Welcome to My Blog

10 things you need to know this morning in Australia

Monday 31 July 2017

Trip Guide News

Business Insider Australia Twitter Facebook LinkedIn
Enable Images to View

10 things you need to know this morning in Australia

Trump's new comms director is already his former comms director. House, for auction, $1.65, no reserve. The return of Romper Stomper. And coffee with beef jerky in it is now a thing.
Enable Images to View
 

TD Securities doesn't think the RBA will attempt to jawbone the Aussie dollar lower today

Here's the view of Prashant Newnaha, interest rates strategist at TD, on why the bank is unlikely to express concern about the dollar's recent strength.
Enable Images to View
 

The push for Malcolm Turnbull to hold a parliamentary vote on same-sex marriage could boil over next week

Momentum is building inside the federal Liberal Party for a push on same-sex marriage when Parliament resumes next week, creating the potential for an explosive brawl.
Enable Images to View
 

CHARTS: The typical Australian property investor

Contrary to the image a property investor might conjure up - a wealthy full-time property speculator - most residential investors in Australia don't actually rely on it as their primary source of income.
Enable Images to View
 

Elon Musk took a jab at Volvo while talking about the Tesla Model 3's crash test

Musk showed a video that he said displayed side-by-side clips of a Model 3 and a 2016 Volvo S60 undergoing the same crash test.
Enable Images to View
 

US Navy pilot explains how he shot down a Syrian fighter jet

On June 18, a US Air Force pilot shot down a Syrian fighter jet south of Tabqah after it dropped bombs near US-backed forces, also known as Syrian Democratic Forces, according to US Central Command.
Enable Images to View
 

There's a 95% chance the world will warm beyond a crucial tipping point -- here's what that means

Two degrees is what's usually considered the threshold at which warming becomes catastrophic.
Enable Images to View
 

One of the largest bitcoin exchanges in the world will not support bitcoin cash

Bitcoin will likely split into two separate currencies following a brutal civil war among crypto-powerbrokers. Coinbase, one of the largest cryptocurrency exchanges, however, will not back bitcoin cash, a fork of the original bitcoin.

No comments:

Post a Comment