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Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris, and Republican presidential candidate former President Donald Trump.

Now it’s the middle ground that matters in the US election

How both Trump and Harris react over the next few days following this debate will determine the tone of the rest of their campaigns.

Mining was the weakest sector as heavyweights BHP, Fortescue and Rio Tinto all fell.

Traders gear up for rally as supply shocks rock markets

Australian miners notched their best week so far this year as investors rush back to the beaten-up sector in hopes the commodities comeback is just beginning.

Scams are costing Australian households at least $2.7 billion a year.

Toughest anti-scam protections in the world unveiled

Banks, telcos and social media platforms will be required to put help for scam victims front and centre on their websites under proposed laws.

It’s deja vu all over again when it comes to aged care and RBA reforms

This week’s agreement on aged care and the failure to agree on the RBA reprises arguments that took place decades ago, writes Laura Tingle.

Social media bosses face jail if they fail to stop revenge porn

Britain is introducing tough new online safety laws that could see social media bosses punished for allowing deep fakes and revenge porn to be shared.

Murdoch’s family trust feud to stay secret, court rules

A court battle over the family control of Rupert Murdoch’s media empire will be held behind closed doors, depriving the media of details of the succession drama.

Surprise spending blowout hits $70b

Treasury may have underestimated a state and federal government budget spending splurge by $70 billion which a string of economists warn will add to inflation.

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review

Polls perennially underestimate Donald Trump’s support.

Five reasons Trump could still win (and Harris blows it)

It’s always misleading to follow election news day to day. Elections are driven by a few core realities and if Donald Trump wins in November, it will be due to these five drivers of support for Trumpism.

‘Snake oil’: Don’t believe the artificial intelligence hype

Misleading claims about the capabilities of AI are rampant, and the technology is already causing serious harm from hiring to education, medicine and hiring, write two computer scientists in this extract of their new book, AI Snake Oil.

Danielle Wood.

Economists have lost their power. Here’s how to fix it

Economists can be a necessary “pain in the arse” in public debates. But policymakers have stopped listening, and the influence of the profession depends on providing practical advice.

As the Taliban silences Afghan women, we must raise our voices

Since 2021, the world has stood by and watched as the basic rights of women in Afghanistan have been dismantled.

How Shein’s shadowy CEO staged a staggering takeover of retail

A Chinese-founded company selling questionably sourced clothes can thrive thanks to the perpetually unsated consumer.

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

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Companies

German State Secretary Anja Hajduk and Minister for Climate Change Chris Bowen during a press conference at the APAC Hydrogen Summit in Brisbane on Friday.

Australia and Germany in $660m hydrogen funding initiative

Chris Bowen has rejected commentary about the death of hydrogen industry, claiming production could reach a million tonnes a year in five years.

The Beverly Hills wannabes and the betrayal of Ballarat

The collapse of a small-town gold mine has revealed how millions of dollars flowed to a network of Chinese businessmen. Now liquidators want the money back.

Rob Ferguson, the former CEO of BT Australia.

Corporate Australia mourns former BT boss Rob Ferguson

His Bankers Trust colleague Chris Corrigan remembered him as “an individual thinker with an inquiring mind, who never lost his curiosity about how the world works”.

ANZ chief executive Shayne Elliott was questioned about the bank’s culture at a parliamentary hearing last month.

ANZ boss dismisses trading floor scandal as ‘conspiracy theory’

Shayne Elliott told staff issues within the trading team were unrelated, blaming the media for conflating them.

Nine farewells Mike Sneesby after three years and $3b share price slide

His legacy is likely to be remembered in two parts: what he did do at Stan, and what he didn’t do when he took charge of the publishing and broadcasting giant.

Renewables record tumbles but may be close to pause

Renewables’ share of generation hit a fresh record on Monday, but with coal plants having to run at minimum levels it may be near a temporary limit.

Rex accused of stealing planes from Arizona aircraft graveyard

The lawsuit, filed by American leasing company Jet Midwest, adds a twist to the regional carrier’s tortured demise. Rex entered administration in July.

Companies in the News

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Markets

Uranium stocks rallied on Thursday.

Putin’s ‘jawboning’ of the West with uranium threat unleashes rally

Commodity markets have been rocked after the Russian president suggested limiting metal exports, but pundits are divided on whether he will follow through.

