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HMC Capital’s David Di Pilla and former prime minister Julia Gillard have teamed up to launch a $2 billion Energy Transition Fund.

‘True energy impact’: Di Pilla defies gloom, appoints Gillard to $2b fund

The ASX-listed HMC Capital is banking on plenty of investor interest to defy a gloomy market outlook on the transition to clean energy for its latest vehicle.

Clients are ditching the big four for smaller firms, new research has found.

Let ASIC police big four conflicts: Samuel

Former ACCC chairman Graeme Samuel says the big four’s governance changes looked good on paper, but would not fundamentally change the culture of the firms.

Westpac CEO Peter King says the banking sector has competed away three rate rises.

Westpac shows how banks are mortgage war casualties

Peter King says Westpac is hunting growth. But he won’t find it in old-fashioned mortgages and deposits, where returns have been brutally competed away. 

Gender of directors added no financial value: study

A study by the Australian National University has found that the gender of directors appointed to company boards had no impact on the financial performance of those businesses.

Victoria open to tax breaks to boost home building

Premier Jacinta Allan says her Labor government is open to pulling every lever available to boost housing supply, after developers called for taxation tweaks to boost investment.

Transurban’s buying and building days not done yet

Investors would have reacted much more strongly to any sort of distribution guidance. Instead, Transurban’s Michelle Jablko gave them the long road to value creation.

RBA’s radio silence fuels extreme rate rise bets

Traders’ bet that the RBA will lift the cash rate is fuelled by the central bank’s lack of communications since March as it undergoes sweeping reporting changes.

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monday media

Dentsu runs the media account for supermarket giant Woolworths.

Ad giant Dentsu’s epic losses no big deal for Japanese parent

Dentsu spends more than $1 billion every year in Australia on behalf of its clients, including Woolworths. It has lost $170 million over the past three years.

Geoff Selig at a Liberal Party conference in 2008.

Former NSW Liberal president Geoff Selig dies at 59

The businessman had been the chairman of catalogues and marketing firm IVE Group, which on Monday told investors of his death while on holiday in Europe.

Antony De Ceglie.

Stokes lieutenant Anthony De Ceglie wants a ‘unified voice’ at Seven

Seven West Media’s first company-wide editor-in-chief is now in charge of more than 30 news sites and 16 hours of news coverage every day.

Tax Office investigating Lachlan Murdoch’s Nova radio assets

The parent of SmoothFM revealed it is under an ATO microscope, hauling in PwC for tax compliance services.

Ten settles its Lehrmann bill, but from a shrinking purse

New accounts show Ten had almost $1 million set aside for litigation and legal bills before the Bruce Lehrmann defamation matter officially began.

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Companies

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Westpac’s Yetton targets ‘right returns’ over mortgage wars

The consumer bank chief also also promises to extend a moratorium on regional branch closures until 2027.

Westpac said its first half profit of $3.3bn was down 16 per cent on the first half last year.

Westpac deflects downturn with special dividend

The Westpac boss says the return of $1.5 billion to shareholders is a sign of confidence in the Australian economy and the outlook for bad debts.

The Escondida mine in Chile is one of the largest copper mines in the world.

BHP gets green light for improved Anglo bid

Two prominent Australian investors say they support BHP making an improved bid for Anglo American so long as discipline is not completely abandoned.

Ruslan Kogan is the chief executive and founder of Kogan.com.

ASX queries Kogan executive options sale ahead of share plunge

The online retailer, in response to questions from the market operator, said it did not think a poor sales update that sent its stock tumbling was material.

Qantas pays $120m to settle ghost flights case

Customers on cancelled flights will receive up to $450 in compensation after the airline admitted it misled travellers and agreed to pay $120 million to settle.

Transurban wants more drivers to see the benefit of toll fares

In a strategy presentation to investors, the motorway giant’s chief executive Michelle Jablko said the focus would be on ‘running the business better’.

NBN fixer Stephen Rue to restore Optus’ credibility

Stephen Rue has been charged with restoring Optus’ reputation with consumers and improving its services when he leaves the NBN to run the beleaguered telco group.

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Markets

Rio Tinto CEO Jakob Stausholm says collapsing the DLC is not a priority.

