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Wallabies find new character to buoy Rugby Championship hopes | Australia rugby union team

Right now Australia are unbeaten and leading the 2022 Rugby Championship. Let that sink in for a moment. For long-suffering fans it is a break in the clouds, a ray of light casting everything and everyone in Wallaby gold, a rugby rainbow that’s beautiful because it cannot last.

Or can it? After all, Australia defeated the team sitting third (Argentina) on the weekend. Currently sitting second (South Africa) are a side the Wallabies conquered twice last year. And the team in fourth (New Zealand) are in an almighty slump, having lost three Tests in a row for the first time in 24 years. The All Blacks have now lost five of their last six Tests, and up until Sunday, so had the Wallabies.

But the 41-26 win against Los Pumas has instilled hope, much of it drawn from the way it was won. Once again the Wallabies muffed the start and were punished on the scoresheet. But as they did against England in Perth, they kept their nerve. The tougher it got, the better they played. If the darkest hour is indeed before dawn, Sunday was a day character – and characters – shone through.

Once again, the Wallabies were sucker-punched before the kick-off. Last month, it was playmaker Quade Cooper going down with a calf injury in the first Test warm-up and not being able to contest the Ella-Mobbs series. In Mendoza it was Michael Hooper, the side’s best player, captain and seemingly indestructible talisman, flying home with a “mindset” issue on the eve of the first Test.

Dave Rennie had lost nine frontline players to injury in the England series, at a devastating attrition rate. Before this Test too Samu Kerevi blew his ACL and Dave Porecki suffered a concussion to join Angus Bell (toe), Andrew Kellaway (hamstring), Scott Sio (shoulder), Tom Banks (arm) and Hooper on the sidelines. Against a Pumas side purring after upsetting Scotland, these blows might once have been deadly.

It seemed so when Australia again fumbled the start and through ill-discipline, over-eagerness and bone-headed decision-making, gifted the home side a 10-point lead after 15 minutes. Yet they found a way back, banishing early yips, shutting out the raucous crowd and building forward pressure, giving Cooper the time and space to sow doubt in the defensive line and unleash the gold rushers out wide.

Even when Cooper’s Achilles tendon imploded in the 46th minute with Australia still nine points down, the Wallabies lifted a gear. Prop James Slipper, no stranger to facing down mental demons, had stepped into Hooper’s shoes as captain and with so many stars missing and their leader in 68 of his 121 Tests flying home, his rallying cry to his three debutantes was simple: “Make Hoops proud.”

Fraser McReight and Jed Holloway had taken radically different paths to their debut Tests on Sunday. Holloway, 29, is a country boy, a Yamba Buccaneer, and a journeyman who’d arrived in his gold jersey via stints in Japan, the US and a period of self-imposed exile. Fraser McReight, 23, is a wild-haired Sunshine Coast kid with a crazy-brave tenacity and work ethic that makes him Hooper’s natural heir.

Cooper had exited the field and the playbook had left with him when this odd couple turned the game. Shoulder-to-shoulder, Holloway and McReight charged into the Argentinian defence. With the ball under his wing, McReight stumbled and looked to be falling short when Holloway reached back and, by the scruff of his jersey from him, dragged his teammate over the stripe to get Australia back within one point.

Santiago Carreras of Argentina is tackled by Jed Holloway at Estadio Malvinas Argentinas.
Santiago Carreras of Argentina is tackled by Jed Holloway at Estadio Malvinas Argentinas. Photograph: MB Media/Getty Images

The tide was turned by force of mateship and Australia scored the last 24 points of the Test. What made it special was Holloway’s childhood mate (and teammate since he was 10 years old), Matt Gibbon, also made his debut on Sunday.

With both his parents suffering mental disabilities, Gibbon, 27, had grown up wild on a cattle farm in Alstonville, NSW, until his grandfather took him in and channeled the boy’s feral streak into rugby, training Matt and his brother with an old stock whip cracking at their heels like they were brumbies. The old man had died the week before this Test, but with Holloway by his side, Gibbon took the field.

Last month, Australia lost their playmaker, their fullback, the foundation of their scrum and their lineout caller within the first 25 minutes of a Test and, with 14 men on the park, still found a path to victory. On Sunday, with indomitable characters Holloway, McReight, Gibbon and Slipper et al writing the script, they gave a glimpse of the character of a Wallabies side that can shock critics and shake the world.

Words are not deeds and there is a long way to go until the 2023 Rugby World Cup in September. But win again on Sunday and take this team, with that momentum, into the next four Tests (three at home), against South Africa and New Zealand, and Australia can give themselves a very real shot at a Rugby Championship for the first time since 2015, and – perhaps – a first Bledisloe Cup since 2002.

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Australia

Locum doctor fee rises lead charity to withdraw financial support in five NSW towns

A year or two ago it used to cost just over $1,000 a day for a locum GP to cover while a town’s permanent doctor was on leave. That has now tripled to close to $4,000.

It is this “eye watering” increase that is being blamed on a medical charity withdrawing its financial support to pay for fly-in fly-out doctors in five New South Wales towns.

“It’s a dramatic change, we’re moving from GP locum rates of $1,200 a day up to anywhere between $2,500, $3,500, $3,750 a day,” Rural and Remote Medical Services (RARMS) CEO Mark Burdack said.

