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The Australian share market is off to a weak start, despite gains on Wall Street on Friday, as investors turn nervous ahead of key global macro-economic and political events later this week.
Oil have again skidded again, pushing prices to three-month lows as investors continue to flee bullish positions on worries that OPEC-led production cuts have not yet reduced a global glut of crude.
Gold has recovered from an early drop to five-week lows after a US non-farm payrolls report for February failed to meet elevated expectations, prompting a drop in the US dollar and Treasury yields.
Oil prices have slid nearly 3 per cent, extending the previous session's dive that brought prices to the lowest levels this year, as record US crude inventories fed doubts about whether OPEC-led supply cuts would reduce a global glut.
Gold has fallen for the sixth straight session, reaching a five-week low, with analysts expecting further losses as investors become increasingly certain that US interest rates will rise this month.
ANZ Banking Group says it will try to find new jobs for the approximately 180 employees at its share trading business that has been sold to UK-listed CMC Markets.
Relations between the Western Australian government's alliance partners have hit rock bottom, after the Nationals WA attacked the Liberals over plans to cut $800 million out of its prized Royalties for Regions program, calling it a "final betrayal".
Rio Tinto chairman Jan du Plessis has confirmed he will retire from his post, ending a term of more than eight years at the head of the Anglo-Australian miner, to become chairman of UK telco giant BT Group.
The Australian dollar has slipped against its US counterpart, which lifted as strong US payrolls data underlined expectations of a lift in US interest rates.
Oil prices plunged 5 per cent to their lowest levels this year on Wednesday as U.S. crude inventories surged much more than expected to a record high, stoking concerns a global glut could persist even as OPEC tries to prop up prices with output curbs.
Treasury costings of the Liberal Party’s campaign promises have shown the estimates to be reasonable, with the Liberal's plan showing the state getting back to a small surplus in 2019-20.
Westpac chief executive Brian Hartzer says his bank is putting customers first by backing open data and denies it did the opposite by suggesting they join its poorly performing superannuation fund.
Infrastructure and mining services group Downer has agreed to buy New Zealand builder Hawkins for an undisclosed sum, as it expands operations in the Pacific nation.
Oil prices are little changed, as growing US production expectations offset earlier gains after Saudi Arabia's oil minister said market fundamentals were improving.
Gold has hit its lowest level in more than four weeks as the US dollar strengthens and expectations for a US interest rate rise this month weigh, though moves were muted ahead of US payroll data this week.
Western Australia's environment minister says there is no justification to stop work on the Roe 8 project, despite a Senate inquiry saying the Commonwealth should suspend approval for it.