Energy secretary backs nuclear, attacks net zero

Original article by Colin Packham
The Australian – Page: 4 : 19-Feb-25

The Coalition’s plan to build seven nuclear power stations if it wins the upcoming federal election has received tacit support from the US Energy Secretary, Chris Wright. He has told the Alliance for Responsible Citizenship conference in London that he would love to see Australia embrace uranium, but he says the federal government will need to shrug off its ideological opposition to the energy source. Wright adds that the net zero emissions target of 2050 is a "sinister goal" that has had tremendous costs and no benefits.

CORPORATES
UNITED STATES. DEPT OF ENERGY

ACCC ticks Virgin-Qatar flights plan

Original article by Ayesha de Kretser
The Australian Financial Review – Page: 14 & 19 : 19-Feb-25

The Australian Competition & Consumer Commission has backed Vigin Australia’s proposed alliance with Qatar Airways. The ACCC’s draft determination has concluded amongs other things that the wet-lease agreement will be advantageous to travellers by offering a greater choice of international flights, more convenience and enhanced loyalty program benefits. Qatar Airways will also acquire a 25 per cent stake in Virgin if the deal receives final approval from the ACCC, and ultimately the Foreign Investment Review Board and Treasurer Jim Chalmers.

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VIRGIN AUSTRALIA HOLDINGS LIMITED, QATAR AIRWAYS, AUSTRALIAN COMPETITION AND CONSUMER COMMISSION, AUSTRALIA. FOREIGN INVESTMENT REVIEW BOARD, AUSTRALIA. DEPT OF THE TREASURY

Robo-debt officials to be investigated, in anti-corruption commission backflip

Original article by Olivia Ireland
The Sydney Morning Herald – Page: Online : 19-Feb-25

Former High Court judge Geoffrey Nettle has ruled that National Anti-Corruption Commission should investigate six public officials over their role in the robodebt scandal. Nettle was commissioned to undertake an independent review of the NACC’s June 2024 announcement that it would not pursue an investigation into six individuals who had been referred to it by the robodebt royal commission. The names of the six officials have not been disclosed. The welfare debt recovery scheme was implemented by the former Coalition government, and subsequently deemed to have been unlawful.

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AUSTRALIA. NATIONAL ANTI-CORRUPTION COMMISSION, HIGH COURT OF AUSTRALIA

AFL fans expected to fork out as Saturday live coverage goes behind paywall in 2025

Original article by Jack Snape
The Guardian Australia – Page: Online : 19-Feb-25

Foxtel and its Kayo Sports streaming service will have exclusive live broadcasts of AFL matches on Saturdays in Victoria and Tasmania during the 2025 season. The live and exclusive coverage will also apply to the first eight rounds of the home-and-away season in other states, under the new $4.5bn broadcasting rights deal between the AFL, Foxtel and the Seven Network that began this year. Foxtel CEO Patrick Delany is confident that fans will be willing to pay to watch live coverage of AFL matches.

CORPORATES
FOXTEL MANAGEMENT PTY LTD, KAYO SPORTS, AUSTRALIAN FOOTBALL LEAGUE, SEVEN NETWORK LIMITED, SEVEN WEST MEDIA LIMITED – ASX SWM

BHP dividend slumps to eight-year

Original article by Peter Ker
The Australian Financial Review – Page: 14 : 19-Feb-25

BHP has posted a 2024-25 underlying interim profit of US5.08bn ($7.98bn), which is 23 per cent lower than previously. Lower commodity prices weighed on the half-year result, while shareholders will receive an interim dividend of $US0.50 per share; this is BHP’s lowest half-year dividend payout since 2017. Meanwhile, CEO Mike Henry says the resources giant will focus on organic growth projects within its existing portfolio, rather than pursuing acquisitions. He notes that it is increasingly challenging to undertake large global mergers and acquisitions for shareholder value in the current market, which may rule out another bid for Anglo American. BHP is also reducing its reliance on iron ore by increasing its investment in commodities such as copper and potash.

