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Chalmers’ RBA dilemma: how much Greens is too much for investors?

Former central bankers say foreign investors who buy Australian government bonds, equities and currency will pay attention to the political standoff over the RBA board.

Public Hospitality Group’s Jon Adgemis at the Australian Open this year.

New York lender in fight over slice of Adgemis’ pubs group

A major lender to Public Hospitality Group, the hotel empire of former KPMG deal maker Jon Adgemis, has signalled it will call in receivers to five Sydney pubs.

‘Extremely volatile’: CFMEU delegate grabs AFR photographer

A CFMEU member has allegedly manhandled a Nine photographer as union members vote to walk off the job in Sydney next week.

Friend or foe? Europe’s big Chinese EV dilemma

Bad news hasn’t been enough to get European carmakers and politicians to rethink their anti-China strategy. But that’s exactly what might need to happen.

Is Woodside going American? Probably a good idea, investors say

Australia’s hostile business environment for oil and gas means Woodside’s shift of emphasis to North America, where it has done a string of deals, is a good idea, they say.

Bipartisan, pragmatic, down to the wire: the deal that almost wasn’t

Panic set in this week as the government’s much-vaunted aged care reforms stalled. They were finally settled on a plane trip from Sydney to Canberra.

Afghanistan’s long dark shadow still hangs over the military

Two major reports this week brought home painful reminders of the legacy of Australia’s contribution to the war on terror. Will anything change?

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weekend fin

Katherine Bennell-Pegg is the first person to qualify as an astronaut under the Australian flag.

The Sydney-born astronaut who learnt Russian in eight weeks

Katherine Bennell-Pegg is the first person to train and qualify as an international astronaut under the Australian flag. She’s doing it all for her late mum.

Daventry Woman: The body of a woman was found on April 10, 2002 near Daventry, UK. She was wearing an orange-coloured floral blouse and pink-and-black skirt.

Meet the retirees hunting down cold cases

A global network of do-it-yourself detectives is on a mission to solve the mysteries that police won’t. Like, who is “D. Malan”, discovered on a hillside in 1979 and still never identified?

China is embracing EVs while European enthusiasm has ebbed.

Friend or foe? Europe’s big Chinese EV dilemma

Bad news hasn’t been enough to get European carmakers and politicians to rethink their anti-China strategy. But that’s exactly what might need to happen.

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.

Afghanistan’s long dark shadow still hangs over the military

Two major reports this week brought home painful reminders of the legacy of Australia’s contribution to the war on terror. Will anything change?

smart investor

Banks and investors will be sad to see hybrids disappear.

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.

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.

Engaging a strategic investment adviser could help you take a step back from running your SMSF.

I’m 74 and want to run my $10m SMSF with less fuss

A wealth manager can help you with investment strategy, administration and accounting. But choose wisely by checking their qualifications.

How investors can avoid being ripped off by strata firms

At the slightest hint of unscrupulous behaviour, ask questions.

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.

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Companies

The Giants run through their banner for the opening of the 2024 season.

What the data says about the rise of the AFL’s northern fan base

The AFL began this season with an opening round that focused solely on the northern states. Was it worth the gamble?

Private Healthcare Australia chief executive Rachel David says Healthscope’s ad campaign against insurers has been a failure.

Insurers deny caving in to Healthscope demands

“Out-of-contract payments have not occurred in response to Brookfield and Healthscope’s heavy-handed US-style campaign,” says lobby group.

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.

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.

Airlines and Melbourne Airport headed for runway funding feud

Vanessa Hudson says Melbourne Airport needs to wait until “the demand is there” before building a third runway and charging airlines and their passengers to pay for it.

Westpac shunted RAMS boss before he took Beyond job

Westpac stood down RAMS boss Jake Bromwich, now the CEO of Beyond Bank, and moved him into a different role as it investigated a whistleblower’s claims.

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”.

Companies in the News

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Markets

The New York Stock Exchange.

Dow rallies on renewed hopes for half-point rate cut

All three US benchmarks were higher after traders repositioned their bets on how aggressive Fed policymakers might be when they meet next week.

Lithium stocks propelled the ASX higher this week.

Traders gear up for commodity 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.

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.

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.

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.

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

A reform to face the test of an ageing Australia

It is encouraging that the two main parties have tackled such a fundamental challenge to the nation in a bipartisan way.

The AFR View

Editorial

The AFR View

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.

How Kamala Harris won the battle of the body language

Donald Trump came to the debate expecting a mouse to toy with. Instead, his Democrat opponent left behind a belittled figure we have rarely seen before.

Louise Mahler

Leadership coach

Louise Mahler

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

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.

Laura Tingle

Columnist

Laura Tingle

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

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.

Treasurer Jim Chalmers and Aged Care Minister Anika Wells on Thursday.

Aged care concessions cost $5b in revenue

The Albanese government sacrificed about $5 billion in budget savings in return for securing the Coalition’s support for the aged care reforms.

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 and boost call centre assistance under new proposed laws.

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.

‘Grab the popcorn’: Vic Liberal civil war goes prime time

In one sense, ousted Liberal MP Moira Deeming’s defamation case against John Pesutto is about free speech. But it threatens to engulf Peter Dutton’s federal opposition.

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World

Donald Trump during this week’s debate.

Why Trump says immigrants are eating cats and dogs

In the US presidential debate, Donald Trump repeated a bizarre and false claim circulating in right-wing circles on social media.

PwC in Shanghai faces a substantial fine and suspension over its failings with Evergrande.

PwC banned from China for six months and fined record $92m

Chinese authorities imposed a huge fine on PwC and suspended the accounting firm from operating over failures in auditing the collapse of real estate giant Evergrande.

Kamala Harris and Donald Trump

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

Even Donald Trump’s backers admit Kamala Harris won this week’s debate. How he bounces back from defeat will shape the race for the White House.

Trump pledges mass deportation of Haitians to Venezuela

The Republican presidential candidate, mocked earlier this week for saying Haitian arrivals were eating household pets, said he would “do large deportations”.

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.

Property

Dissh co-founder Lucy Henry-Hicks and her partner Mitch Lau have bought 1A Fourth Street, Palm Beach, QLD.

Fashion duo splash $40m on mega block, breaking Gold Coast record

The duo behind Brisbane cult label Dissh have reset the suburb’s property records after purchasing three blocks fronting the beach.

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 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.

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.

How inheritances are reshaping the property market

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

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Wealth

With a reversionary pension, the beneficiary has peace of mind knowing they’ll continue receiving income into their bank account.

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.

How inheritances are reshaping the property market

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

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.

Technology

‘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.

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.

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.

How to spot when a CV has been written by AI

It’s not always easy to tell when a CV or cover letter was written by generative artificial intelligence. But a lack of personality is a common giveaway.

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Life & Luxury

‘Beautiful chaos’: Iconic power diner owner calls time

Simon Hartley has hosted every prime minister since Gough Whitlam at his CBD restaurant Becco. But on Friday, he held the last supper.

Vincent Macaigne as Pierre Bonnard paints wife Marthe yet again in Martin Provost’s Bonnard, Pierre & Marthe.

Art’s greatest couple get the biopic treatment

Pierre Bonnard, France’s most important 20th century artist after Matisse, painted wife Marthe hundreds of times. This film shows their deep and tumultuous bond.

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.

Do you know this week’s news? Answer these 10 questions

Have you been paying attention this week? Test your knowledge across politics, business and world news.

‘I was levitating’: Why Brett Clegg paid for Sydney Dance Company work

The public relations mogul’s love affair with dance began when he sent an unsolicited novella to a British electro musician in 2011.

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