National Australia Bank’s May survey
The recent federal budget had no positive impact on business conditions and confidence, according to the May monthly survey from the National Australia Bank.
Read MoreThe recent federal budget had no positive impact on business conditions and confidence, according to the May monthly survey from the National Australia Bank.
Read MoreElon Musk wants shareholders in Tesla to approve his controversial multi-billion dollar share deal at Thursday’s annual meeting. To show that he has their best interests at heart, he says he will ban Apple products from Tesla cars and other products if the phone giant integrates OpenAI’s technology into its iPhones.
Read MoreIt’s no wonder Tesla CEO Elon Musk has knocked down stories that the company is planning to refresh its key seller, the Model Y EV, this year.
Read MoreAmid the slower-than-forecast imports for China for May, the usual suspects – iron ore, copper, and coal – stood out, but oil slid, even though global prices were not all that strong.
Read MoreThe US Federal Reserve meets this week, and one thing is certain: after the surprise surge in US job numbers in May, the Fed won’t be following the European Central Bank and Bank of Canada in cutting its key interest rates anytime soon.
Read MoreReality drifted through global oil markets last week after OPEC+ bowed to reality and announced it would start easing its production caps, while keeping others in place until next year.
Read MoreAfter the excitement of last week, this week should be quieter, even though two central banks are meeting – The US Fed and the Bank of Japan on Friday. The May US consumer inflation report mid-week could trigger a return of volatility to markets if the data shows no change in US price pressures (as early forecasts suggest).
Read MoreA handful of results, and lots of annual meetings, are scheduled for the US and European markets this week.
Read MoreDr Shane Oliver, Head of Investment Strategy & Chief Economist at AMP, discusses developments in investment markets over the past week, economic activity trackers, major global economic events and Australian economic events.
Read MoreWinston Sammut, the Director Property of Euree Asset Management, gives his weekly take on the REITs sector.
Read MoreLast year was the warmest on record since global data collection began in 1850, with extreme weather and prolonged heatwaves pushing temperatures 1.18°C above the 20th-century average. This year, heatwaves have already affected the Middle East and Southeast Asia, starting as early as April, indicating a busy year ahead for power companies.
Read MoreOn Wednesday, there were three companies worth more than $3 trillion USD: Microsoft, Nvidia, and Apple.
Read MoreThe European Central Bank has cut interest rates for the first time in nearly five years, moving ahead of its US and UK counterparts in lowering borrowing costs after the biggest price surge for a generation. The move was widely forecast and pushed European shares to record highs for a second day.
Read MoreFund Manager Chris Pedersen discusses JB Hi-Fi, Judo Capital Holdings and Ramsey Health Care.
Read MoreThe March quarter national accounts didn’t tell us anything we didn't already know – the economy is struggling. The 0.1% rise in growth in the quarter was very underwhelming, and the 1.1% annual rate indicated stagnation.
Read MoreThe Bank of Canada cut its key rates by 0.25%, joining central banks in Sweden and Switzerland, and ahead of the European Central Bank, which is widely forecast to cut by a similar amount on Thursday.
Read MoreFive months into the year, Australian car sales are growing at a record pace. If this trend doesn’t slow in the next seven months, total new sales could top 1.3 million, setting a new all-time high.
Read MoreMarket values continue to fluctuate at the top of Wall Street, and for the first time ever, a session finished with three companies worth $US3 trillion or more.
Read MoreAmerican investment analysts and traders have finally woken up to the strategy Warren Buffett and Berkshire Hathaway are using to invest surplus cash in US Treasury bonds.
Read MoreDr Shane Oliver, Head of Investment Strategy & Chief Economist at AMP, discusses the growth rate.
Read MoreSuddenly, the flow of economic news is all confused, with weak news becoming good news, at least for US investors on Tuesday.
Read MoreIndia's stocks appear to be selling down for a second consecutive day today, following Tuesday’s significant slump in response to the surprising election outcome.
Read MoreTesla's performance in China—its most important market—continues to flag, raising more questions about its performance this quarter and for the rest of 2024.
Read More"Follow the money" is always a good adage in stock market investment. There's nothing like momentum or choice to tell a broader story about what investors and companies are doing with their money. And that applies in exploration for minerals as well as energy commodities.
Read MoreWidespread cheating in the huge Japanese car industry has been exposed by a government investigation, with Toyota, Mazda, Hino, Daihatsu, and Honda caught up and named for breaches of various rules and safety tests.
Read MoreThe old "boom, no it's a bust" mentality among iron ore traders emerged Monday when Singapore prices slid 4% or more on nerves about Chinese demand.
Read MoreThere won’t be any confirmation for a year or more, but the South Korean government has suddenly become very, very optimistic that it has identified a potential major oil and gas resource in the East Sea, off the city of Pohang (home to the huge steel group, POSCO).
Read MoreNever a good sign to show weakness when you claim to be controlling a key commodity market and expect to escape some sort of punishment. But that’s what the OPEC+ group did with its extension of its production caps until well into 2025—down went prices on Monday, thereby making all OPEC members poorer for at least a session.
Read MoreIn more unwelcome news for the lithium wannabees and actual miners and refiners, BYD, the world’s biggest maker of electrified vehicles, is continuing its push away from concentrating on lithium-gobbling battery-only EVs.
Read MoreQantas (ASX:QAN), Bonza, and Air New Zealand (ASX:AIZ) will miss out, but their global peers are having a great 2024 if the latest earnings upgrade estimate from IATA, the world airline lobby group, is any guide.
Read MoreDealmaking in the US oil and gas sector has soared to nearly $200 billion over the past year as major producers race to acquire rivals and expand their scale, reshaping the national energy landscape.
Read MoreAustralia’s lowest-paid workers will receive an inflation-matching pay rise of 3.75% this year, down from 5.75% last year. The rise equates to $33.10 a week after the Fair Work Commission's decision was announced on Monday.
Read MoreThe Chinese group Yuxiao Fund, along with four associates having ties to major Chinese conglomerates, will be compelled to reduce their shareholdings in Northern Minerals, a strategic rare earths miner, as the federal government deemed the acquisition contrary to "our national interest."
Read MoreGuzman y Gomez (GYG), the renowned fast-food chain, has revealed its plans to debut on the Australian Securities Exchange (ASX) in June, marking a significant milestone in the company's journey.
Read MoreInvestors would do well to take advantage of annual market volatility in June and buy on the dip, according to Emanuel Datt, chief investment officer of Datt Capital.
Read MoreOPEC+ may have agreed on Sunday to extend a voluntary production cut of 2.2 million barrels of crude oil a day deep into next year, but that is an acknowledgment that the output restrictions have failed to support prices at a level its members want.
Read MoreThe headlines from American retailing for the first quarter of 2024 told a very mixed picture – lots of cold, some hot, and little in between for many chains.
Read MoreGold had a fourth straight monthly gain in May, and its supporters think it will gain again in the coming days, particularly during the first trading week of June. This is trading off the back of the final inflation report for May, which was released on Friday and left us none the wiser about the course of price pressures, Fed interest rates, and bond yields.
Read MoreSo where do markets go on the first day of the new month (and for many companies, the final month of the second quarter and the 2023-24 financial year)?
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