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
Primary Section
Latest posts
Victorians are finally ready to oust Labor
Victorians have experienced severe Stockholm Syndrome with respect to the state Labor government. Victoria’s nine-month lockdown during the Covid-19 pandemic was among the longest and most severe in the world, driven in part by the state government’s incompetence in handling hotel quarantine. Victoria’s infrastructure projects have experienced massive cost overruns, and the government has swelled
Is the RBA done with rate hikes?
The past week has seen two major banks pivot on interest rates. They now expect the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) to keep the official cash rate on hold until mid-next year, before delivering cuts. CBA was the first to change its view, last week forecasting that the RBA will remain on hold at 3.35%
Australia’s New CGT Rules: The Hidden Math
The Australian Federal Budget has ignited a fierce debate around tax reform, with the spotlight firmly fixed on changes to negative gearing and the capital gains tax. For property, the changes are expected to put downward pressure on prices. But for broader investment portfolios, the proposed CGT changes are opening a complex can of worms.
Canada’s “ugly” growth experience holds lessons for Australia
Canada’s newly declared recession has exposed how heavily the country’s headline GDP growth relied on record‑high immigration, with Prime Minister Mark Carney acknowledging that reducing immigration contributed to the downturn, according to the National Post. Analysts argue this simply reveals what has been true for years: Canada’s economy has been expanding only because its population
Melbourne is the real life GTA
Jacqui Felgate, Melbourne’s 3AW Radio host, often posts videos on Instagram of the latest armed robberies, home invasions, and crimes across Melbourne. The stories are as regular as they are disturbing. They often involve masked teenagers carrying out assaults, burglaries, or carjackings, only to receive a light punishment and return to the community to commit
War turns meaningless
The overnight headlines are of continued war. Israel pounds southern Lebanon and Gaza and said nothing will stop it Apache shut down over Hormuz. Iran denies it did it. Nobody cares. Iran declares Trump mad and has no respect with country in the region. Trump launches counter-strikes. Deal 9 imminent! Oil always believes Trump. I
Australia’s population on course for 84 million by 2100?
Recently, there has been a great deal of debate over the path of Australia’s population growth, most notably regarding what Australia’s population will look like in the year 2100. In a recent commentary to the Daily Telegraph, entrepreneur and former retail magnate Dick Smith warned that: “We’re going to get to (a population) 100 million
Australia’s rental crisis continues to deepen
Australian tenants are facing deteriorating conditions, with Cotality’s results for May showing accelerated rental growth and vacancy rates returning to record lows. Annual advertised rental growth in Australia rose to 5.9% in May, the largest annual increase since September 2024. The increase in advertised rents comes as the national rental vacancy rate fell to a
Will Australia’s house price correction broaden beyond Sydney and Melbourne?
According to Cotality’s daily dwelling values index, Perth, Brisbane, and Adelaide have so far avoided the house price corrections taking place in Sydney and Melbourne. PropTrack’s dwelling value results for May also show that these three cities have avoided falling, although growth has slowed significantly across each market. The question arises: can Perth, Brisbane and
What can save us from PM Pauline!?!
LVO noted the latest Newspoll this morning, which, I note, still refuses to include a TPP of ALP vs ON. Some of the moronic responses from the major parties this morning show why and how PM Pauline is becoming a fait accompli. First, Albo the coward. “Some of the personal ways in which mainstream media,
Australian consumer sentiment collapses
The Westpac consumer sentiment index collapsed by 2.9% to 80.6 in June, with Australians showing deep pessimism across finances, the economy, housing, and savings behaviour. The survey is back near the weakest levels in its 50-year history, with pessimists outnumbering optimists by nearly 20%. Household finances have deteriorated, with finances versus a year ago falling 7.5%
The day I escaped a Victorian mental asylum
A year or so ago, I had an experience that many of you will struggle to comprehend. For a decade, a mental health nurse with a fixation on my wife had stalked my family. My wife is a senior forensic psychologist, so you can imagine the kind of jealousies involved. The obsession comprised the usual
Australia’s sandwich generation pays the most tax
At 48, I am officially part of Australia’s “sandwich generation”, busy caring for both teenage children and elderly parents. While I am earning more than I did in my 30s, my family’s expenses have also never been higher, as has my tax bill. Analysis by Taylor Fry for the Actuaries Institute, presented in The Australian
Bull trap
TME with the charts. The Bounce Trap Friday’s selloff exposed a market built on momentum, leverage, and a belief that the AI trade only goes one way. History suggests the bounce may not be as safe as it looks. Forced sellers According to Goldman, SOX entered Friday at its most extended level since the dot-com
Albanese tempts political fate by pledging status quo on migration
Amid the rise of One Nation to the top of the list for the primary vote, according to the most recent aggregate polling data, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has pledged to continue reducing migration over the years ahead. “We will reduce that overseas migration over next couple of years down to 225,000 and we think
It’s a gas miracle!
Yes, the gas cartel has discovered extra volumes, but only through a miracle that coincidentally matched the timing of the gas reservation and the debate! The price has cratered locally. This has wiped out the usual winter demand shock for electricity. Even as Asian gas prices roar 400% higher due to the Iran War. Isn’t
War returns
It’s been a night of war. Israel has rejected Iran’s warning not to attack Lebanon, though aerial operations appear paused. Israeli officials say strikes on Iran being halted at President Trump’s request to ‘stop shooting’. Netanyahu confirms attacks halted ‘for now’. Iran FM accuses US of cooperating with Washington: “No one believes that the Zionist regime would carry
Australians are sick and tired of Anthony Albanese
A historic Newspoll shows One Nation surging to first place in primary vote support, overtaking Labor and the Coalition for the first time, amid collapsing approval for Anthony Albanese and overwhelming public demand for a major political shake‑up. One Nation’s primary support has jumped to 31%, ahead of Labor on 30% and the Coalition on 18% (matching
More proof Australia’s immigration system is broken
Australia’s immigration system is broken. The fastest-growing category of temporary migrants has been bridging visas, which have been ruthlessly abused. There were 432,000 people in Australia on bridging visas in the March quarter of 2026, up from an average of only 96,000 between 2012 and 2016: The Department of Home Affairs generally issues bridging visas
It’s been a miserable decade for Australian households
The past decade has been a basket case for Australian households According to the March quarter national accounts, released last week by the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS), real per capita household disposable income—arguably the strongest indication of material living standards—declined by 0.6% over the quarter to be tracking 3.6% lower than the COVID-19 peak:
How government spending powered post-pandemic growth
Last week, the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) released two sets of data illustrating the extent to which Australia’s economy and labour market have been driven by government spending since the pandemic. The March quarter national accounts, presented below by CBA, showed that government spending as a share of the economy was 28.8% in the