Aussie shares dip lower on big bank fall
The Aussie sharemarket dipped lower on Wednesday as bank stocks tumbled.
The Aussie sharemarket dipped lower on Wednesday as bank stocks tumbled.
The sharemarket dipped lower on Tuesday as the RBA delivered some hawkish rhetoric on interest rates, even as the miners boomed on fresh Chinese support.
Despite more EVs and people working from home, Australian fuel prices increased at double the rate of inflation in the 12 months to June.
The Australian sharemarket tumbled on Monday as supermarket giants Coles and Woolworths retreated on the ACCC’s bombshell legal move.
More and more Australians are taking on multiple jobs to keep their heads above the water, but the issue runs deeper than just cost of living.
Leading Australian economists say the RBA will deliver a gift to cash-strapped households in February, but one key player is holding firm on a rate cut this year.
The world’s biggest economy has just cut interest rates by a “jumbo” 50 basis points. Here’s what that means for Australia.
The Australian sharemarket booked a fresh record high on Thursday as investors celebrated the US Fed’s “jumbo” rate cut.
The local sharemarket traded flat on Wednesday as investors moved cautiously before Thursday morning’s pivotal Fed rate cut decision and the release of key jobs data.
The rate cut rally in Australian shares continued on Tuesday, with the local bourse hitting fresh highs once again as it booked a fourth consecutive session in the green.
Australia has signed a massive new trade deal with a Middle-Eastern powerhouse, but the agreement has sparked controversy.
Growing jubilance around this week’s interest rate cut in the world’s largest economy propelled Aussie shares to a record high.
Looking to buy your first home? The latest auction results could signal an important change in Australia’s ‘unstoppable’ housing market.
Aussie homeowners have been smashed with interest rate pain for years now and a leading economist warns the stress isn’t going to end anytime soon.
As Australia’s biggest companies do all they can to cut costs, the corporate juggernauts are pulling back profits to pay shareholders.
Economic activity jumped last month, but Australia’s biggest bank warns the frothy spending could be temporary.
The Australian sharemarket lifted on Tuesday on the back of a rally in energy stocks and some relief from a rattled Wall St.
Aussies and business are growing increasingly fearful of a stagnating economy, with new concerns about potential job losses.
A former federal treasurer and current Labor Party national president has come out swinging against the Reserve Bank, saying the RBA is ‘punching itself in the face’.
The cost of managing your money, getting a loan, and insuring your possessions has gone up way more than the actual inflation rate in the past year.
The financials and energy sectors have dragged the ASX to a winning day as Chinese woes weigh heavy on Australian miners.
New research has found one group are falling victim to crypto scams as they are “overconfident or overambitious”.
Shareholders in Coles and Woolworths are licking their lips, but the public is still stretching every dollar further at the checkout.
The Aussie share market finished the week, and the reporting month of August, in the green as it marked the third straight week of gains.
The Australian share market fell again on Thursday, after a poor start thanks to Wall St, as several big name companies report results.
The Australian Stock Exchange ended Wednesday flat after some of the country’s biggest companies reported some less than stellar results.
Woolworths Group has announced a dire $108m net profit, a 93 per cent drop on last year.
The Australian share market finished down on Tuesday, following sagging results from jeweller Lovisa and sluggish performance from Zip and Johns Lyng.
The local sharemarket lifted on Monday as buoyant investors cheered the prospect of a September rate cut in the world’s largest economy.
The Australian sharemarket advanced for a 10th consecutive session on Thursday, marking the longest rally in stocks since 2015.
Original URL: https://www.news.com.au/finance/markets/australian-markets/page/12