Local shares are set to rise; oil and iron ore were higher overnight.

ASX gains as gold scales record high

Shares lift; Olam Agri sweetens Namoi bid to 75¢; Atlas fights over French tax; gold hits record high; oil rebounds; bitcoin retakes $US58,000. Follow updates here.

The New York Stock Exchange.

What happened overnight? Nvidia helped extend a tech rebound

Australian shares were set to open higher. Nasdaq paced an advance in all three US benchmarks. Oil rebounded. Bitcoin retook $US58,000.

ECB cuts rates again as economy stumbles

The ECB is getting more confident that consumer-price growth is returning to target following its historic spike.

Here’s a stock that’s doubled in value and has further to run

Tura Capital’s Oliver Attwater says there are huge returns to be made in global small and mid-cap stocks – if you know where to look. Like in appliances and commercial kitchens.

Opinion

Chalmers dumps his fiscal profligacy onto the RBA

The government has its foot on the spending pedal while the Reserve Bank tries standing on the brakes. There is no sign of the co-ordination that has been called for.

Michael Stutchbury

Editor-at-large

Michael Stutchbury

Why is APRA trying to blow up the hybrid market?

The prudential watchdog wants to boost bank leverage and raise the risks depositors and taxpayers face in the name of ameliorating its regulatory complexity.

Dutton’s strategic reset targets treasurer and the teals

The latest moves are emblematic of a broader offensive buoyed by polls that suggest a very slim possibility of winning enough seats to negotiate minority government.

Phillip Coorey

Political editor

Phillip Coorey

The EPA is a dead end for Labor

The Coalition will almost certainly not agree to pass the bill next week, even if there are further negotiations and minor concessions from Labor.

Finally, politicians reach a reform deal worthy of the title

Bipartisanship and reform, two rarities these days, have combined in the shape of the age care funding changes.

Phillip Coorey

Political editor

Phillip Coorey

Stop taking our mining good fortune for granted

There is a danger of not only bashing the mining industry, but in treating new minerals as the “next big thing” while overlooking legacy conventional mining.

The AFR View

Editorial

The AFR View

Reports

Clean Energy - the bumpy transition

This special report looks at how Australia is tracking to meet net zero goals, and the new technology that can help us get there.

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Politics

Former Department of Human Services secretary Kathryn Campbell.

Top bureaucrat breached code of conduct 12 times during robo-debt

A review has found 12 public servants, including department secretary Kathryn Campbell, breached the public service code of conduct 97 times during the notorious debt recovery scheme.

Airport executive Lori Argus

Melbourne Airport boss promises third runway ‘noise sharing’ plan

Lori Argus says the third runway is critical for performance; Iconic brand retains top spot as Australia’s most trusted; Official appointed to clean up Setka’s CFMEU branch quits abruptly. Follow live updates.

Peter Dutton has put the broom through the NSW Liberal Party.

Dutton prevails in NSW Liberal Party takeover bid

Former state MP Peta Seaton will join a three-member panel charged with cleaning up the dysfunctional division, in a win for the federal opposition leader.

Aged care overhaul to push more cost onto self-funded retirees

A “user pays” overhaul of aged care funding will come into effect from July 1 next year, after agreement between the government and opposition.

All your questions about the aged care overhaul answered

The first thing to know is that how aged care is funded remains very complex. We’ll do our best to break it down.

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World

Donald Trump at a rally in Tucson, Arizona.

Angry Trump rules out another debate as Harris hauls in the cash

The former president also defended his defensive performance in this week’s debate with his Democratic rival.

A Russian tank at an undisclosed location near the Russian-Ukrainian border last month.

Russia launches major counteroffensive in Kursk

Moscow said its forces had recaptured 10 settlements in the area where Ukraine had launched a daring incursion on August 6.

Billionaire goes from basement to world’s first private spacewalk

Jared Isaacman planted the seeds of payments company Shift4 in his parents’ basement and used to scrounge for pizza dollars. But at 41, he’s just made history.

US hints at allowing Ukraine to strike deeper into Russia

Top US and UK officials announce nearly $2.2 billion in aid to Ukraine, as Secretary of State Antony Blinken says long-range missiles would soon be on the agenda.

