Skip to navigationSkip to contentSkip to footerHelp using this website - Accessibility statement
  • Advertisement
    AUDUSD0.6806
    0.0023 (0.34%)0.34%
    SPI 2008,008.00
    -18.00 (-0.22%)-0.22%
    S&P/ASX 2008,045.10
    -26.30 (-0.33%)-0.33%
    All Ords8,263.60
    -27.70 (-0.33%)-0.33%
    NZX 504,668.45
    -47.95 (-1.02%)-1.02%
    Hang Seng17,747.54
    55.09 (0.31%)0.31%
    Nikkei38,362.53
    -9.23 (-0.02%)-0.02%
    View all
    Mineral Resources boss Chris Ellison’s gone from expansion to batten-down-the-hatches.

    Boom or bust? MinRes is the ASX’s white-knuckle ride

    The company’s huge debt numbers could sink a weaker board and management team. Who said big caps had to be boring?

    Perpetual chief executive Rob Adams handed down his final result as the fund manager’s CEO.

    Perpetual ready to sprinkle riches; red flags at Cettire

    Wesfarmers and Qantas headlined the final Thursday of earnings season, but it was Perpetual and Cettire’s results that caught our eye.

    The Productivity Commission has urged Labor to assess if the subsidies are in the national interest, as energy expert Tony Wood warned against competing with China.

    PM’s $1.5b solar and battery plan needs review: PC

    The Productivity Commission has urged Labor to assess if the subsidies are in the national interest, as energy expert Tony Wood said it was ‘nonsensical’ to compete against China.

    Cettire auditor fails to sign off on accounts, begins ‘nuanced’ review

    The luxury online retailer was a market darling. But its market capitalisation has been slashed amid weaker sales and questions about its business model.

    Comyn blasts Greens for ‘insidious’ populist bank bashing

    The CBA chief executive attacked “big corporations tax” proposals lacking any “rigour or merit” that will “erode trust in important institutions”.

    Wesfarmers, Cettire drive ASX lower

    Shares fall; Nvidia’s forecast disappoints; Sandfire ups revenue; higher profit for Wesfarmers; Atlas Arteria & Qantas profit drop; Southern Cross skips dividend. Follow updates here.

    Seven tells court 13 women have claims about newsman Robert Ovadia

    The former high-profile crime reporter was sacked by Network Seven in June amid an internal investigation. He is fighting the claims.

    Advertisement

    The best of travel, fashion, cars and more, straight to your inbox every Saturday.

    Sign up for the free Life & Leisure newsletter

    Companies

    Qantas chief executive officer Vanessa Hudson.

    Qantas deflects Qatar factor, readies for more competition

    The airline reported $2.1 billion in earnings last financial year, down 18 per cent from a record result in 2023.

    Mortgage broker pay should attract more scrutiny: Comyn

    The chief executive of the country’s largest lender says mortgage brokers who write the majority of loans “don’t have any controls” on pay at all.

    Jeff Peters, the CEO of Platinum Asset Management

    Platinum profit falls as funds flee on performance

    The investment manager blamed poor performance for shrinking inflows, but said “green shoots” were coming through on investment returns.

    Wesfarmers managing director Rob Scott calls the performance of Kmart a “standout”, with youth fashion, beauty and health all resonating with consumers.

    Kmart sparkle sends Wesfarmers’ profits and dividends higher

    While the conglomerate’s retail brands including Bunnings and Officeworks posted increased earnings, the mining and energy businesses went backwards.

    South32 warns WA carbon emissions limits ‘way above’ reasonable

    South32 has warned that the carbon emissions limits proposed by the WA government would far exceed those demanded by the federal government.

    Mineral Resources ditches dividend for first time in a decade

    Chris Ellison-led MinRes says it will defer expansion projects and focus on cost reduction after ending the financial year with net debt of almost $4.43 billion.

    Rio Tinto poised to take control of uranium project clean-up

    Rio Tinto is attempting to end decades of disputes with minority investors, traditional owners and governments over the project in the Northern Territory.

    Companies in the News

    Search companies

    View stories and data from an ASX listed company

    Markets

    Nick Griffin of Munro Partners.

