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    Government energy rebates caused electricity bills to fall by 6.4 per cent in July, but the RBA has warned the decline in inflation will be temporary.

    Power rebates hide inflation threat, with no rate cuts in sight

    Headline inflation fell to 3.5 per cent in July thanks in part to state and federal energy rebates that will have only temporary effects, meaning the RBA is likely to keep interest rates where they are.

    Family offices are ready to invest their cash reserves.

    Two-speed economy exposes the great Australian divide

    The gap has widened between younger and older Australians, small and large businesses, and resources-rich Western Australia and the east.

    Woolworths chief executive Brad Banducci departs with a mixed report card.

    Banducci’s last Woolies profit is his worst misstep and finest moment

    CEO Brad Banducci leaves the retail giant in a difficult spot. But the strategic decisions he’s made can drive the group’s turnaround.

    ASX falls; Woolworths and Kelsian climb; Tabcorp sinks

    Shares lower; $A rises as July CPI cools; Tabcorp dumps turnaround strategy; Woolworths flags special dividend; Kelsian bounces after sell-off; APA profits increase. Follow updates here.

    Gill McLachlan hits the Tabcorp reset button with $1.4b write-down

    The wagering giant has struggled to best its larger overseas rivals, and its new chief executive said it was obvious it would not meet cost reduction targets.

    Zelensky says incursion into Russia part of plan to end war

    Volodymyr Zelensky says he is not intending to permanently annex the region; PM announces endorsement for Pacific police; Victorian education minister slams student caps. Follow live updates.

    Biden was good at managing America’s decline

    Between the peak of something and its ultimate demise, a vast amount can be achieved. Perhaps it took a man who became president at 78 to see the point, writes Janan Ganesh.

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    Companies

    Brad Banducci has run Woolworths for eight years. He presented his last financial update on Wednesday.

    Woolworths supermarkets lose ground to Coles after tumultuous year

    The major retailer recorded a slight rise in underlying profits, which were all but wiped out by a big write-down in its New Zealand business.

    Andrew and Nicola Forrest.

    Fortescue dividend worth $2.2b for Forrest family

    Andrew and Nicola Forrest will receive the windfall after Fortescue raised its dividend payout ratio at a time when it is cutting 700 jobs.

    Rising medical costs are putting pressure on private hospitals, and insurers.

    Insurer payments to hospitals are rising – so are out-of-pocket costs

    But major hospital groups say surging specialist fees and medical device expenses mean the higher payments are still barely keeping them above water.

    Coles CEO Leah Weckert says shoppers are seeking out deals, buying less meat and spending on frozen and bulk foods.

    Coles rewards shareholders as profit and margins jump

    The result pushed Coles shares to a two-year-high, as major retailers face more political heat over alleged price gouging.

    Tradies get a taste for Guzman y Gomez’s breakfast burritos

    “Cafes are expensive,” says Guzman y Gomez co-CEO Steven Marks, who is tapping into the fast-growing drive-through breakfast rush.

    Worley profits surge but pipeline softens as energy projects cancelled

    Customers are being more “pragmatic” on how they reduce carbon emissions and putting pure sustainability projects on hold, says chief executive Chris Ashton.

    Austal fights to keep US Navy work after $35m fraud penalty

    The Australian defence contractor accepted a $US24 million fine in a plea deal to avoid criminal prosecution after a long-running American investigation.

    Companies in the News

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    Markets

    ASX investors paying ‘eye-watering’ prices despite weak earnings

    Investors in Australia’s sharemarket are increasingly getting less bang for their buck for some of the biggest names on the ASX, but they are paying it anyway.

    Jerome Powell’s rate talk has sent the gold price to record highs.

    Gold bulls delight in Jackson Hole as Powell juices rally

    Investors say the Federal Reserve chairman’s speech was a watershed moment for bullion.

    What happened overnight? Wall Street churned as it awaited Nvidia

    Australian shares were set to open down. US stocks traded in a narrow range as the AI darling’s quarterly results loomed. Iron ore advanced, oil pulled back.

    Iron ore’s spike above $US100 won’t last: strategists

    The price of Australia’s key export has bounced 10 per cent in just two weeks, catching hedge funds off guard.

