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Rio Tinto will take ownership of Arcadium Lithium’s Mt Cattlin mine in Western Australia, among other assets.

Rio Tinto makes $9.9b bet on lithium comeback

Takeover target Arcadium Lithium says Rio Tinto’s offer to pay a 90 per cent premium reflects “full and fair” value amid a lithium bear market.

Ed Peter.

Ed Peter’s Duxton Pubs dangles 2025 IPO as it seeks $35m

Some parts of Peter’s South Australian business empire have come under pressure as investors get cold feet.

Arcadium’s $10b takeover exposes brutal reality of listed life

A $15.7 billion merger one year, gone in a not-quite $10 billion takeover the next. Time frames are not always as long as we like to think in listed equities.

Alan Joyce to keep flying on Qantas dime for more than two decades

The former chief executive is entitled to perks worth millions of dollars, as Richard Goyder makes the most use of his free flights this year.

‘Wedge politics’: Dutton mocks PM’s talk about NBN privatisation risk

The opposition says the government is attempting a similar campaign to the “Mediscare” one in 2016. Experts doubt anyone will want to buy NBN Co any way.

Why Rio Tinto wants to be a new cornerstone for the lithium sector

Rio Tinto CEO Jakob Stausholm argues the miner’s long-term investment approach and sheer size can help stabilise the volatile lithium market.

Payman announces ‘a party for all’, but wants alignment on Israel-Gaza

Candidates for the new party called Australia’s Voice would have “value alignment” with Senator Fatima Payman, including their stance on the Israel-Gaza conflict.

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Companies

Linda Rogan and Richard White.

Richard White allegedly asked lawyer to break off billionaire’s affair

Letters filed with the Federal Court in an unrelated bankruptcy claim show his solicitor told Linda Rogan his client had made “alternative arrangements”.

Super Retail Group has been accused of serious wrongdoing by its former top two lawyers, Rebecca Farrell (left) and Amelia Berczelly (centre).

Super Retail loses bid to throw out Harmers from dismissal case

Justice Michael Lee said it would be “far from an insignificant thing” to disallow two women suing the company their choice of solicitor.

Businessman Leigh Clifford (right) wanted to save the Melbourne Rebels. Left: Rugby Australia CEO Phil Waugh, who shut down the club in May.

Former Melbourne Rebels directors sue Rugby Australia for $30m

The court case comes five months after former Qantas chairman Leigh Clifford declared war against the governing body.

APA Group CEO Adam Watson in Sydney in February.

Relief rally for APA on gas pipeline decision

Energy-intensive manufacturers say the ruling still leaves them worried about supply shortages in the southern states.

$145m: The most valuable AFL and NRL teams revealed

An inaugural list that rates the most valuable club trademarks in the two most popular football codes are out, with an ASX-listed giant leading rugby league.

Nine mulls adding advertising to Stan in search for new revenue

Streaming platforms like Netflix and Amazon Prime Video were once entirely commercial-free. Now almost all services have a cheaper ad-backed plan.

VC deep freeze still manages to outrun IPO market

The IPO drought has forced venture capital investors to search for different ways to realise profits from long-held investments.

Companies in the News

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Markets

These Chinese government faces some hurdles to delivering the sort of fiscal stimulus markets are looking for.

Why China is hesitant to fire its stimulus bazooka

China bulls want stimulus, and quick. But three big roadblocks stand in the way. 

Brokers haven’t given up more stimulus to help reflate China’s economy.

Brokers stick with stimulus bets after meltdown

Investors have delivered a cool assessment of whether China’s stimulus lives up to the hype, but brokers are refusing to give up on the easy money dream.

Investors expect drastic interest rate cuts by the Reserve Bank of New Zealand as the economy deteriorates.

Markets bet on drastic cuts after NZ slashes rates

The kiwi hit a seven-week low after New Zealand’s jumbo rate cut, but Citi is tipping the RBNZ could go another 75 basis points next month to arrest slowing growth.

Dimon and Dalio look past rates to a ‘ticking time bomb’

While everyone is predicting rate cuts, Jamie Dimon and Ray Dalio remain worried that rates will need to go up and one big inflationary force keeps building.

