Welcome back to our Weekly Digest. Read on for the latest updates and some ideas to help us all move forward.
The local sharemarket started the week at a three-week high, coming off a rally from last week. Tech and payment firms were among the industries leading the charge.
Baby formula manufacturer Bubs Australia soared in value after an agreement was reached on the weekend to send 1.25 million tins of baby formula to the United States. A bacterial infection forced the country to close a major formula manufacturing plant, leading to widespread shortages.
AGL Energy, Australia’s biggest polluter, has abandoned its plans to split the company’s assets, which would have allowed them to continue burning coal for 20+ years. Mounting opposition from shareholders forced the decision.
Up until the pandemic, short-range predictions among analysts typically did not diverge very much. However, there is now a broad range of guesses as to what measures are needed to bring inflation under control as interest rates continue to rise.
Anthony Albanese is set to face his first major hurdle as Prime Minister as petrol prices are about to soar. Meat, fruit, and vegetable prices could all follow suit in the coming months.
National Bank of Australia announced that it is launching a new buy now pay later service, in an attempt to take a bite out of competitors such as Afterpay and Zip Co. Unlike those services, NAB is advertising no late fees, no account fees, and no interest.
A new study has found that low-income households are facing decade-long wait times for social housing, and the worst is likely still to come.
The ATO has published a list of guidelines for those wishing to donate crypto assets. An overview can be found here.
Australians are experiencing waits of up to 3 months to receive passports. Many people are reporting that they cannot get through to the APO to check the status of their applications.
The Australian Retailers Association (ARA) is calling on the government to make retail work exempt from Age Pension income test, as the industry faces its biggest employee shortage in half a century due to a lower inflow of international students and working holiday makers.
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