Gupta hands vulture fund a hook into Tassie smelter
Signs of hope, or another nail in the coffin? It’s hard to tell what Sanjeev Gupta’s latest deal means.
Signs of hope, or another nail in the coffin? It’s hard to tell what Sanjeev Gupta’s latest deal means.
Paul Chiodo’s legal woes now extend to a lawsuit filed by his former lawyers, who allege there are $263,000 in unpaid bills.
Super Members Council has trotted out an ‘independent’ report critical of letting first-home buyers dip into their retirement savings for a deposit. But we’re dubious of its true independence.
Vikas Rambal’s first business ended in legendary acrimony, the second faltered and his third was shelved as a fantasy. Now worth $4.8bn, this is a story of keeping the dream alive.
A classic slap fight is unfolding before our eyes between Mike and Annie Cannon-Brookes, the splitsville rich-listers trying to make each other blink over the carve-up of their $23bn estate.
The embattled CEO of Creative Australia clearly needs to seize the power of the search engine, or at least learn how to conduct due diligence.
A top executive hired by Sanjeev Gupta has quit and another director stepped down from several board positions as the British tycoon fights to keep his empire alive.
Oh, what a coincidence. A senator’s significant other (who contributed to the government’s IR reviews) has a new partner: the Albanese government.
CA boss Adrian Collette will soon front Senate Estimates. He may want to explain why roughly 37 per cent of its peer assessors, who oversee grant funding, received grants themselves.
Another day, another dreadful call by an arts institution, this time Sydney’s Museum of Contemporary Art, which has got itself in a tangle over a bash booked by Greens senator Mehreen Faruqi for International Women’s Day.
Original URL: https://www.theaustralian.com.au/author/nick-evans/page/11