    CBA chief economist Stephen Halmarick calls time at bank

    The economics specialist is due to depart early next year after almost 16 years with the big four lender to pursue other opportunities in the field.

    Opinion

    Why the RBA will ignore lower inflation

    While Treasurer Jim Chalmers will welcome Wednesday’s lower inflation number, the RBA won’t be fooled by the temporary and artificial effect of energy subsidies.

    John Kehoe

    Economics editor

    John Kehoe

    BHP steps boldly in an uncertain world

    The company is confident of future growth prospects in copper and potash, while iron ore profits continue to underpin its bottom line despite nerves over China.

    How to remake the CFMEU culture of confrontation

    Only deeper, durable changes will stop the law-breaking construction union’s self-reinforcing behaviour re-emerging after three years of administration.

    Peter Richards

    Industrial relations expert

    Peter Richards

    Biden was good at managing America’s decline

    Between the peak of something and its ultimate demise, a vast amount can be achieved. Perhaps it took a man who became president at 78 to see the point.

    Janan Ganesh

    Contributor

    Janan Ganesh

    Why haven’t the police investigated the doxxing of Jewish creatives?

    We now know who leaked the names and comments in the WhatsApp group. But what about holding accountable those who used carriage services to menace and harass?

    Stuart Cohen

    Australian Jewish Creatives and Academics WhatsApp group

    An aggressive Ukraine has crossed Washington’s red line

    Volodymyr Zelensky is prepared to ignore Russia’s nuclear threats. But the Biden administration is still wary of escalating the war, writes Gideon Rachman.

    Reports

    Higher Education Awards

    The Higher Education Awards highlight the tremendous contribution that the Higher Education sector makes to Australian capability, prosperity and society.

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    Politics

    Greens leader Adam Bandt and his party want to gouge another $500 billion in taxes from corporate Australia

    Greens demand $500b in ‘Robin Hood’ taxes on miners, corporates

    The Greens’ “Robin Hood” reforms would levy an extra $514 billion in taxes over 10 years.

    Melbourne hosted up to 50,000 construction workers protesting the administration.

    Rogue CFMEU leaders vow ‘absolute destruction’ of Labor

    Ousted CFMEU officials have vowed to campaign to turf Labor out in state and federal elections, as tens of thousands stopped work to protest the CFMEU administration.

    Universities are set to have international student numbers cut drastically.

    Major universities smashed in Labor about-face on overseas students

    The government will cap numbers and redistribute them across the sector, one of the country’s biggest export industries, with smaller institutions to benefit.

    Households have run out of pandemic savings

    The $300 billion in pandemic-era savings may have run out, encouraging households to save stage three tax cuts.

    Doxxed Jewish group demands police probe of NYT admission

    Members of a group of Jewish creative workers who suffered harassment after details of a private chat group were published believe there’s evidence of a possible crime.

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    World

    Qaid Farhan Alkadi was found in a southern Gaza tunnel.

    Israel rescues first living hostage from Gaza tunnel

    The 52-year-old Israeli father of 11 was taken to a hospital, where members of his large Bedouin Arab family gathered around his bedside in a joyful reunion.

    Nvidia’s rivals are trying to take AI market share.

    Chip challengers try to break Nvidia’s grip on AI

    Cerebras, d-Matrix and Groq are among a group of smaller companies aiming to take a slice of the multibillion-dollar artificial intelligence hardware market.

    People walk in front of their damaged houses after a Russian rocket attack in Usatove village, near Odesa.

    Ukraine plans payback with new weapon after ‘massive’ Russian attack

    Ukraine says it has a new long-range “game changer” weapon to strike deep into Russia, and it doesn’t require asking permission from the US and other allies.

    Top US, China officials to meet on military, Taiwan, fentanyl

    The two countries are at odds over the Middle East and Ukraine, Chinese territorial claims from Taiwan to the South China Sea, and trade.

    Canada tries to halt China’s EV flood with 100pc tariffs

    The move replicates US and EU measures as Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says China “is not playing by the same rules” as everyone else over electric vehicles.