Time for Rio Tinto dual-listing rethink with Anglo American in play

Trading the spread between the value of Rio Tinto’s dual-listed London and Australian shares is usually the province of specialist arbitrage funds. But BHP’s tilt at Anglo American has it back in focus.

Australians under 35 are the biggest speculators in cryptocurrencies, although some are unaware of the need to pay capital gains tax on sales.

ATO targets crypto traders’ tax affairs, bank details

The Tax Office is ramping up its surveillance of crypto traders, demanding that exchanges hand over details around clients’ ID, wallet addresses and bank accounts.

ASX tipped to hit 8300 by year-end defying rate talk

Brokers and investors have all turned more positive on the outlook for the sharemarket, despite traders pushing out interest rate cut expectations to next year.

RBA’s radio silence fuels extreme rate rise bets

Traders’ bet that the RBA will lift the cash rate is fuelled by the central bank’s lack of communications since March as it undergoes sweeping reporting changes.

ASX rises ahead of RBA cash rate decision; Westpac rallies

Real estate and technology stocks push shares higher; Qantas agrees to pay $120 million to resolve ACCC dispute; Westpac announces $1 billion buyback; GrainCorp downgrades profit guidance.

Opinion

Big four’s reformation moment

Engaging with the Treasury process is an opportunity for the consulting giants to help modernise the partnership-based model founded in the 19th century and unfit for today.

The AFR View

Editorial

The AFR View

Why didn’t ACCC litigate Qantas?

Is what might be seen as regulatory brand ransom to force companies to admit to lesser charges and avoid the need to litigate, the way the watchdog should seek to uphold Australia’s consumer protection and competition law?

The AFR View

Editorial

The AFR View

Qantas’ Hudson takes the chance to shed some Joyce baggage

Vanessa Hudson has finally accepted reality by making a deal with the competition watchdog over ghost flights.

It’s economically naive to cut China out of direct investment

There may be more “like-minded” investors out there for Australia’s resources sector, but will they be as competitive and efficient as China has proven to be?

Answers emerge slowly to government’s $1b quantum questions

Questions are mounting over how PsiQuantum was backed when we have been told so often to marvel at local tech stars.

Paul Smith

Technology editor

Paul Smith

Moment of truth on inflation for Reserve Bank’s credibility

At stake here is whether the supposedly politically independent central bank can re-establish the low inflation foundations that supported three decades of unbroken economic growth until the interruption of the pandemic.

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

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese says Australia’s social cohesion is becoming frayed.

Social cohesion ‘fraying’, Albanese admits amid anti-Israel backlash

Anthony Albanese defended his efforts to keep the community together but would not be drawn on a looming UN vote on Palestinian statehood.

WA Police Commissioner Col Blanch, flanked by WA Police Minister Paul Papalia and WA Premier Roger Cook during a press conference on Sunday morning.

Minister was warned about radicalised teen before police shooting

A 16-year-old school boy shot dead by police in Perth over the weekend after a stabbing incident was part of a state-run deradicalisation program.

Victorian Premier Jacinta Allan (centre) with Planning Minister Sonya Kilkenny in Melbourne on Monday.

Victoria open to tax breaks to boost home building

Premier Jacinta Allan says her Labor government is open to pulling every lever available to boost housing supply, after developers called for taxation tweaks to boost investment.

The 24 questions Treasury has about the big four consulting firms

The 16 “potential issues” raised by Treasury and the 24 questions it would like responses to about the structure of the firms and the wider sector.

FWC, government face pressure to step in over submarines pay stoush

The Albanese government insists that an industrial dispute at submarine builder ASC in Adelaide won’t affect the navy’s ability to deploy the ageing Collins-class submarines.

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World

An Australia MH-60R Seahawk.

Navy helicopter near miss in latest Chinese confrontation

Australian personnel had to take evasive action when their helicopter was confronted by a Chinese fighter jet.

Donald Trump and Kristi Noem in 2018.

How one public gaffe can destroy your career

Potential Trump vice president candidate Kristi Noem, who admits shooting her dog, is not the only public figure to have disastrously misjudged popular opinion.

A makeshift tent city in Rafah.

Israel urges Rafah evacuation ahead of assault

Israel has described Rafah as the last significant Hamas stronghold after seven months of war, and its leaders have repeatedly said they need to carry out a ground invasion.

France’s cognac exports to China could be hit like Australian wine

China opened an anti-dumping investigation into brandy imported from the EU in January, sparking fears cognac could suffer a similar blow to that taken by Australian wine.

