At the core of AAP Newswire is our unbiased, 24/7 breaking newswire that feeds the latest news from Australia and the world. Supported by over 200 journalists, AAP Newswire provides the news that matters.
The Australian dollar was around 1.5 US cents weaker this morning, after signs of economic slowdown in the United States and China pushed commodities lower overnight.
WA in new fight with PM on skills – The Aus; Swan flags personal tax reform – The Fin; Miners face training slug – The Fin; Orica given green light on Burrup as Oswal sues – The Fin; Buy a humble house for starters: Premier – The West
Tumbling demand for commodities and a drop in the euro led to a broad stock sell-off on Wall Street on Wednesday that pulled the Dow Jones industrial average down by 130 points.
The competition watchdog has raised concerns about Wesfarmers' potential acquisition of Burrup Fertilisers, saying it could squeeze competitors out of the market.
The Australian Greens want the federal government to go back to the drawing board on welfare changes and skilled migrants, only a day after the budget was delivered.
West Australian Workforce Development Minister Peter Collier has warned of massive labour shortages in Perth if the federal government continues to ignore their calls for skilled migrant status.
Building materials supplier Boral says it remains on track to deliver a turnaround in annual net profit, despite soft residential markets and bad weather earlier in the year.
Woolworths says it will change the way it labels fruit and vegetables after being named and shamed for describing imported produce as Australian grown.
Commonwealth Bank of Australia posted third quarter unaudited cash earnings of around $1.7 billion amid "subdued" credit demand and "fragile" consumer and business confidence.
BC Iron's spurned suitor Regent Pacific says it won't offer a better price for the junior iron ore miner after BC Iron terminated the on again, off again $345 million takeover.
The Australian share market was higher at noon on some positive corporate news and speculation that inflation in China during April may be lower than expected.
Shares in Forge Resources tumbled after rare earths explorer Lynas Corporation terminated a deal to sub-lease phosphate, tantalum and niobium-prospective areas at its Mount Weld project to Forge.
Turning deficit to surplus – The Fin; GST carve-up battle to intensify – The West; Extra money, but more needed – The Fin; $22bn saved to enable tweaks – The Fin; Migrants to ease skill shortage of boom – The West
Coal, iron ore puts surplus in the black – The Fin; Pressure on WA to speed up port works – The Fin; Miners to drive spending splurge – The Aus; Port finds high lead levels in shipment – The West; Dairy farmers wary of set price – The West
Chevron has inked a sales deal with JX Nippon Oil and Energy Corporation for liquefied natural gas from its $43 billion Gorgon project offshore from Western Australia.
OZ Minerals has agreed to pay $55.1 million, plus costs, to settle two class actions related to its alleged failure to disclose material information about its financial position.
The Australian share market closed lower today, led downwards by the major banks as investors sat on the sidelines ahead of the federal budget release tonight.
Western Australia's peak resource sector association says the boost to skilled migrant numbers, expected in the federal budget, will hardly solve the state's labour shortage.