Welcome to My Blog

The 10 most important things in the world right now

Wednesday, 20 September 2017

Trip Guide News

Business Insider Australia Twitter Facebook LinkedIn
Enable Images to View

The 10 most important things in the world right now

Here's what you need to know on Wednesday. 
Enable Images to View
 

The sacking of a teen who planned to vote against same-sex marriage is under investigation

The Fair Work Ombudsman is conducting an investigation into the dismissal of a teenager from her job in Canberra after her boss cited the teen's opposition to same-sex marriage.
Enable Images to View
 

The $11 billion Tabcorp-Tatts merger has been quashed

The Federal Court blocked approval of the ambitious proposal.
Enable Images to View
 

Harvey Norman booked $107m in income from property this year -- here's how the accounts work

An increase in the value of the retailerms property portfolio contributed $107.38m to its net profit before tax in FY17. 
Enable Images to View
 

ANOTHER WHALE: Someone just bought $600 million in Australian govt bonds in a single trade

Another single buyer has successfully bid for an entire an Australian government bond issue after a similar $500 million issue on September 1.
Enable Images to View
 

Australia's same-sex marriage postal vote is starting to look like a $122 million shemozzle

Ballot papers are still being mailed out, but a few key lessons have already emerged from the survey.

Enable Images to View
 

Solving a pet peeve about following instructions led this Australian woman to dominate a global market

Karen Pouye hates having to set up a new digital recorder because she cannot stand having to read the instructions. 
Enable Images to View
 

The founder of the world's largest hedge fund says 'bitcoin is a bubble'

Ray Dalio, the founder of the world's largest hedge fund, has joined the ranks of JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon.
Enable Images to View
 

MATT BARRIE: Australia, get your head out of the sand -- because we're in crisis

Freelancer founder Matt Barrie has ripped into Australia's complacency, warning that the country is in a "crisis" with "structural" problems that demand serious reforms.

No comments:

Post a Comment