AI to drive new generation of winners and losers
New York-based analyst Viktor Shvets says the next decade promises to be the most critical in terms of the transition from today’s capitalism to a yet-to-be-defined alternative system.
New York-based analyst Viktor Shvets says the next decade promises to be the most critical in terms of the transition from today’s capitalism to a yet-to-be-defined alternative system.
Improved ties between Australia and China and the reopening of borders for tourism and business travel are driving an upbeat mood for 2025, the year of the snake.
Labor’s proposed tax on the unrealised gains of super funds could cost it the next election, says fund manager Geoff Wilson, who mobilised investors in 2019 against a planned franking credit hit.
Fund manager Jun Bei Liu says dropping interest rates will help boost the sharemarket this year, with sectors such as property and consumer stocks to benefit.
The US and China are now in a global AI race. The revolution is coming a lot faster than many executives have anticipated.
The arrival of a Chinese challenger to the dominance of AI pioneer ChatGPT and its chip suppliers is the wake-up call the US tech titans needed.
Hundreds of thousands of retirees over 65 could be overpaying taxes by $650 each year on average as the system fails to alert them, the Super Members Council has revealed.
The SMSF Association is concerned the federal government could try to push the tax through with some last minute amendments.
The changing role of women in the workforce in Australia has driven major structural shifts in the logistics business, according to Michael Byrne, the former chief executive of Linfox and Toll.
Adelaide-born businessman Rob Chapman says the election of Donald Trump will move the ‘pendulum’ right, but says the fundamentals of doing business will remain intact.
Original URL: https://www.theaustralian.com.au/author/glenda-korporaal/page/5