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    RBA says ‘no quick fix’ to house prices

    RBA chief economist Sarah Hunter warns that undersupply of homes means house prices and rents will continue to rise as the market fails to keep pace with strong demand.

    Warren Buffett’s new position was finally revealed to markets on Wednesday night.

    How inflation relief and Buffett’s new bet gave bull market fresh legs

    Wall Street popped to new record highs on better-than-feared US inflation data. But there’s a big contradiction at the heart of the bulls’ outlook.

    The ASX is set to open higher, following another positive lead from New York.

    ASX gains; Aristocrat jumps, $A tops 67¢ on US rate cut bets

    Gold miners, tech boost shares. Bond yields retreat. $A, copper, manganese, bitcoin rally. Incitec Pivot in talks to sell fertiliser business. Aristocrat lifts dividend 20pc. Follow here.

    PM chides Labor MP over her use of anti-Israel slogan

    Anthony Albanese says it was “not appropriate” for Labor Senator Fatima Payman to use the pro-Palestinian “from the river to the sea” slogan.

    Fonterra says it wants to sell its Australian dairy assets

    The New Zealand-headquartered co-operative is behind household brands such as Western Star butter and Mainland cheese and has eight local manufacturing sites.

    ‘Let’s get ready to Rumble’: Trump, Biden agree to televised debate

    President Joe Biden and Donald Trump have agreed to hold two televised debates ahead of the US election.

    This small cap has rocketed since South32’s manganese mine disaster

    Shares in Jupiter Mines have doubled in value since Cyclone Megan forced the closure of one of the world’s biggest producers of the steel making commodity.

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    FEDERAL BUDGET

    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.

    Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and Treasurer Jim Chalmers on Wednesday, May 15.

    ‘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.

    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.

    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.

    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.

    Features include the ability to save articles, dark mode and real time notifications.

    Get the latest business news on the go with the AFR’s new iOS app.

    Find out more

    Companies

    The cotton industry is made up of major businesses and smaller, family-run operations.

    ACCC intervenes in bidding war over Namoi Cotton

    The regulator’s intervention pushed shares down eight per cent at the start of trade on Thursday. It has fielded offers from France’s Louis Dreyfus and Olam.

    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 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.

    Hydrogen credit could blow its $6.7b budget

    Sunshine Hydro chairman Michael Myer says international investment could mean the cost of the budget measure blows out, but is still worth the benefits.

    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.

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    Markets

    US inflation eased slightly in April, offering relief to investors and the Federal Reserve.

    US stocks close at record high on slower inflation pace

    Wall Street notched record closes after data showed price growth moderated, bolstering investor hopes for interest rate cuts by the Federal Reserve.

    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”.

    Wall Street.

    What happened overnight? US benchmarks closed at record highs

    Australian shares were set to open higher after data showed US inflation was cooling. The $A eyed US67¢; Bitcoin topped $US66,000. Gold rallied.

    Citi calls time on iron ore rally as budget bakes in price plunge

    Citi has told investors to “fade the rally” after more signs of weakness in China’s financial 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.

    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

    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.

    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.

    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.

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    World

    Donald Trump and Joe Biden are set to face off again in this year’s presidential election.

    ‘Let’s get ready to rumble’: Biden and Trump agree to TV debates

    The two men will go head-to-head on CNN on June 27 then on ABC News on September 10.

    Slovakia’s Prime Minister Robert Fico was shot and injured after the away-from-home government meeting in Handlova.

    Slovakia’s populist prime minister shot multiple times

    Robert Fico was gravely wounded after a political event in an attempted assassination that shocked the small country and reverberated across Europe.

    Barron Trump was largely shielded from the media while he was growing up.

    How 18-year-old Barron Trump could follow in his father’s footsteps

    The youngest of Donald Trump’s children graduates high school this week, which makes him a target for the press.

    Vladimir Putin’s preparing for a long war

    The Russian president’s idea of the motherland is much larger than the country’s globally recognised borders, an atavism that’s widely shared within his nation.

    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.

    Property

    Restaurant duo splashes on mansion with dark history

    Nomad Group’s Al and Rebecca Yazbek have paid about $11 million for Hambleton House on Albert Park’s best street in Melbourne’s bayside.

    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.

    vvv

    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.

    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.

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    Wealth

    Emma Edwards says to watch out for lifestyle creep.

    ‘Don’t waste it’: Smart ways to spend your income tax cut

    Some workers will have an extra $350 a month from July 1. Don’t waste this “powerful” opportunity, experts say.

    My partner earns far more than me. Should we still split bills 50/50?

    One partner in the relationship earns $200,000, while the other earns much less. What’s the fairest way to divide their living expenses?

    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?

    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

    Ultra runner Helen Ryvar runs through an underpass in Wrexham during running a half marathon in Wrexham, Wales, in March.

    This record-breaking runner is also a boss and single mother of three

    Helen Ryvar, who runs her own business, swears by her relentless morning fitness routine – she’s out of the door by 4.15am, rain or shine. Here are her tips.

    Russell Brand shared the news of his baptism in a typically verbose Instagram video on April 29.

    The unlikely relationship between Russell Brand, Bear Grylls and God

    Why would chief scout Grylls, a man with a flourishing global career, team up with the “cancelled” Brand – and risk harming his own squeaky-clean brand?

    Juliette Binoche and Benoit Magimel were real-life lovers 20 years ago.

    The Taste of Things movie review – a feast for the eyes

    Director Anh Hung Tran has created an utterly absorbing film about cuisine as a model for life.

    At her funeral, says Saskia Havekes:  “No one is to play Ave Maria and definitely no white coffin. Those two things I can absolutely say no to.” Illustration by Sam Bennett

    Society florist to sign off with a signature flower

    Grandiflora founder Saskia Havekes plans to be dressed in white, with a floral scent and a magnolia bloom.

    Perhaps the most spectacular vista anywhere, especially given how hard you have to work to get to this elevation.

    Mount Everest from your tent? That’s a view worth the trek

    Waking up to behold Nepal’s most renowned mountains is a dream come true. But you’ve got to put in the hard yards to get there.

    From the gallery