Battle of the asset classes: the investments likely to grow in 2025
Shares surged higher in 2024 and their returns will be tough to repeat in 2025, but other investment opportunities appear attractive.
Shares surged higher in 2024 and their returns will be tough to repeat in 2025, but other investment opportunities appear attractive.
A tech firm that streamlines how chemists find pharmacists for locum shifts has signed up Australia’s biggest player, as it expands to the US and into other fields.
Financial pressures on universities, exacerbated by the unsuccessful bid to limit international student numbers, could prompt more merger discussions, KordaMentha says.
SunRice is well along the path of cracking more than $2bn and becoming one of Australia’s biggest food exporters – and investors have been piling in.
News Corp shares have raced to a new record as the media giant posted its highest first quarter revenue result in over a decade.
New NAB chief executive Andrew Irvine has seen the past benefits of a Trump bump, but this time the settings are much different.
Bitcoin’s resurrection has been almost as impressive as Donald Trump’s, and has cryptocurrency enthusiasts crowing.
The US dollar surged, stocks hit a record but Donald Trump’s decisive win wasn’t good news for all markets. These are the charts that told the story.
The revival of Donald Trump’s power sends a clear message about the rise of a pro-business US projecting strength around the world.
Melbourne’s sinking property market is trapping new borrowers as Victoria becomes the worst state in Australia for mortgage arrears.
From tech, to trade and Wall Street, businesses have a big stake in the outcome of today’s US presidential election.
Geelong Grammar urged its network to write to the Victorian state government in opposition to an LNG import terminal being developed by Viva Energy.
Any other chief executive would have been forced out a long time ago. This is no ordinary boss.
Peter King’s time at the banking major was never going to be marked by transformational deals. Rather it involved relentless fixing of long-term problems.
Original URL: https://www.themercury.com.au/business/victoria-business/page/18