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Westpac chairman Steven Gregg with Treasurer Jim Chalmers at the post-budget lunch.

Dutton rejects ‘Rich Lister’ tax cuts

The opposition has blasted $27.8 billion in production credits in the budget as “tax cuts for billionaires”, vowing to repeal them if elected.

Consumer prices have risen.

US consumer prices rise less than expected; core CPI slows

Last month’s slowdown was a relief after data on Tuesday showed a jump in producer prices in April.

Scott Morrison and Donald Trump at Trump Tower, Manhatten,

AUKUS is ok with Trump, says Morrison

Donald Trump has indicated solid support for the AUKUS submarine deal, according to former prime minister Scott Morrison, who met with the former president at Trump Tower in New York on Wednesday AEST.

Queensland in secret bid to buy stricken coal-fired power plant

It’s three years since Queensland power station Callide C blew up, and the fallout hasn’t stopped. Now, a secret deal for the government to buy a 50 per cent stake is in doubt.

The union movement is about to break into Aldi

Aldi’s long history of non-union pay deals has been disrupted as workers reject the supermarket giant’s offer for the first time in decades.

‘Expansionary’ budget at odds with RBA rate push

Despite calls for Labor to adopt a contractionary fiscal policy to complement the RBA, economists say Tuesday’s budget was likely expansionary or neutral at best.

Santos will sack 200 people as project delays spoil returns

The reliance on new projects such as Barossa in the Timor Sea takes on greater importance at Santos, where many of its legacy assets are being depleted.

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FEDERAL BUDGET

Big bosses from left: NAB CEO  Andrew Irvine, Wesfarmers managing director Rob Scott, CSR CEO Julie Coates, Harvey Norman executive chairman Gerry Harvey.

CEOs to Labor: Inflation still needs to be tamed

Measures to lift housing supply are being partly applauded, but a heavier push on curbing inflation seems to be missing in a two-speed economy.

Brian Craighead, founder of Energy Renaissance, says the $523 million budget “battery breakthrough” funding can help Australia’s only lithium ion battery maker expoand sufficiently to underwrite a massive expansion in critical minerals. Photo: Louie Douvis

The game changer on battery-making is still to come

The founder of Australia’s only lithium-ion battery-maker says a $523 million budget boost will help underwrite a boom in critical minerals.

Clive Palmer.

Palmer says billionaires like him shouldn’t get a break on bills

The Rich Lister, who is eligible for the power bill rebate on several of his homes, says the money would be better spent on households that desperately need it.

Investors welcome Chalmers’ new ‘front door’ service (with caveats)

Big investors want to be consulted as the proposal for an investment concierge moves from budget papers into reality.

Careful return to migration trends needed, Labor urged

Efforts to better manage immigration levels must not undercut the university sector and efforts to address skilled worker shortages across the economy, experts say.

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Companies

Rio Tinto chief executive Jakob Stausholm at a Canadian conference earlier this year. Mr Stausholm says he does not want M&A to distract the company from improving its existing operations.

Rio chief ‘not afraid’ of M&A as Anglo American break-up looms

Jakob Stausholm won’t rule out entering the acquisition fray, but told investors he doesn’t want big transactions to derail his recovery mission at the miner.

Barrister Bret Walker said the sins of Star were in the past and should not be used to determine the suitability.

Star makes last ditch argument to keep casino licence

Bret Walker, SC, appearing for the company, condemned the “deplorable” behaviour of former executives who an inquiry heard went to war with the regulator.

Claire Morris founded Prezzee with Matt Hoggett.

Prezzee co-founder quits Shaun Bonett-owned gift card company

Claire Morris is leaving the group, and resigning as its brand ambassador. It follows a string of senior executive departures in the last 18 months.

The Whyalla steelworks is owned by GFG Alliance. Its furnace has been out of action for months.

Gupta’s $500m Whyalla steelworks upgrade delayed by two years

A plan to produce green steel will now be pushed out until 2027, the company said. It is already grappling with issues that have shut down the furnace.

Karoon chairman preps for showdown with angry investors

An activist consortium led by Samuel Terry Asset Management intends to vote against five of the nine resolutions up for vote at the oil and gas producer’s AGM on May 23. 

Fiji Airways keen to keep Virgin Australia at bay

The Pacific’s biggest airline would consider a tilt at Air Vanuatu if its liabilities are limited to keep Virgin sidelined.