CORPORATES
BHP GROUP LIMITED – ASX BHP, ANGLO AMERICAN PLC

The one-cut wonder

Original article by Greg Brown, Jack Quail, Sarah Ison
The Australian – Page: 1 & 4 : 19-Feb-25

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese says the first official interest rate cut in more than four years will have no impact on the timing of the federal election, and that the budget is still set for 25 March. However, the Reserve Bank of Australia’s 25 basis point interest rate cut on Tuesday has provided Albanese with a trigger for an early election. RBA governor ­Michele Bullock has downplayed expectations of further interest rate relief, contending that the central bank’s board will need more evidence that inflation is falling to the middle of its 2-3 per cent target range. The RBA’s preferred measure of underlying inflation fell to 3.2 per cent in the year to December, and the central bank now expects it to fall to 2.7 per cent in June. The election must be held no later than 17 May.

CORPORATES
AUSTRALIA. DEPT OF THE PRIME MINISTER AND CABINET, RESERVE BANK OF AUSTRALIA

ASX diversity guidelines face axe as new proposal emerges

Original article by Perry Williams, Janet Albrechtsen
The Australian – Page: 13 & 19 : 19-Feb-25

Tanarra Capital founder John Wylie says the ASX Corporate Governance Council should abandon a proposal to require directors of listed companies to disclose personal information such as their sexual orientation and religious ­beliefs. He says it is a gross invasion of people’s personal privacy to have to disclose their sexual identity in order to be eligible for a board position. A number of corporate directors have released a joint statement backing Wylie’s stance. Wylie has proposed his own reforms, which include requiring directors of listed companies to stand for re-election annually rather than every three years.

CORPORATES
TANARRA CAPITAL PTY LTD, AUSTRALIAN SECURITIES EXCHANGE. CORPORATE GOVERNANCE COUNCIL

Long wait for living standards to recover

Original article by Jack Quail, Simon Benson
The Australian – Page: 1 & 4 : 19-Feb-25

The Reserve Bank of Australia now expects growth in real household disposable income of just 3.1 per cent in the year to June; it had previously forecast growth of 3.9 per cent for this metric, which is regarded as a proxy for living standards. The central bank estimates that real household disposable income per capita is about one per cent lower than prior to the pandemic. Meanwhile, shadow treasurer Angus Taylor says the federal government’s own forecasts show that the nation’s living standards will not return to the levels prior to the last election until 2030.

CORPORATES
RESERVE BANK OF AUSTRALIA, LIBERAL PARTY OF AUSTRALIA

Fair Work Act changes are a world of pain that hurts housing

Original article by Prue Goward
The Australian Financial Review – Page: 31 : 18-Feb-25

Changes to the Fair Work Act as a result of the federal government’s changes to industrial relations laws are having a negative impact on many business sectors, of which the housing industry is just one. The main change to the Act that affects the housing sector is in section 15, which redefines subcontractors earning less than $175,000 a year as employees. Once a subcontractor is defined as an employee by one company, it must be defined as an employee for all the companies it does work for, which could be half a dozen. These changes will result in more expensive housing, and possibly no construction industry at all, given the growth of innovations such as refabricated housing that could be brought in from other countries.

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Small business in recession as public service thrives

Original article by Millie Muroi
Brisbane Times – Page: Online : 18-Feb-25

Deputy Opposition leader Sussan Ley says the number of small businesses that employ people in Australia has fallen from around 953,000 to 922,000 since Labor won the federal election in May 2022. Ley adds that the nation appears to experiencing a small business recession, while the federal government has hired about one permanent public servant for every small business that is collapsing. The Coalition has flagged public service cutbacks if it wins the upcoming election, with Labor having hired an additional 36,000 public servants during its first term in office.

CORPORATES
LIBERAL PARTY OF AUSTRALIA, AUSTRALIAN LABOR PARTY