Rio buys Arcadium for $9.9b; China finance ministry to meet Saturday

Shares edge up but commodity stocks weigh; Rio Tinto inks Arcadium buy; Oil falls sharply; RBNZ slashes its key rate to 4.75 per cent. Follow updates here.

Opinion

Why Kamala Harris is not playing up her gender

Unlike Hillary Clinton, the Democratic candidate does not intend to attract votes for the ground-breaking achievement of becoming the first female US president.

US-China rivalry colours our ASEAN relations

ASEAN believes that neutrality is the best defence against regional conflict. But it is too reluctant to help maintain the regional balance.

The AFR View

Editorial

The AFR View

Private markets will always need public ones

Private markets need listed markets to price their assets and provide an exit, but public markets need to curb the inane social pre-occupations.

John Wylie

Investor

John Wylie

Australia can’t keep relying on hopes of China stimulus

Beijing’s latest version of its stalling stimulus model will become another dead end. It’s time for Australia to make its own economy more adaptable.

John Lee

Foreign policy expert

John Lee

Respectful remembrance shows peace is possible

Readers’ letters on ending conflict in the Middle East; Coalition attacks on the government; ASIC’s action against AustralianSuper; nuclear power; and respect for Baby Boomers.

Contributor

Why the RBA can’t cut interest rates as fast as overseas

The central bank has adopted a softer approach on interest rates than foreign counterparts, so local borrowers will need to be patient.

John Kehoe

Economics editor

John Kehoe

Reports

BOSS Most Innovative Companies

The Most Innovative Companies List recognises and celebrates those businesses that are shaking up their industries with genuine game-changing innovations.

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Politics

‘Wedge politics’: Dutton mocks PM’s talk about NBN privatisation risk

The opposition says the government is attempting a similar campaign to the “Mediscare” one in 2016. Experts doubt anyone will want to buy NBN Co any way.

Opposition Leader Peter Dutton and Prime Minister Anthony Albanese.

Why Albanese and Dutton are lying low in Queensland election

In the defiantly parochial state, a visit from the boss in Canberra doesn’t always work as intended.

Mr Crisafulli was bombarded with questions over abortion on Wednesday.

Abortion laws threaten to derail LNP’s bid for Qld victory

The odds-on favourite to win the Queensland election has failed to hose down controversy surrounding abortion speculation.

Albanese likens China talks to US-Soviet Cold War ties

Anthony Albanese is heading to the ASEAN summit for two days of talks with regional leaders where security will be a top priority.

Australia’s universities tumble down global rankings

Australia has six universities in the world’s top 100 again, but pandemic-era revenue cuts are hitting financial viability.

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World

Brokers haven’t given up more stimulus to help reflate China’s economy.

Fresh hopes for China stimulus and private sector reform

Foreign investors say China’s moves to free up private business might reduce unemployment, encourage investment and boost consumer confidence.

US President Joe Biden says Benjamin Netanyahu is not doing enough.

‘Bad f---ing guy’ description hangs over Biden-Netanyahu phone call

Joe Biden’s hopes of avoiding a wider Middle East war are more remote after revelations he described Benjamin Netanyahu as a “son of a bitch”.

Unprecedented move: Aussie super funds press for reform in UK

IFM and six leading super funds are publicly pushing the Starmer government for reforms to help unblock the UK’s sluggish pipeline of infrastructure deals.

Netanyahu defiant as Middle East braces

Benjamin Netanyahu is set to speak with US President Joe Biden over his retaliation plans against Iran amid fears of a widening war.

Florida residents flee monster hurricane as time runs out

Milton, one of the most intense Atlantic hurricanes on record, is threatening a stretch of Florida’s densely populated west coast still reeling from Helene.

Property

Artist’s render of Lendlease’s 499-unit BTR project planned for 899 Collins Street in Melbourne’s Docklands, in which Nippon Steel Kowa Real Estate has taken a 40 per cent stake. 

