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Australian shares were little changed in early trading, as materials and energy stocks fell after commodities including base metals, gold and oil declined overnight.
Labor to ease the carbon squeeze– The Aus; ASIC raises hurdles on share listings– The Fin; BHP gave me an assurance: Barnett– The Fin; Alcoa trucks in water as drought hits– The West; Nobel winner and Australian of the Year to fight funding cuts– The West
The Australian dollar was more than one US cent lower as investors fled to save-haven assets following another aftershock in Japan and more concerns about its nuclear power safety.
Perth company Liquefied Natural Gas Ltd, through a wholly-owned Indonesian subsidiary, has lodged a compensation claim for US$70.9 million against Japan's Mitsubishi Corporation.
West Australian Premier Colin Barnett says he regrets comments made by his police minister about the treatment of homeless people in Perth during the commonwealth summit in October.
The Australian share market has closed sharply lower, pulled back by profit-taking on mining and energy stocks, amid fresh concerns about US growth prospects and the nuclear drama in Japan.
Treasurer Wayne Swan jets off to the US today for the G20 Finance Ministers' meeting in Washington, a trip he says will provide valuable insights as he prepares his May 10 budget.
Oil and gas companies can avoid opposition to their planned activities if they are up front in talking with the communities in which they wish to operate, an energy conference has been told.
The judge in Channel Seven's legal action against its former television executive James Warburton has chided Kerry Stokes for comments he made regarding the case yesterday.
Prime Minister Julia Gillard says the government remains committed to finding savings in the budget to bring it back to surplus, as scientists rallied against possible research spending cuts.
Australia warned of China shale gas boom – The West; Skilled migrant push intensifies – The Fin; Browse progress good, says Ferguson – The West; Chinese backers find $US500m for Moly mine – The West; Single-sex clubs under attack in WA – The Fin
The Australian market has opened lower on strong negative leads as offshore markets were spooked overnight by the crisis in Libya and poor data from China, the US and Spain.
Phoenix claim in Firepower fallout – The Fin; Woodside to extend NWS – The West; WA Premier broadens his horizons – The Fin; Fertiliser tycoon sued over lost $110m – The Aus; Maurice Blackburn enters expanding WA legal landscape – The West
US stocks plunged Thursday on worries of higher oil prices and an economic slowdown, with the Dow, Nasdaq and S&P 500 indexes all losing more than 1.8 per cent in the day.
Cardboard box manufacturers Amcor and Visy Board will pay out at least $95 million to thousands of businesses after settling a drawn-out class action over alleged price fixing.
The state government has announced it will increase fines to a maximum of $1 million for illegally demolishing or damaging a state-registered place without appropriate approval.
Qantas Airways says there will be further enhancements on its regional routes, with self-service check-in systems to be rolled out at 21 destinations over the next four months.
The Australian sharemarket dropped one-and-a-half per cent lower on Monday as investors sought safe haven assets amid global uncertainty and higher oil prices.