Can China rescue its rapidly cooling property market?
As China announces the most aggressive easing of property restrictions to date, analysts remain divided about the potential impact of the measures.
Divestment's big week; Nigeria kickstarts solar
The week in clean energy saw the Rockefellers and Mars stand-out amid an upbeat climate summit in New York, while Africa's biggest sub-Saharan economy looks set to get serious about renewables.
Why cash is king in the new employment landscape
To survive, small businesses are avoiding penalty rates by making special staff agreements on hourly rates and cash payment. The young and old must play by the new rules, or they'll miss out.
Electricity spot prices crushed from all sides
Strong winds and historically low demand saw wholesale power prices drop markedly yesterday - with the oversupply also affecting Brisbane hub gas prices.
How much damage will the US dollar do?
A surging greenback will likely see increasing market volatility around the globe, but in Australia we could also see the broader economy take a sizeable hit.
DataRoom AM: Lorna Jane jogs on
Lorna Jane pulls the plug on auction proceedings, while Glencore and Rio Tinto may look to merge their NSW coal operations.
Hapless Shorten is trapped in a Rudd-Gillard time warp
Bill Shorten had a prime opportunity to sell the ETS plan Labor would take to the next election, but Julia Gillard and Kevin Rudd got in his way.
Scoreboard: Confidence cooler
Wall Street fell on disappointing consumer confidence data, while European shares gained on ECB stimulus prospects.
When terror lights up the trading board
The precise psychological context of 9/11's market rout will never be repeated, but long-term risks remain.
Energy agency's warning to government on RET
The International Energy Agency projects that solar could be cheaper than coal, but it hinges on clear, stable policy. Meanwhile, Australian investors representing $1 trillion in funds have warned Prime Minister Abbott he's about to trash precisely that.
Three steps to a flexible workplace
The advantages of flexibility are well appreciated so what's stopping more people from reaping the huge benefits of working remotely?
Hong Kong protests are about more than democracy
Thousands of Hong Kong citizens have taken to the streets to protest against China's electoral reform package. But Hong Kong will need more than a freely elected chief executive to tackle its political crisis.
Corporate tax avoidance reports are avoiding the real facts
Claims that a large chunk of Australia's top companies are avoiding tax are completely baseless, and many of them aren't even Australian.
IEA: 4 charts showing how solar will achieve dominance
The energy agency sees a 2050 with PV contributing 16% and concentrated solar - after an equatorial boom - tipping in 11% of the world's electricity supply, making solar the dominant energy source.
Climate experts slam Energy Green Paper
One of the main objectives of the Abbott Government's energy green paper - increasing coal use, via Asia, over coming decades - is diametrically opposed to the policies needed to limit warming below 2 degrees.
The poisonous combination threatening the global recovery
Contrary to widely held beliefs, the world has not yet begun to deleverage following record crisis-linked borrowing. Global debt-to-GDP continues to rise, setting some countries up for a hard fall in the future.