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Join investors and regulators as they take a deep dive into cryptocurrency and digital assets.

Read full coverage now.

Dutton said the cost of his nuclear plan would be released before the next election.

Coalition nuclear policy relies on coal for longer than experts expect

Opposition leader Peter Dutton has conceded that the Coalition’s nuclear policy relies on an extended use of coal power and a sharply increased role for gas power.

Israeli shelling on a village in the Nabatiyeh district after residents of southern Lebanon were told to immediately evacuate homes and other buildings where Hezbollah stores weapons.

Israeli strikes kill more than 492 in Lebanon in deadliest day

Israel’s Benjamin Netanyahu issued a warning to Lebanese people as the toll from the strikes marked the deadliest single day in the country for decades.

Australia’s most powerful people in property for 2024

Interest rates and construction costs are wreaking havoc and creating new winners and losers. Perhaps the biggest power shift is the fading influence of the CFMEU.

Israel will do ‘whatever is necessary’ to push Hezbollah out

Israel’s military spokesman says the army will push Hezbollah away from Lebanon’s border with Israel. Follow live updates.

ASX to slip, Wall St higher as rate-cut path comes into sharper focus

Australian shares are set to open down. RBA expected to hold rates steady, decision at 2.30pm. Gold resets record, copper gains, iron ore falls, oil slips.

Woolworths, Coles faked discounts on hundreds of products, says ACCC

The regulator is suing the country’s two biggest supermarkets, claiming they told customers prices were falling when they were actually higher than before.

Crypto dream is being ‘killed’ by policy paralysis

Crypto entrepreneurs say the government’s failure to produce digital asset legislation and aggressive enforcement by the regulator is forcing product development underground and new businesses to be launched overseas.

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crypto summit

CBA managing director of blockchain and digital assets.

CBA crypto experiments held up in regulatory bottlenecks

Unanswered questions from a myriad of regulators are stifling Australia’s largest bank from advancing cryptocurrency and digital asset projects.

Richard Galvin, of DACM spoke at the The Australian Financial Review Crypto and Digital Assets Summit in Sydney on Monday.

Go long and let others take the risk: crypto fundies’ top strategies

Some of Australia’s best performing digital asset managers have told investors to ignore the noise when mulling a bet on cryptocurrencies.

 Anthony Scaramucci, attending the The Australian Financial Review Crypto and Digital Assets Summit virtually, says as many as 2 million single-issue crypto voters could swing the US election.

Bitcoin bros could swing US election: Scaramucci

The former communications director for the Trump presidency said 2 million voters could swing on the candidates’ differing digital asset policies.

ASIC wants crypto start-ups to hold financial services licences

The corporate regulator will appear at the AFR Crypto and Digital Assets Summit on Monday with a warning to developers in the polarising sector.

Bitcoin is going mainstream. Can Australia join the party?

Twenty-thousand crypto believers descended on Singapore this week – and the companies they represented may surprise you.

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Companies

The changes of price at Coles and Woolworths were tracked closely by users on X, TikTok and Reddit.

It was cybersleuths who (allegedly) caught Woolies, Coles in the act

In the end, it wasn’t the government, or Treasury, or a parliamentary committee that caused the biggest headache for the country’s supermarket giants this year.

Rightmove’s website is the most popular real estate listing platform in the UK.

Britain’s Rightmove to ‘carefully consider’ REA’s $12b takeover bid

News Corp’s real estate platform increased its offer to almost $12 billion after its first two bids were swiftly rejected by the UK’s biggest property portal.

REA Group’s Owen Wilson has made a bold play for Rightmove – the dominant player in UK property classifieds.

REA’s big British bet haunted by ghosts of failed deals past

First it was BHP Group – now REA is having a tough time swallowing a UK target, namely real estate portal Rightmove. The parallels are stark.

Telix CEO Christian Behrenbruch has upgraded 2024 revenue forecasts.

Telix on $1b spending spree to build US radiopharmacy network

The biotech is investing heavily in global networks that will enable it to control the supply and distribution of nuclear medicines used to treat cancer.

Cheese and milk producer Beston goes bust as Japanese suitor walks

The company behind the Edwards Crossing Cheese Company and Mables brands has called in administrators, owing more than $55 million to National Australia Bank.

David Foster out of Bendigo and Adelaide after bruising Star inquiry

He had been on the bank’s board since 2019, and was its chairman until April when he went on leave amid a NSW inquiry into the casino, where he was also chair.

