits.

    Where to invest as the tech megacap rally eases

    Signs that equity investors are getting cold feet over the rapid advances in artificial intelligence leaders have put a spotlight on some less obvious beneficiaries of the technology boom.

    Technology

    Leonardo generated impressive looking images using AI. These were submitted by users to its forums following thematic prompts.

    Canva’s AI prize Leonardo traded for $320m, dividing VC industry

    The valuation has been so closely guarded some investors have refused to tell their own backers how much Canva paid for the start-up.

    Premier Steven Miles says “social media companies have no regard” and “no responsibility”.

    ‘Offensive’ social media companies shamed for letting scams thrive

    Financial Services Minister Stephen Jones says social media giants are “dragging their heels” in the fight against scams

    Former US president Donald Trump is positioning himself as a pro-crypto candidate.

    Australians welcome Trump’s pro-crypto stand

    Crypto traders say Donald Trump’s pledges to end the “persecution” of the industry and sack SEC chairman Gary Gensler are a good start.

    Work & Careers

    Law graduate, Claudia McDonnell, wants to have 5 children.

    If this law graduate has two children, she will be exceptional

    Claudia McDonnell, 24, belongs to the most childless generation of Australian women in modern history.

    In tougher job market, aspiring bankers skip class to ‘stack’ internships

    Goldman Sachs had 31.5 per cent more internship applications in Singapore this year, and graduate recruitment is now so competitive that “internships are where you can get the foot in the door”.

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    Life & Luxury

    Ryan Reynolds, left, as Deadpool/Wade Wilson and Hugh Jackman as Wolverine/Logan in the slapsticky Deadpool & Wolverine.

    Deadpool & Wolverine film review – Marvel’s big bet rakes in a record

    This “action-comedy” has more blood-letting than any other superhero movie, but its “R” rating hasn’t stopped it making financial history.

    “One of my proudest moments was achieving a 55-kilogram weighted squat”.

    How weightlifting strengthens more than muscles for retail strategist

    Kelly Brown, co-founder of an e-commerce agency, finds pumping iron reduces her stress levels as she strives to hit personal bests.

    Alexia Roberts, Chief Winemaker in the Yeenunga Vineyard.

    Getting a taste for grenache? Try these new old-vine examples

    South Australian producers are serving up a bunch of great grenaches – here are four you need to know about.

    Arthur Boyd’s oil painting, Landscape, measuring a tidy 19.5 x 22.5 cm, carries an estimate of $15,000 to $25,000.

    An $8.2m result affirms Ron Walker and Denis Savill’s taste in art

    Just 28 works owned by two men who spent decades doing deals delivered one of the best auction results of the year.

    Krug Champagnes once bottled  are kept in the House’s cellars in Reims.

    How much champagne is too much? Depends on the airline you’re flying

    We joined Singapore Airlines on a whirlwind tour of its premium suppliers across France’s Champagne region. This is what we learnt.

    From the gallery