Queensland in secret bid to buy stricken coal-fired power plant

It’s three years since Queensland power station Callide C blew up, and the fallout hasn’t stopped. Now, a secret deal for the government to buy a 50 per cent stake is in doubt.

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Markets

Treasurer Jim Chalmers on Wednesday. Moody’s has warned his budget has not addressed any structural spending issues.

Moody’s warns big ‘structural’ spend will leave budget mired in red

The influential ratings agency said the broader issue was “how effective spending programs such as Future Made in Australia are in allocating resources”.

China has increasingly been shipping its steel overseas as demand from the property sectors continues to falter.

Iron ore plunge baked into the budget ‘unlikely’ to materialise

The threat to China’s iron ore supremacy is front and centre of the latest federal budget, but analysts think the government’s dire outlook may prove too pessimistic.

Macquarie wants to seize market share in the fast-growing exchange-traded fund (ETF) sector.

Macquarie stokes ETF price war, slashes fees to 3 basis points

Macquarie wants to shake up the asset management sector with ETFs charging management fees as low as 3 basis points.

ASX retail, property stocks to rally from budget boost

The “inflationary” tones from the federal budget could provide a fresh tailwind for the sharemarket, especially for retail and real estate stocks, according to brokers.

Producer prices leap as US inflation remains sticky

The unexpectedly high readings may raise concerns on Wall Street and in the Federal Reserve.

Opinion

Chalmers is telling a big budget fib

Treasurer Jim Chalmers stood in front of 600 guests at his post-budget speech in Parliament House on Wednesday and repeated a misleading number about spending.

John Kehoe

Economics editor

John Kehoe

Why Chalmers’ budget made me very grumpy

I’m feeling as grumpy as I appear in my headshot. That’s because the big ask of the budget was not to poke the inflationary bear. It didn’t pass that test.

Chalmers confronts his economic critics

The treasurer insists his budget gets the balance right, even if the economists don’t agree. What will the Reserve Bank and the voters think?

Chalmers’ budget boast overlooks Australia’s debt mountain

The substantial fiscal challenge from the budget is a forecast decade of deficits and highest plateau of federal government net debt for more than half a century.

The AFR View

Editorial

The AFR View

Chalmers crumbles and gives up spending restraint

Jim Chalmers is like a bloke who successfully dieted for two years but crumbled after someone shoved a bucket of KFC under his nose.

Phillip Coorey

Political editor

Phillip Coorey

Budget spending spree that locks in a decade of deficits

Given all the good luck since coming to office, there are no excuses for Labor not running successive substantial surpluses to repair the budget buffers and start repaying the pandemic debt at this point in the cycle.

The AFR View

Editorial

The AFR View

Reports

BOSS Best Places to Work

The awards celebrate the achievements of the best small, medium and large organisations and nine sector winners.

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Politics

A group of students occupy the Arts West building at Melbourne University’s Parkville campus on Wednesday.

Pro-Palestine protesters storm university building

Police were called and all classes in one building at the University of Melbourne were cancelled after students occupied the site in defiance of administrators.

Unions to ramp up pay claims despite inflation slowdown

Unions want to make up for “lost ground” after years of cost-of-living pressure, despite Treasury forecasts that inflation could fall beneath 3 per cent by Christmas.

A worker installs a solar panel on the roof of an Australian home.

Treasury debunks Albanese’s solar and battery push

Treasury says there is a “strong case” for green hydrogen and green metals have “significant potential”. Making solar panels and batteries is another story.

Time to fix budget’s structural deficit: accountants

Accounting bodies say the federal budget should have done more to deliver substantive tax reform and a plan for implementation. Here’s how the day unfolded.

Tax fraud, capital gains tax crackdown to raise $3.3b

The budget includes a broad crackdown on tax fraud, the shadow economy and the avoidance of capital gains tax by foreign residents, which Labor hopes will raise $3.3 billion.

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World

An armoured personnel carrier near the border with the southern Gaza Strip.

US to send $1.5b in new military aid to Israel

The White House has alerted Congress a security package is in the works, after it paused a bomb shipment last week in a warning to Israel over its war in Gaza.

‘Dear friends’ Xi Jinping and Vladimir Putin at the Kremlin in 2019.

Putin to meet ‘dear friend’ Xi in China, defying US

The Russian president is set to arrive in Beijing, underlining the key relationship as China faces growing US pressure to curtail support for the war in Ukraine.

Lithium mining in Western Australia. New US levies on Chinese exports could provide long-term support for Australian producers.

New US tariffs on China could help Australian critical minerals

It’s not just the federal budget that could boost Australia’s critical minerals exports, but also a new round of US tariffs on Chinese imports.