Lendlease signs Japanese partner for $500m build-to-rent tower

Lendlease is pairing Australia’s housing development demand with the investment needs of companies like Nippon Steel Kowa Real Estate to back its own turnaround.

The MHN Design Union residence of Sean and Bonita Katz.

Private credit boss sells ‘Batman’s treehouse’ after 30pc price drop

AltX co-founder Sean Katz and his wife Bonita have sold their Vaucluse mansion after spending $33 million on a Camp Cove waterfront.

Urban Property has capitalised on the state government’s need for more housing by convincing it to give approval for a pivot from an office tower to a residential one.

NSW’s new planning rules swap unloved offices for 450 homes

The state government’s powers clear the way to seize planning controls of “unreasonably delayed” sites.

Google HQ, Media House up for grabs

The offerings come after two years of significant upheaval across the office market. But there is growing confidence the down cycle is finally bottoming out.

Rich Listers to turn Ferrero nut orchards into olive groves

goFARM, which is half owned by Costa Asset Management, has paid about $60 million for the former hazelnut orchards near Narrandera.

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Wealth

Keeping people living in their own homes until the end is, at last, looking like a possibility.

Thankfully, living at home until the end looks possible for more Australians

Elderly people will get used to paying for the services they need rather than wondering what they are going to leave the next generation.

Is passive investing a safe bet or a double-edged sword?

While typically considered benign, passive index investing can come with unintended consequences.

Don’t let politics get in the way of a good return

With the US presidential election less than a month away should investors be concerned about the impact on sharemarkets?

Technology

Google hit back at the proposals, calling them “radical and sweeping”.

Google targeted for break-up in landmark US case

The US Department of Justice could seek “structural remedies” such as forced product sales after a judge’s ruling of illegal monopoly in searches.

Did Apple just kill social apps?

The drama demonstrates how powerful gatekeepers like Apple have become and how even minor changes to Apple’s products can create dramatic ripple effects in the rest of the tech industry.

Inside the bro-ification of Mark Zuckerberg

The Meta founder has quietly remade his public image, attracting the same generation of start-up guys who once idolised Elon Musk.

Work & Careers

Swinburne University’s Professor Matthew Bailes has been named Scientist of the Year.

The Aussie who helped discover how to weigh the universe

World renowned astrophysicist Professor Matthew Bailes has won the 2024 Prime Minister’s Prize for Science.

‘No excuse’: Drunk worker fired for Qantas Lounge sex harassment

The fly-in fly-out worker had her unfair dismissal claim rejected, including that placing her head in a co-worker’s lap was “the usual inconvenience of public travel”.

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Life & Luxury

One Melbourne home has just lost a major talking point. This 17th century rendition of Leonardo’s Mona Lisa sold for GBP102,000 (including buyer’s premium) at Bonhams in London on October 2. By the hand of an unknown artist, the work was consigned by a Melbourne resident whose family had owned the work since 1984.

Mona Lisa of Melbourne makes an unexpected splash in London

After being held by a family for 40 years in Hawthorn, a rare 17th-century expert copy of Leonardo da Vinci’s Mona Lisa has sold for 10 times its estimate.

Le Baiser de l’Hotel de Ville, 1950, by Robert Doisneau, carries a pre-sale estimate of $US 10,000 to 15,000 in Phillips’ Photographs auction in New York on October 9, 2024. It is signed in ink in the margin.

Iconic images of life, death and football fetch top dollar

A series of auctions suggests the market for big-name photographers is alive and well.

At these ultra-luxe Maldives resorts, you could be in for a surprise

Take up the alternative medical therapies or snorkel in transparent water with boundless reef fish. Each has its own wow factor.

An Original Impossible Burger (left) and a Cali Burger, from New York’s Umami Burger. Plant-based meat has lost favour with consumers.

Are plant burgers better than beef? Here’s how to decide

Are burgers made from plants really better for you than real beef burgers? Scientists have found that in most cases, plant-based meat substitutes can improve your health.

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What’s behind our obsession with wellness?

From ice baths and breathwork classes to turmeric lattes and green juice, wellness has become a cultural obsession and a trillion-dollar industry.

From the gallery