Battlelines drawn in Queensland’s insurance wars
The two biggest insurers are about to go head to head in Queensland. Will the $855m buyout deliver for Sydney’s IAG?
The two biggest insurers are about to go head to head in Queensland. Will the $855m buyout deliver for Sydney’s IAG?
Star investors vote against CEO pay amid liquidity, viability concerns. ACCC sues Webjet. IAG snaps up most of RACQ underwriting for $855m. AVJennings shares rocket on takeover. Activist group ordered to pay Santos $9m.
Tim O’Sullivan is running an multimillion-dollar business but there’s a wild break-up story behind his success.
From suspicious hotel check-ins to employees viewing child sexual abuse material at work, Australia’s top businesses are calling for stricter action across all sectors.
Ex-AFL boss McLachlan to take Tabcorp reins. China house price falls may pressure iron ore prices. Integral, Capital lock merger talks. Temasek’s $300m stake play with Betashares. Billionaire’s $62.8m selldown.
China’s inclusion of Australia on its visa waiver program has been hailed by airport and tourism leaders as an important development.
Corporate travel bookings have revealed the city where workers are most likely to tack on extra time to a domestic business trip.
The next step for a controversial Australian energy project which would power an estimated 1.8 million homes has been announced.
Wall St hit fresh highs overnight but it wasn’t enough to lift Aussie equities, with the ASX200 drifting lower on extended weakness in China.
Optus preps for ACMA court fight over 2022 hacking. Telix Pharma won’t pursue US IPO. Deterra’s UK buy, div policy change weighs. McLachlan wooed for Tabcorp CEO role.
Aussies have rushed to ATMs all over the country to withdraw thousands in cash – here’s why so many are doing it.
Qantas unveils its first premium cabin sale since the pandemic with return business fares from $1199 on most international routes including to London.
Less than a decade ago, Aussies stood for hours in snaking queues in a bid to buy a product from this cult store. Now, the entire industry is on life support.
After the divisive disaster of Qantas’s ‘yes’ logo during the voice campaign last year, the airline is confident a new patriotic slogan plastered on planes will garner support from travellers.
Original URL: https://www.ntnews.com.au/business/companies/page/199