As Senior Editor at Business News, Mark Beyer has a wide-ranging brief to research, analyse and report on the issues, trends and personalities affecting the business community in Western Australia.
Mr Beyer has 35 years' career experience, primarily in business journalism. He joined Business News in 2002 and previously worked for The Australian Financial Review and The West Australian, and also has public relations and corporate affairs experience.
Before becoming a journalist, he was an economist with the Commonwealth Treasury in Canberra.
LEIGHTON Contractors subsidiary Metronode has released details of its new Perth data centre, which will be the fourth data centre to open in the city in the past year.
The Takeovers Panel has declined to take action against Bentley Capital chairman Farooq Khan over allegations he acted in concert with relatives to acquire shares in the listed investment company.
Premier Colin Barnett said today he was "gobsmacked" by the federal government's threats to Western Australia, as the row with Canberra over mineral royalties heats up.
Energy giant Royal Dutch Shell announced today it will go ahead with the world's first floating liquefied natural gas project, off WA's northern coast, at a cost of approximately US$12 billion.
More than ever before, the outlook for state finances seems to be dictated not by the policy decisions as by the underlying assumptions, with three being particularly important this year.
The federal government has warned Western Australia will get lower GST grants and lower infrastructure funding after the state announced an increase in iron ore royalties in today's budget.
The state government's annual budget has projected a blow-out in state debt to more than $22 billion over the next four years but is based on revenue estimates that treasurer Christian Porter admits are not realistic.
State government spending on capital works projects is projected to increase to a record $7.6 billion in 2011-12 but the government has disappointed sports fans hoping for tangible progress on development of a major new stadium.
The chief executive officer of state superannuation fund GESB, Michele Dolin, is to step down next month after eight years at the helm, a period that included an aborted plan to privatise the $13 billion group.
THE resources sector anticipates Enterprise Migration Agreements will enable more than 30 large projects to overcome the labour shortages that threaten their viability.
LEIGHTON Holdings subsidiaries Leighton Contractors and John Holland are two of Australia’s major construction contractors, but they are not names normally associated with engineering work on LNG projects.
International conglomerate GE has bought out its Australian partner Transfield Services from their jointly owned business, Perth-based TGE Energy Services.
Two months after overcoming a bruising boardroom battle, window furnishings company Kresta Holdings has selcted internal candidate Andrew Tacey as its new chief executive.
Incoming Woodside Petroleum chief executive Peter Coleman said today he would focus on delivering on the company's established strategy, including work on its three major growth projects Pluto, Browse and Sunrise.
Burrup Fertilisers founder Pankaj Oswal has stepped up his criticism of the sale process of the ammonia producer, and revealed that he has a claim for US$500 million against the company, which is currently in receivership.
RECORD investment in resources projects has shaped the federal government’s 2011-12 budget, which, as expected, has outlined new initiatives to bring skilled workers to regional Australia.
THE Fremantle Port Authority is planning to expand its ‘outer harbour’ operations at Cockburn Sound after signing export deals with iron ore miner Mineral Resources and coal miner Griffin Coal.
Nexus Energy has appointed engineering firms Fluor Australia and Wood Group to progress its planned development of the Crux liquids project off the Kimberley coast.
DATA centres are a long-established feature of the IT landscape, yet during the past year there has been unprecedented activity in this sector and the promise of more to come.
The value of houses and units in Perth fell again in the March quarter, new data from Australian Property Monitors has found, but the group has predicted a market revival by year's end.
TFS Corporation, one of the few surviving companies offering managed investment schemes in Australia, has received a product ruling from the Tax Office for its 2011 Indian sandalwood project.
A joint venture between civil contractor NRW Holdings and indigenous contractor Eastern Guruma has been awarded a $160 million contract by Rio Tinto Iron Ore.
The near-terminal managed investment scheme sector took another blow last week when stock exchange-listed Arafura Pearls Holdings was placed into voluntary administration.