A dicey jobs print for the Fed
This morning's US data release shows the employment rate is the lowest it's been since 2008, despite another 148,000 jobs created in September. It's easy to see why monetary policy will remain loose.
The Distillery: A BHP bonanza?
Commentators believe a buyback may be on the cards for BHP shareholders, while the Paul Zahra rumour mill is in overdrive.
Questions remain over Zahra's hasty exit from David Jones
The stage-managed and neatly packaged explanation of Paul Zahra's impending departure from the top job at David Jones doesn't pass the smell test.
Iron ore adds steel to BHP performance
Stronger than expected iron ore production, thanks in part to the earlier start-up of a new mine, helped lift BHP Billiton's quarterly output to a new peak, paving the way for an upgrade to the full-year forecast.
Vodafone customer numbers to fall in accounting clean-up
Vodafone's rough ride is set to continue, as accounting changes take their toll on customer numbers.
Battered Rip Curl resurfaces
Global surfwear label Rip Curl has ridden a wave of improving retail trading conditions from America to Indonesia as well as the benefits from a restructure in 2012 to swing back to profitability, reporting an after-tax profit of $14.12 million for fiscal 2013.
Bega Cheese to press on with battle for control of WCB
Bega Cheese shareholders have signalled they will not stand in the way of the company's takeover of Warrnambool Cheese and Butter, as its chairman signalled his intention to pursue the bid amid rival proposals.
CBA still paying banned planner
The country's biggest bank, Commonwealth Bank, has been paying banned financial planner Don Nguyen an income of tens of thousands of dollars a year since he was allowed to resign in 2009 amid an investigation that ultimately cost the bank tens of millions of dollars in compensation to his clients.
Salary package leader plays down risk of tax revisions
Australia's biggest salary packaging company, McMillan Shakespeare, says it will not know until next year the extent of the effect of the former government's attempt to tighten the rules on tax benefits for salary-sacrificed cars.
Brambles highlights spin-off as a growth story
Brambles chairman Graham Kraehe insists its document-storage division Recall is ''anything but a sinking ship'', emphasising it will be a ''growth business'' once it is spun off later this year.
Analysts concerned hunt will distract David Jones
The search for a new chief executive to lead David Jones would likely disrupt the retailer's transformation into a successful omni-channel business and comes just as it enters a trading period responsible for nearly half its annual profit, analysts say.
BHP Billiton helps drive market gains
The sharemarket touched a 5-year high as the world's biggest miner, BHP Billiton, drove market gains.
New surge pushes ANZ closer to exclusive $100 billion club
ANZ shares hit a record high on Tuesday, creeping ever closer to the sharemarket's exclusive $100 billion club as the financial sector continues its stellar run this year.
Nine's banks gear up for big float
The publicity machine for the Nine Entertainment float is to crank up the day before the Melbourne Cup this year, with the media group's gaggle of investment banks scheduled to have a prospectus ready to lodge with the corporate regulator on November 4.
Southern Cross handed first strike over remuneration
Southern Cross received a first strike at its shareholders' meeting in Melbourne on Tuesday with more than 25 per cent of shareholders rejecting its remuneration report.