    These early Nvidia backers are offloading their shares – for now

    Some early Australian investors of the AI darling were positioned for a sharp sell-off in the shares this week, including Munro Partners, but a re-acceleration in the chipmaker’s earnings is also in their sights.

    Nvidia’s fall shows ‘just great’ isn’t good enough any more

    On the surface everything was rosy in Nvidia’s market-shifting earnings call, so why have investors headed for the door?

    Warren Buffett is one of the richest people in the world, and perhaps the most prolific investor ever.

    Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway tops $US1 trillion market cap

    The conglomerate has become the first US company outside the technology sector to reach the 13-figure milestone, after its shares rose 30 per cent this year.

    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.

    Why a surging gold price could signal ‘more sinister’ times ahead

    Investors are being urged to look further into the record-breaking rally in gold prices, and a “quiet trade” unfolding in Russia and China.

    Opinion

    Labor losing ground on left and right

    Labor’s fury at Greens MP Max Chandler-Mather over his CFMEU support is a convenient political distraction.

    Why the Pilbara is not going to explode in a wave of strikes

    Getting the majority of workers to back a new wave of unionism in the Pilbara might be harder than either side thinks.

    Scott Riches

    Former union official.

    Scott Riches

    The two words you should always treat with caution in business

    Sentences which begin “Studies show...” are often followed by a description of a correlation interpreted as if it were a causal relationship - when it’s not.

    Richard Holden

    Economics professor

    Richard Holden

    Whole-of-government should cut across ‘legacy’ portfolios

    The big and wide-ranging issues that will dominate future decades require an integrated strategy office to be established to wrestle with complex, integrated problems.

    Huw McKay

    Strategic thinker

    Huw McKay

    Harris’ refusal to answer questions is only hurting herself

    The Democratic presidential nominee’s reluctance to do media interviews will not help sell her to undecided voters before the November election.

    Edward Luce

    Columnist

    Edward Luce

    Have universities brought Clare’s hard cap on themselves?

    It’s a populist political fix for cutting immigration. But a failure of university self-regulation has also led to government intervention.

    The AFR View

    Editorial

    The AFR View

    Reports

    Higher Education Awards

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

    Advertisement

    Politics

    King says cash rate will settle in low 3pc range

    Peter King says banker pay is a ‘live issue’ for Westpac; CBA boss Matt Comyn says term deposit rate accusations are incorrect after he was quizzed on coffee prices. How the day unfolded.

    CFMEU directors depart in Cbus board clean-out

    The lawbreaking construction union’s three directors have left the board of Cbus, but it is unclear who the CFMEU administrator will replace them with.

    Resources Minister Madeleine King and BHP CEO Mike Henry.

    King lashes BHP for railing against Labor workplace laws

    Resources Minister Madeleine King has accused the mining giant of consistently opposing Labor policy, and says miners on $250,000 a year “deserve every bloody penny”.

    PM’s $1.5b solar and battery plan needs review: PC

    The Productivity Commission has urged Labor to assess if the subsidies are in the national interest, as energy expert Tony Wood said it was ‘nonsensical’ to compete against China.

    Albanese’s hot-mic moment exposes US Pacific security plan

    Anthony Albanese played down a conversation with a top US official over the Pacific police pact, and questioned a journalist’s ethics for recording the exchange.

    SPONSORED

    World

    Patrick Mahony (left) and Tarek Obaid.

    ‘Obscenely greedy’ oil execs jailed over vast 1MDB fraud

    A Swiss court found the former PetroSaudi executives responsible for embezzling $2.6 billion in what the court heard was the “fraud of the century”.

    Pavel Durov.

    Telegram boss charged, blocked from leaving France

    Pavel Durov faces preliminary charges over the alleged failure to address criminality on the messaging app, including the distribution of sexual abuse content.

    Even Temu is crashing, in red flag for China’s economy

    PDD Holdings, owner of market darling Temu, has surprised investors with an unusually gloomy outlook, as the nation’s economic malaise takes a toll on demand.