    Property

    Property boom is a sign of wealth for those who own a home.

    Number of homes for sale soar ahead of spring

    Fresh listings are surging in some of the more expensive housing markets in Sydney and Melbourne as sellers rush to beat the competition.

    The 198-room Hoxton Melbourne is due open its doors in 2027

    Accor hotel brand to debut in Melbourne match factory

    The former Redheads match factory in Melbourne’s Cremorne will be repurposed into the country’s first Hoxton designer hotel by developer Alfasi.

    Not moving: The pressures pushing construction businesses under show no sign of easing.

    Construction insolvencies come racing out of the blocks in FY25

    It’s not clear when the pressures pushing builders over in numbers disproportionate to the size of the sector will ease.

    Lendlease, Warburg Pincus in $1.8b life sciences buy

    As it goes through a messy turnaround, Lendlease needs to convince investors it is on the right track. This deal aims to do that.

    London’s luxury-home market looks to rich Americans to save it

    Agents looking to sell the city’s priciest homes are increasingly seeing US buyers as their best hope for reviving a market hurt by tougher taxes on the rich.

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    Wealth

    There is still time for savers to secure a good deal.

    The window to make decent money on term deposits is fast closing

    Banks have already started cutting interest rates anticipating the Reserve Bank’s next move, but there are still reasonable deals to be found.

    The hunt for truly diverse investments – from alligators to concrete

    With regular asset classes increasingly correlated, wealthy investors are looking to some esoteric choices.

    Being an Nvidia multimillionaire isn’t as enjoyable as you may think

    The tech darling’s 3776 per cent rally has enriched people, but they are too busy to bask in their wealth, as work at the company is gruelling and high-stress.

    Technology

    Nvidia’s rivals are trying to take AI market share.

    Chip challengers try to break Nvidia’s grip on AI

    Cerebras, d-Matrix and Groq are among a group of smaller companies aiming to take a slice of the multibillion-dollar artificial intelligence hardware market.

    How to hide your tech in plain sight

    Like Samsung’s Frame TV, the Samsung Music Frame uses the power of invisibility to get spouses to finally agree on something for once in their lives.

    Casey Donovan has at least 10 people online implying that they are her agent.

    New music booking platform raises millions to cut out middle men

    Try to book big names for an event, and you’ll face a dozen sites claiming to represent them. That scourge may now end for artists such as Casey Donovan.

    Work & Careers

    Anthony Pratt at the 2024 Met Gala in New York. He and his sisters argue their half-sister’s claim to the family’s $23 billion empire should be dismissed.

    Anthony Pratt a witness to father’s love for half-sister: court claim

    Billionaire Anthony Pratt and his sisters were witness to the “bonds of love and affection” between their late father and his “love child” Paula Hitchcock, claim new court documents.

    Landmark bid for gig worker pay prompts warning of ‘legal chaos’

    Transport Workers Union applies to set minimum rates for food delivery workers, truck drivers and couriers just days after government’s laws came into effect.

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    Life & Luxury

    Hermès for your home? See what the luxury brand has in store

    These covetable products may be new, but they include plenty of retro nods.

    Daisy Knatchbull: “The Deck is for every woman. Every size. Every shape. We don’t discriminate, except when it comes to gender.”

    The newest trend on London’s Savile Row: women

    “We don’t discriminate, except when it comes to gender,” says Daisy Knatchbull, who’s turning heads in the home of suiting.

     The Ferrari 250 LM

    This FI beauty could top $100m at a legendary racing car auction

    The Indianapolis Motor Speedway Museum is about to part with some of its extraordinary collection.

    Art collector Lisa Paulsen and daughter Zoe Paulsen, Director of Sydney Contemporar.

    Affordable or significant? Sydney’s biggest art fair offers both

    With 86 galleries taking part in Sydney Contemporary, new director Zoe Paulsen reckons visitors will find something that piques their interest.

    Traders at the Chicago Mercantile Exchange in 2002.

    Want to be a more effective trader? Get in touch with your emotions

    Emotions put us in the right mind-state so that we can effectively think about situations. Ignore them at your peril.

    From the gallery