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Website improvements

Hi all, A quick note to offer guidance on the new website. As well as the layout changes that make it easier to access content for new readers, it comes with a dramatically improved sign-up and resubscription process, greatly enhanced speed, and a much better mobile experience (since 95% of traffic is now phone!). The

Latest posts

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Criticism of budget dismissed as “barely coherent noise”

In the weeks since the Albanese government’s latest federal budget was unveiled, there has been a growing chorus of criticism over the government’s changes to the tax system. While some economists and commentators have welcomed the changes to the tax system as they relate to investment in existing property, as Leith covered here at Macrobusiness

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Which stocks are cheap?

Or, at least, out of fashion. TME. The outcasts that nobody wants Markets have an uncanny habit of punishing consensus. While investors continue chasing yesterday’s winners, positioning data reveal a surprisingly long list of sectors sitting near multi-year lows in ownership. These aren’t necessarily buys—but they’re where the fuel for future reversals may be building.

2

Gas fog of war smothers Canberra

Hilariously, as a cold snap spikes East Coast gas prices and the Iran war delivers windfall profits, the gas industry has ramped its whinging to 100%. They’ve rolled out good ‘ol industry patsy Wood Mackenzie: Labor’s proposed domestic gas reservation scheme would flood Australia’s east coast market with excess gas supply in the short-term before

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The rise of government censorship by algorithm

In June, the British government proposed mandatory changes on how content is discovered on YouTube and other online video platforms, which would give government unprecedented influence over what content makes it to the screens of viewers. Under the proposed plans there would be a “prominence regime” which could require platforms such as YouTube to give

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Alboflation rages under Aussie economic bonnet

According to Primara Research, I have never heard of the latest ABS Business Conditions data for June 2026 indicates that 1 in 7 Australian firms are now boosting prices in reaction to gasoline costs, up from 11% to 15%, 36% more enterprises than last month. It’s mining, construction, wholesale, transport: these are the input expenses

0

The Pilbara killer is here

The ferrous complex is trying to hold $100. It may succeed for a few months with the aid of seasonal tailwinds. Iron ore inventory edged down on the week. Steel inventory jumped and is well above last year’s. MySteel indexes are adjusting down to CISA measures. Prospects for demand remain dim. Property is kaput. Policy

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Of course Pauline Hanson is corrupt

The AFR devoted a lengthy and laborious investigation to One Nation’s funding over the weekend. Perhaps part of the disbelief rumbling through Canberra stems from the knowledge that small-dollar, direct-to-voter fundraising like this isn’t how Australian political parties make their bread in 2026. When asked by AFR Weekend, the Labor Party declined to say how

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Government accused of crashing the housing market

In the weeks since the Albanese government delivered it’s latest federal budget, whatever pretense of a free market that existed surrounding the issue of housing prices has been gradually evaporating. Where once there were claims that the impact of negative gearing and the capital gains tax discount were minimal, and that Australian housing was a

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Weekend Reads and Vids: 4 – 5 July 2026

Elioth Gruner Frosty sunrise 1917 Art Gallery of New South Wales Gift of Howard Hinton 1927       Somewhere near here Albanese and Chalmers see reform and risk-taking as an antidote to populism – ABC Are the wheels falling off the AI investment boom? – ABC Predicted $27bn wartime windfall for Australian LNG exporters

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Chugging into full AI bust

OK, so where Korea goes, goes AI. TME with more. Memory Cracks The technical deterioration across the AI memory complex is becoming difficult to dismiss as stock-specific. From SK Hynix and SanDisk to Micron, Kioxia and Samsung, momentum is fading at the same time, with several leaders breaking key trendlines and short-term support. Whether this

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Australian dollar finds Japanese help

DXY is holding resistance turned support. AUD was aided by JPY intervention. Oil and gold parted ways, suggesting the Warsh test is peaking. Base metals are oscillating. Mining charts remain hideous EM stocks are hanging in, casting doubt over the DXY rally. Junk is serene. The Treasury curve is still bear flattening as the Warsh

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Hormuz cropen continues

After a few good days and some more missiles, the Strait of Hormuz remains open. MS fro two days ago. Yesterday we saw 7 vessels exiting the Strait of Hormuz. Data from last weekend got revised upwards from a rate of 3 vessels per day to ~7-8 units/day. Inbound vessels are also trending at ~8-9

2

We need gas. Doesn’t matter how

When it comes to gaslighting HQ, look no further than today’s rubbish. A comparison by the $384 million Amplitude using publicly available data seeks to dispel some of the myths of the “manufacturing versus big gas” rhetoric, and make the case why forcing producers to cross-subsidise the manufacturing industry is not a solution to the

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How to fix Victoria’s frontline services

I have now done my best to describe the extraordinary policy failures that have done nothing to improve VIC frontline services, with record suicide rates. The failure of the Rosy Batty panopticon: MARAM has replaced frontline workers’ judgement with a centralised information-sharing system. The failure of AHPRA regulation to hold medical bad actors to account. The use

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Australians say almost anything is better than this

Earlier this year, RedBridge asked voters if they agreed or disagreed with a vitally important question. “Almost anything is better than the way things are now, I just want to vote for change”. Across every single demographic breakdown except voting intention, there was net support for this perspective. Generation Gender Location Education Home ownership  

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Meta pops semis bubble

TME with the news. Under The Hood The indices may not be saying much, but beneath the surface the market continues to evolve. Leadership within AI is shifting, market structure is becoming increasingly important and several cross-asset relationships are beginning to diverge. How bullish is the AI bull? SOX has gone nowhere over the past

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Why is China suddenly so angry?

0The Chinese wolf warrior diplomat is back. China’s top diplomat in Australia has launched a remarkable attack on ASIO and other Western intelligence agencies, accusing them of fabricating spying claims against his nation as he issued a sweeping denial that Beijing engages in foreign interference. The combative intervention has sparked calls for ambassador Xiao Qian

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Ryan Stokes will be OK

Gas propaganda HQ just won’t stop. One of the nation’s big energy users and producers, Ryan Stokes, says Labor’s proposed 20 per cent domestic gas reservation will wipe out small energy companies and subsidise multinational manufacturers that are neglecting Australia’s long-term economic interests. The heavyweight pushback from the Seven Group Holdings boss came as Japanese

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Australians keep cutting back, inflation still won’t die

With the war in the Middle East still unresolved and growing domestic inflationary pressures, concerns continue to mount about the future of the Australian economy. Back in May, RBA Assistant Governor Sarah Hunter delivered a speech, during which she put forward the RBA’s perspective that a significantly more serious downturn within the economy and labour

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Rise and rise of the weaponised social worker

Today, I continue my series on the disaster that is Victorian frontline services for family violence, mental health and child protection. So far, I have recounted: The failure of the Rosy Batty panopticon: MARAM has replaced frontline workers’ judgement with a centralised information-sharing system. The failure of AHPRA regulation to hold medical bad actors to

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Albanese blames algorithms for Australia’s ills

During parliamentary question time last week, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese took issue with tech algorithms, stating that they drove people to “more and more extreme positions”. “So, they start off in a mainstream position talking about ethnicity perhaps or faith, and they end up over a period of time receiving in their inbox — not