    Three dead, factories shut as typhoon hits Japan’s Kyushu

    Major vehicle makers, including Toyota and Nissan, suspended operations in domestic factories, while chipmaker Renesas temporarily halted production.

    Trump hit with new US criminal charges before election

    Prosecutors are attempting to tailor the fresh charges against Donald Trump to reflect the Supreme Court decision on presidential immunity.

    Property

    Dreaming of a tree change? You might be too late

    Housing approval numbers in many regional areas went backwards in the past financial year, while capital cities fared a lot better, official data shows.

    Not crossing the line: But large contractors want reforms to an insolvency scheme they say costs them money.

    How construction failures push up costs for builders – and consumers

    Union officials with unchecked power on construction sites force builders to cover costs of insolvent subcontractors, which in turn pushes up costs for home buyers.

    Late Foxtel boss’ luxury weekender sets Central Coast record

    The luxury weekender owned by one of Australia’s most influential entertainment pioneers, the late Brian Walsh, sold for an undisclosed price understood to be between $9.5 million and $10 million.

    Home building goes backwards as infrastructure booms

    Developers and economists say conditions might improve soon for detached homes, but there’s no sign of any change that would get apartments going up again.

    John Singleton puts ‘for sale’ sign on $16m Central Coast acreage

    Rich lister adman John Singleton has listed his Killcare acreage on the NSW Central Coast just ten months after buying it for a suburb record of $15.85m.

    Advertisement

    Wealth

    Policy information will be sought for boats worth $100,000 plus.

    Yachts, fine art and investment properties targeted by ATO

    The ATO will use data from insurance and property management companies to cross-check taxpayer claims.

    Beware – DIY repairs and renovations are a minefield for SMSFs

    Doing work on a property owned by your SMSF is fraught with danger because of strict tax and superannuation laws. Here’s what you need to know.

    My short-term memory is a worry – should I close my DIY super fund?

    Many retirees with SMSFs worry about diminished capacity as they get older – this is what to do.

    Technology

    Ray Dalio, billionaire and founder of Bridgewater Associates, plans to create an AI version of himself.

    Ray Dalio to beta test an AI version of himself

    Billionaire Ray Dalio created the world’s biggest hedge fund, now he’s recreating himself with AI to share his principles.

    NextDC chief Craig Scroggie.

    No sweetener for NextDC in AirTrunk’s $20b auction

    The CEO of data centre group NextDC, Craig Scroggie, doesn’t expect AirTrunk’s sale to influence the way his company is valued by the sharemarket.

    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.

    Work & Careers

    Gayle Dickerson says her intuition has helped her assess the capabilities of management teams.

    Five times you shouldn’t trust your gut as a leader

    Gayle Dickerson says relying on intuition can be useful when you’re dealing with imperfect information.

    Veteran CFMEU leader may return as rebels jockey for hearts and minds

    Respected former construction union leader Andrew Ferguson may be a key appointee to help clean up the CFMEU.

    Advertisement

    Life & Luxury

    The year’s top watches are from brands you’ve probably never heard of

    The ‘Oscars of watchmaking’ takes place in Geneva later this year – and there are some unexpected names among the nominees.

    Melbourne Symphony Orchestra chairman David Li with his wife Angela, and former managing director Sophie Galaise.

    How the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra is tearing itself apart

    War erupted on the board of one of Australia’s most prestigious arts institutions long before the public upheavals over a pianist’s remarks about Gaza.

    Why everyone should play this game of integrity

    Actuarial recruiter Jas Singh only became serious about mastering golf in the past few years and believes the fairway is a great place for personal growth.

    “A pack of noisy bastards”: Kneecap are, from left, DJ Provai, Mo Chara and Moglai Bap.

    ‘Kneecap’ and ‘Touch’: edgy Irish hip-hop and an Icelandic romance

    The fictionalised biopic of a loud, incomprehensible band has a rough and ready quality, while a heart-warming drama somehow manages to keep the lid on the treacle jar

    Private investigator’s weapons fetch a fortune

    Warren Mallard penchant’s for “edged” weapons has paid off, while James Wolfensohn’s modern Australian classics get a mixed reception.

    From the gallery