Putin’s propaganda queen admits covertly working to get Trump elected

While the Kremlin has denied US claims of meddling in the election, Margarita Simonyan proudly admits her work is at the behest of the Russian government.

Property

The fridge-in-reverse that can cut $1000 from home energy bills

Heat pump hot water systems can deliver large savings on energy bills, but there are issues to be aware of.

Australia’s housing woes are causing everybody to make decisions that they might not ordinarily make.

Housing is eating the economy in countless ways

Australia’s housing woes are causing policymakers, investors and households to make decisions they might not ordinarily make. But to fix it, we need to escape a vicious cycle.

Australia’s highest-paid legal eagle swoops on $18m home

Corrs Chambers Westgarth CEO Gavin MacLaren has emerged as the buyer of a grand South Yarra manor.

How inheritances are reshaping the property market

When it comes to spending legacy money on housing, three different groups of buyers are emerging.

Melbourne is ‘dead’, says property mogul

Nigel Satterley, Australia’s biggest private residential land developer, dismissed fears the good times are over for Perth’s property market.

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Wealth

Gabriel Roure with the Nike Air Yeezy Red Octobers he sold for $45,000.

An Australian billionaire paid $45,000 for these sneakers

Sneakers, handbags, watches, number plates, sports cars. If you like nice things, and to signal your success to the world, there are clever ways to invest to ensure your assets keep gaining value.

Where to invest as bank hybrids disappear

Investors have enjoyed juicy yields on bank hybrids but will need to find alternatives after APRA announced the securities would be phased out by 2032.

What happens to your super after you die comes down to this choice

Your money can go to your beneficiary either as a regular pension payment or as a lump sum death benefit.

Technology

Apple and Nvidia have their own reasons for investing in OpenAI.

OpenAI in fundraising talks that would value it at $225b

The ChatGPT maker is in talks with investors including Apple, Microsoft and Nvidia to raise $US6.5 billion, as the artificial intelligence race continues.

The Fin podcast - Anthony Macdonald, Paul Smith

Inside the AirTrunk deal: how to build a $24b business in nine years

This week on The Fin podcast, Paul Smith and Anthony Macdonald on whether Robin Khuda can grow a $100 billion business and what might get in his way.

‘Daylight robbery:’ Canberra needs EU muscle to land big tech blow

The government wants to work cooperatively with tech moguls such as Meta’s Mark Zuckerberg, but that seems like wishful thinking, and tougher laws are coming.

Work & Careers

Guzman y Gomez’s initial public offering, the largest of the year, was a significant payday for equity capital markets bankers.

Law firm Hogan Lovells to close Australian office

Hogan Lovells will depart Australia a decade after it arrived, while fellow transatlantic firm A&O Shearman will make 10 per cent of its partners redundant.

Degree-free accountants risk undermining profession, unis warn

A proposal to let school-leavers with no degree become chartered accountants risks tarnishing the profession’s reputation, warn leading accounting professors.

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Life & Luxury

Jacob Rees-Mogg: “When it comes to eating, moderation is not something I find difficult.”

Posh people have got the right idea when it comes to diet

Beef, vegetables from the garden and proper butter are the bare necessities for your average toff.

Gloves beat McNuggets for rich sculpture prize

Gloves reshaped into romantic rabbits have won the Woollahra Small Sculpture Prize, besting an earrings and necklace set made from Maccas and its packaging.

Spring to it with a beaded butterfly bag and other fresh treats

Splash out or spend wisely – but whatever you do, it’s time to embrace the new season with style upgrades for your wardrobe, your home, and your wrist.

A meeting room in Flack Studio features the work of Sydney Ball, set off with a moody portrait by Darren Sylvester.

Interior design maestro pays tribute to his famous colour muse

David Flack was inspired by abstract painter Sydney Ball as a schoolboy; now he is curating an exhibition of the late artist’s work.

AFR. NEWS. GOLD COAST. Lawyers  Sienna Marshall and Charles Lethbridge on Coolangatta Beach on the Gold Coast. Picture by Paul Harris. Wednesday 11 September 2024 .

Happy lawyers are better ones: Firm provides unique ways to decompress

Attwood Marshall’s location next to Snapper Rocks means lawyers can catch waves to decompress from the stresses of legal work.

From the gallery