China’s military incursions inch closer to Taiwan

An increasing number of Chinese military planes and vessels have staged drills that have alarmed Taiwan, as it prepares to inaugurate its new president.

Why this Trump acolyte is key to finding some of Greensill’s billions

The fight to recover funds owed to Credit Suisse clients has landed with West Virginia coal baron and senate hopeful Jim Justice and a small Virginia bank.

Property

Lenders have appetite to provide finance for developments, but most of that money is going to smaller, luxury projects.

Lenders’ preference for luxury units a blow to housing supply hopes

Mortgage broker Stamford Capital is arranging construction finance for developments worth $5 billion. All of them are luxury apartment projects.

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Can $32 billion fix the housing crisis?

The Albanese government’s ambitious plan to boost housing supply might not make a difference before the next election. Is there a better solution, asks Robert Harley.

Avid Property Group CEO Cameron Holt.

Developer Avid flags $1.4b land lease housing play

The privately owned developer that acquired Villa World in 2019 has expanded into the fast-growing land lease business. At scale.

Imported tradies need to live somewhere too

To fix the housing shortage the government needs to train many more building industry workers at home as well as fast-tracking visas for foreign tradies, builders say.

Developers cash in as investors spend big on fast food and childcare

Nearly $50m was splashed by investors at a commercial property auction in Sydney, of which almost half was spent on fast food outlets on long leases.

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Wealth

First time home buyer Joanne Kim says she wouldn’t have made it in without being able to live at home for years.

Forget Boomers. Millennials, your next landlord could be a best mate

For decades, Millennials and Generation Z have blamed Baby Boomers for locking them out of the housing market. But what happens when wealthy Boomers start to give their kids cash?

From babies to Boomers: what’s in the budget for you

The 2024 federal budget includes power bill relief, more training places and additional rent assistance.

Super on parental leave adds $4250 to retirement balance

The government will also spend $55.6 million over four years to establish the Building Women’s Careers program.

Technology

Iress chief executive Marcus Price is leading the financial services company through a turnaround.

Hackers steal the keys to Iress’ OneVue platform

Financial software provider Iress is investigating if any client data has been breached after discovering hackers stole a credential to gain access to its systems.

Google steals OpenAI’s thunder with something 15 times bigger

The new version of Gemini can write poems about objects it’s seen, or even tell the user where it last saw her glasses.

Smartphone sales are soaring in Afghanistan.

For the Taliban, Afghans’ best status symbol is a $2120 iPhone

Commerce is thriving for some entrepreneurs despite the difficulties imposed by the country’s rulers.

Work & Careers

Grant Thornton senior manager Priscilla Ly says she’s proud of her employer for introducing a nine-day fortnight.

Grant Thornton adopts nine-day fortnight, but staff have to earn it

The accounting firm’s year-long trial coincided with record productivity, employee retention and profits.

Why this event maestro takes a bath every single morning

Katerina Grant is the founder and director of The World Of, an events agency that produces experiences for clients such as Hermes, Louis Vuitton and Tommy Hilfiger.

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Life & Luxury

Shanae and Jade, 2005, a LightJet print by Petrina Hecks, carried an estimate of $20,000 to $30,000 in Deutscher and Hackett’s Australian and International Fine Art online auction on 14 May 2024.

A little bird delivers record price for photographer

A bird in the hand might be worth two in the bush, but Petrina Hicks’ photo of a budgie in a girl’s mouth was worth plenty on an otherwise disappointing night.

How this tiny English village got a US tech money makeover

Before Michael Birch swooped in, few people had ever heard of Woolsery in North Devon. Now the smart London set happily spend hours driving there.

To make Furiosa her own, Anya Taylor-Joy allowed herself to be put through an emotional and physical wringer for six months.

How Anya Taylor-Joy morphed from chess nerd to action hero

Despite being the star of Furiosa, the actor’s status was cemented by a small role in another big film set in a desert.

The McLaren 750S: Zero to 100 km/h is quoted as 2.8 seconds, and 200 comes up in 7.2 seconds.

An eventful test drive of the new McLaren 750S, priced from $586k

In a nutshell, it’s a pure and precise driving experience, even on city roads (notwithstanding an ill-timed software glitch).

Joint super funds for couples has gained traction within the super industry.

Older adults are having sex – but there is an increasing downside

Experts have offered five reasons that help explain why sexually transmitted infection rates are rising among ageing people.

From the gallery