Fletcher warns of construction slump as it pursues $641m raising

The building materials giant says it expects volumes to slide by as much as 15 per cent this financial year, and the Auckland-based company will cut more costs.

Companies in the News

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View stories and data from an ASX listed company

Markets

The sun is setting on the days of huge payouts from ASX miners.

ASX in the ‘dividend doldrums’ as boards hoard cash

The Australian sharemarket had one of the sharpest declines in payouts in the world in the second quarter and the outlook is not much better, investors warn.

Neel Kashkari, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis.

Kashkari backs two more Fed rate cuts

Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis president Neel Kashkari says he expects two more quarter-point rate cuts from the Fed this year.

Industry veteran builds ‘better’ model to pick ASX winners

Former Credit Suisse alumni John Birkhold has spent years developing a model that undoes traditional ways of investing – he’s now about to turn it on the ASX.

China must ramp up housing rescue to boost growth, economists warn

Amid doubts over whether China can meet its lofty 5 per cent GDP target, analysts say Beijing needs “a complete change in mindset” to revive the property market.

Ophir’s prediction for the ASX’s next 10-bagger

Shares in a2 Milk, Afterpay and Northern Star earned the coveted status for Ophir and its co-founder Andrew Mitchell. He predicts Life360 will be next.

Opinion

Coles and Woolworths score own goal on dodgy discounts

The big supermarket chains have already lost the public relations war over the ACCC’s allegations of fake discounts. What’s the next move?

Dutton nuclear policy sell fails to add up the cost

The energy future of Australia requires details – and lots of them – so that voters can make an informed choice. 

The AFR View

Editorial

The AFR View

Dutton’s nuclear folly is an economy wrecker

Under the Coalition, Australian manufacturing would face a decade of uncertainty and taxpayers would finance the renationalisation of electricity generation.

Craig Emerson

Former Labor minister and economist

Craig Emerson

Labor sings vastly different tunes on supermarkets and Qantas

Aviation is much more concentrated than supermarkets, yet the government seems to accept that the airline industry should remain anticompetitive.

Ayesha de Kretser

Senior reporter

Ayesha de Kretser

Did ‘illusory’ discounts from Coles, Woolies really mislead consumers?

The murky legal issue for the ACCC case against the big two supermarkets is what constitutes a “reasonable” period between a price increase and a subsequent promotional saving.

Robert Hadler

Consultant

Robert Hadler

Liberals desperately need to end the Pesutto-Deeming drama

A climb down by both sides in this libel case would better for the Victorian Liberals than a damning Federal Court judgment.

Terry Barnes

Policy consultant

Terry Barnes

Reports

Executive Education - lifelong learning

This special report looks at lifelong learning, focusing on the impact and efficacy of leadership courses designed for top-tier managers and business leaders.

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Politics

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese in Canberra on Monday.

Only Labor can form majority government: Albanese

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has stepped up his stability pitch to voters by disparaging the Greens as a party of extremists

Australian Zomi Frankcom was one of seven aid workers killed in an Israeli airstrike while helping to deliver food in Gaza.

Aid worker’s family lash Israel’s ‘careless disregard’ for her death

The family of Zomi Frankcom are backing Penny Wong’s global push for better protection of aid workers in combat zones.

Westpac estimates state and federal government spending will hit 28 per cent of GDP by the end of 2025, up from the pre-pandemic average of about 22.5 per cent.

Government spending to hit record, delaying rate cuts

Westpac estimates state and federal government spending will hit 28 per cent of GDP by the end of 2025, up from the pre-pandemic average of about 22.5 per cent.

The unassuming senator with Labor’s fortunes on his shoulders

Queensland is at the centre of two crucial elections in the coming months, and the personable Murray Watt might be the bridge builder who helps tip things for the ALP.

Labor shrugs off flat battery projects with $25m investment

Treasurer Cameron Dick said he was confident the $70 million plant in Maryborough wouldn’t suffer the same fate as earlier failures of battery ventures.

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World

Israeli shelling on a village in the Nabatiyeh district after residents of southern Lebanon were told to immediately evacuate homes and other buildings where Hezbollah stores weapons.

Israeli strikes kill more than 492 in Lebanon in deadliest day

Israel’s Benjamin Netanyahu issued a warning to Lebanese people as the toll from the strikes marked the deadliest single day in the country for decades.

A BYD launch in Brazil this month. South America is an important market for the company.

BYD shrugs off planned US ban of Chinese smart car software

Liu Xue-liang, general manager of BYD’s auto sales division for Asia-Pacific, said the Chinese EV giant had turned its attention to markets with receptive EV policies.