Gallows humour and escape: Trump’s possible return rattles Washington

Much of official Washington is bracing for the former president’s return – this time with ‘retribution’ as his avowed mission, the discussion is about self-imposed exile.

Property

Downcast: Property market-reliant Victoria is in for a ‘challenging’ budget on Tuesday.

Victoria has become a poor state: economist Saul Eslake

The southern state’s high dependence on property and population growth has a fallout felt beyond its borders.

First cab off the rank: The investment property at 5 Pauls Drive, Valley View, was the first to be auctioned and reached a price of $885,000 before they paused and started selling the neighbouring home.

The complicated $1.8m sale of a ‘gamble’ that didn’t pay off

A suburban family bought their neighbours’ house to give them a larger block, but when interest rates went up further something had to give.

The concept for the new flagshp store took 18 months to develop.

Why Michael Hill chose Chadstone to sell $1m diamond earrings

Michael Hill’s global flagship store will open in Melbourne’s biggest mall Chadstone, and will include a $1m pair of yellow diamond drop earrings.

The suburbs where unit values are rising 11 times faster than houses

“Investors are snapping up apartments because they are more affordable and the yields are becoming quite attractive.”

Toorak power couple buy Nick and Camilla Speer’s $25m Portsea pad

Private equity executive Nick Speer and wife Camilla have sold their Portsea holiday compound Rovina to Toorak’s Sophie Oh and Grant Rule.

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Wealth

Shaw & Partners co-chief executive   Earl Evans in the new Perth offices overlooking the Swan River.

Shaw and Partners boss says ‘fed-up’ Morgan Stanley brokers walked

“Heavy-handed” Morgan Stanley’s loss is Shaw’s gain, says co-CEO Earl Evans, who now manages $5 billion in WA wealth alone.

Stick or twist? How start-up investors know when it’s time to sell

VCs selling down Canva stakes could leave huge gains on the table, but don’t want to leave selling too late. Poorly timed sales have a history of destroying value.

Boomers direct spending to kids and grandkids

Financial advisors report many over-65s are helping family members rather than splurging – though travel is a thing.

Technology

Sydney AI customer bot start-up raises from Peak XV

The Funded blog is the home for news on the tech deals that are done in Australia, as soon as we hear about them.

  • Analysis
  • AI

AI start-ups face a rough financial reality check

The AI revolution, it is becoming clear in Silicon Valley, is going to come with a very big price tag.

There are more varieties of digital coins than any investor could care to count.

ASIC-investigated NGS Crypto was accused of ‘passing off’ as NGS Super

The Gold Coast-based cryptocurrency miner under investigation by the corporate watchdog was accused of passing itself off as part of a similarly named superannuation fund.

Work & Careers

County Court judge Geoff Chettle.

Judge cited for ‘demeaning’ conduct in rape case

Victoria’s judicial watchdog has found that Judge Geoffrey Chettle ‘infringed the standards of conduct generally expected of judicial officers’.

Case shows how right to disconnect law could ‘bleed into compo claims’

A tribunal has invoked Labor’s upcoming right to disconnect laws in finding that an employer’s contact of a staffer during sick leave was not reasonable.

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Life & Luxury

Sydney’s best restaurants for a business lunch

Where to go when you’ve got a deal to discuss, when you want to impress your top client or thank the team – as tested by our reviewers.

Dell rethinks its legendary laptop

Dell has made some dramatic design choices in its quest to revitalise its legendary-but-ageing XPS laptop lineup, and we’re not sure all of them have worked.

Introducing the AFR’s new restaurant guide, Fin Dining & Wine

Fifty Australian restaurants at the top of their food game that also understand the particular needs of those doing business over lunch.

Super-agers had more volume in areas of the brain important for memory, most notably the hippocampus and entorhinal cortex.

What an even closer peek inside the brains of ‘super-agers’ reveals

Scientists have become enthralled by a subset of the population aged 80 and older who with the memory of a person 20 to 30 years younger.

The Savu whisky glass: by reducing the ethanol in a pour, it’s possible to better appreciate the whisky, so the argument goes.

What’s the difference between one whisky glass and another?

The Savu is a new product from Finland, designed to enhance enjoyment of your favourite tipple. We blind-tested it.

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