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Business to pay fuel carbon tax – The Fin; New Jakarta ban shuts down live cattle trade - The Aus; $45,000-a-day bill for Buckeridge – The Fin; Traders' lease secrecy win –The West; Karoon gets nod for Browse plan – The Aus
Australian borrowers are likely to be spared an interest rate rise when the central bank board meets next week, but a hike is coming, perhaps as soon as August.
The Australian share market closed lower after a weak Chinese manufacturing report dampened demand for commodities-linked companies, and softness among banking stocks.
Prime Minister Julia Gillard has admitted Labor's carbon price regime will indeed start with a carbon tax before being replaced by an emissions trading scheme.
Australian manufacturing activity has grown for the first time in four months, but the sector is still struggling to cope with a high exchange rate and weak local demand.
Shares in rare earths supplier Lynas Corporation plunged by more than nine per cent on Friday as the company denied reports that a planned Malaysian plant could be delayed by one to two years.
Australian Employment Covenant founder Andrew Forrest says a key milestone has been passed with more than 270 companies committing to 55,000 jobs for indigenous people.
Perth-based shipbuilder Austal says the US Navy has confirmed the construction of two more high speed vessels, the sixth and seventh in a $US1.6 billion, 10-vessel program.
Ice cream maker Baskin-Robbins expects to open another 10 stores in Western Australia this year as it focuses its domestic business on the resource-rich states of WA and Queensland.
Australian shares were slightly higher at open, after another night of strong performances on Wall Street following the second, positive vote by the Greek parliament on austerity measures.
The Australian dollar was slightly weaker this morning, but market sentiment remained high, following a successful vote in Athens on an austerity package required to secure aid to ward off sovereign default.
Push to wipe out carbon tax plan – The West; Bar raised on executive pay deals - The Fin; 'We need a new wave of reform' – The Aus; Boards urged to expand offshore – the Aus; Bulls v bears as thumping rally closes out 2010-11 – The West
US stocks rallied Thursday, rising for the fourth day in a row after Greek MPs voted to implement an austerity plan and data showed business activity was up in the US industrial heartland.
The Australian dollar surged to a 26-year high against the pound, as fears of a Greek default subsided following a successful vote on a key austerity package.
The Australian share market ended the last day of the financial year on a strong note after Greece passed austerity measures to avoid a default on debt.
An International Atomic Energy Agency panel has recommended further safety measures for a rare earth refinery being built in Malaysia by Western Australian miner Lynas Corp.
Federal Resources Minister Martin Ferguson has taken a veiled swipe at Bob Brown after the Greens leader this week raised concerns about the extent of foreign ownership of Australia's mineral resources.
Agreement on a $30 billion Kimberley gas hub is "the most significant act of self-determination by Aboriginal people in Australian history", Premier Colin Barnett says.
The final details of Australia's emissions trading scheme are expected to be announced next week, with the Australian Greens saying major hurdles have been overcome.
Leading West Australian grain organisation Co-operative Bulk Handling will no longer have a monopoly over the transportation of grain in the state, the competition watchdog has ordered.
Industrial action by Qantas engineers looks set to spread across the country next week, with union bosses planning rolling stoppages at half a dozen major airports as part of a dispute over pay and conditions.