Hezbollah fighters attend funerals for those killed in Israel’s air strike in Beirut.

Israel, Hezbollah on the brink of war unless someone blinks

Almost a year after the October 7 terror attack, Israel’s real war might be about to begin, writes Andrew Tillett.

China stimulus hopes rise as PBoC cuts rate, flags briefing

The People’s Bank of China lowered the 14-day reverse repurchase rate, catching up with reductions initiated in July, and flagged further moves on Tuesday.

Iran’s Guards ban communications devices after strike on Hezbollah

Iran is concerned about infiltration by Israeli agents, including Iranians on Israel’s payroll, and a thorough investigation of personnel has already begun.

Property

The Adelphi Hotel has been put into administration.

Hospitality empire on brink as Adelphi Hotel put in administration

Virtical group, which exploded on to the Sydney and Melbourne pub scene last year, has lost control of its two biggest assets.

The two-bedroom house at 3 Gipps Street in inner-western Sydney’s Birchgrove sold pre-auction for $2.35 million.

Sell in the first two weeks, or wait? They sold, for $2.35m

There were many people looking, but few buying. When the vendor of this Sydney home secured two potential buyers, they acted. Quickly.

Hotel mogul Jerry Schwartz at his Sofitel Sydney Darling Harbour hotel.

‘Pay to stay’: Average Sydney hotel room rate to hit $426 by 2033

Sydney will be the standout hotel market over the next decade as occupancy rises to 86pc and few new hotels are completed to keep up with demand.

Cheap no more: where the buyer rush has blunted home affordability

Housing affordability has worsened sharply in some of the country’s cheaper areas amid strong demand.

Apartments taking two-and-a-half years longer to deliver: Urbis

The forecast delay in supply comes as pressure is increasing on the federal government to navigate political opposition to key planks in its housing policy.

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Wealth

There are a few tricks to follow when it comes to picking the best card.

Perks, points and fees: How to choose the right credit card

Understanding the four credit card types will help you make smart choices.

Let others take the risk: crypto fundies’ top strategies

Some of Australia’s best performing digital asset managers have told investors to ignore the noise when mulling a bet on cryptocurrencies.

The $1 rule, and 43 other easy ways to be better with money

Not everything about money has to be hard. We asked experts for their top tips on how to be better at saving, budgeting and investing.

Technology

Evolt 360 co-founders Ed Zouroudis and Kelly Weideman in New York where the company is rolling out its body scanning devices to clinics.

ASX hopeful Evolt 360 reveals plans to cash in on Ozempic boom

The founders of body scanning company are hoping to list on the stock market before Christmas, backed by investors including Regal, Soul Patts and Perennial.

Indebted founder and chief executive Josh Foreman has relocated to the US, its most lucrative market.

Digital debt collector worth $350m after big money raise

Business booms for InDebted when cost-of-living hits consumers. It has attracted new investors, including a super fund to back a rare valuation increase.

Can a robot be too human? This one can

Ecovacs’ latest robovac cleans more like a human does than anything we’ve ever seen. But that’s not always a good thing.

Work & Careers

Australia’s most powerful deal makers in 2024

If investors step up and hit the bid on those valuations, the market will see real momentum. If not, it will be the same painful conversation about dry powder next year.

The most powerful people in the consulting sector in 2024

As the fallout from the PwC scandal still looms large, smaller operations are moving in on the big four’s turf.

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Life & Luxury

Vincent Namatjira, Jessica Fox, Ariarne Titmus, Michael Lee.

The 10 most culturally powerful people in Australia in 2024

What does it mean to be Australian right now? These 10 people made the biggest mark on our national culture this year.

Journalist Antoinette Lattouf and Melbourne Symphony Orchestra pianist Jayson Gillham.

The war at the centre of the arts

The conflict in Gaza hangs heavily over theatres and galleries, as animosities lead to a wave of resignations, donor withdrawals and boycotts.

Our fashion editor’s guide to shopping in New York City

Personally researched and painstakingly compiled, it will save you time and possibly even money. Your retail therapy journey starts here.

Grace Brown

Amazing Grace Brown won’t ride back on retirement call

The Olympic champion became the first woman to win both the Olympic Games and world time trial titles in the same year

Kathy Lette lives in London for nine months of the year, Sydney for three.

Kathy Lette on the ‘crime of menopause’

The London-based Australian author spends her working week writing about life’s challenges. But weekends are for crosswords, laughter, cocktails and theatre.

From the gallery