“We’re looking in some instances, in some towns, locum rates more than tripling in the last year.”

RARMS has announced that since September 30 it will no longer help pay for locums in Gilgandra, Warren, Bingara, Tenterfield and Braidwood.

The practices in these towns will remain open, but the charity’s decision means they will be saddled with the locum bills.

“We can’t afford to pay locum costs moving forward.

“That means each of the towns, if they lose a general practitioner, if they decide to go, they will potentially be up for anywhere between $2,500 and $3,500 a day to get a locum in.”

The main street of a small town
Bingara in north-west NSW is one of five towns affected by RARMS’s withdrawal.(Supplied: Lisa Herbert)

‘Not in a position to subsidise’

Mr Burdack said the organization had managed to weather the costs for the past few years because of the federal government’s JobKeeper payments.

He said a request for this to be extended was knocked back.

“Unfortunately that’s not something that has been taken up and as a result without that JobKeeper money we’re simply not in a position to subsidize locum coverage in those communities when there’s not a permanent doctor,” he said.

a man looking ahead
RARMS CEO Mark Burdack says negotiations are taking place to help fill the gap left by the charity.(Supplied)

RARMS said permanent doctors in Tenterfield and Braidwood have agreed to take over the full management of those practices.

Mr Burdack said at Bingara, north-west of Tamworth, the local council had stepped in.

decision no surprise

But Gwydir Shire Council Mayor John Coulton said the council was not taking over the Bingara health service and the decision of RARMS came as no surprise.

“We were very suspicious of this happening,” he said.

“We spoke to Mark Burdack in May, he couldn’t give any guarantees they could stay open under the present set-up.

“This is not a function of local government, we are going to do everything we can to facilitate another arrangement.

“We’ve been speaking to different sources that we may be able to use at this stage we have nothing.”

“We had a hook-up yesterday with Gilgandra and Warren, two other councils in the same position, and we’ve been bouncing off each other.”

RARMS says it is negotiating with the Western NSW Local Health District and Western Primary Health Network on future arrangements at Gilgandra and Warren.

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US

Biden Tours ‘Heartbreaking’ Kentucky Flood Damage

WASHINGTON — During his first official trip after recovering from the coronavirus, President Biden flew to eastern Kentucky on Monday and committed federal resources to families whose homes had been condemned or washed away by some of the worst flooding in the state’s history.

After flying over stranded cars and buses and landing to find toppled homes and a shelled-out school, Mr. Biden told local officials his administration would cover the cost of the emergency response to the torrential rain and flooding that left at least 37 people dead.

“Everybody has an obligation to help,” said Mr. Biden, who was standing in front of a condemned home. He added that he wanted to ensure the area was rebuilt in a way that made communities more resilient to deadly storms, floods and natural disasters that he described as a consequence of climate change.

Mr. Biden also said the legislation that the Senate passed Sunday, which includes the largest expenditures ever made by the federal government to slow global warming and to reduce demand for fossil fuels, would help Kentuckians rebuild. His comments from him were likely the start of a fresh campaign to galvanize Democratic voters around his legislative signature win ahead of the midterm elections.

But it will take time for such investments to have an impact on disaster-prone communities. Even with available federal funds, many poor and rural areas lack sufficient capacity to rebuild efficiently. Businesses often lack flood-proofing systems, and many homes remain in plains prone to rising waters.

Few of the homes affected by flooding in the hardest hit areas in Kentucky had flood insurance, according to federal data.

Land in Kentucky built to serve coal miners working underneath hills and mountains has been especially vulnerable to floods after many mines shuttered, leaving homes unprotected to rising waters in nearby rivers. Mr. Biden said on Monday that the state would find help in his bipartisan infrastructure package, which tripled, to $700 million annually, a program intended to reduce damage from flooding by buying or elevating homes at risk from floods.

“It really is going to take an all-hands-on-deck approach to rebuild in that kind of way, and that runs head-on into human nature,” said Chad Berginnis, the executive director of the Association of State Floodplain Managers. “I’d imagine after all that suffering, I would just want to get back to normal. That’s the human nature side of this, but it is so important we pause and thoughtfully rebuild so that next flood doesn’t happen.”

That human cost was apparent on Monday. Mr. Biden said it was “incredibly heartbreaking” to see stranded vehicles washed away into creeks and large piles of debris. Gov. Andy Beshear of Kentucky said the death toll was likely to rise to 38 people.



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Mr. Beshear also made clear the federal system built to help those recovering from disasters could improve, noting that “too many” Kentucky residents had been denied assistance from the Federal Emergency Management Agency because of technical errors in the application process.

“Too little is paid to those who get through the system,” Mr. Beshear said. “The people of Eastern Kentucky have lost everything. Most just have the clothes left on their backs. No insurance, no other coverage. Now is the time to fix this issue.”

FEMA had opened 15 shelters across the state as of Monday and delivered 56 truckloads of water, though some wastewater systems were still not fully operational, according to a FEMA daily briefing document. The agency has deployed hundreds of rescue officials to the state and sent more than $3.6 million in the wake of the deadly storms, according to the White House.

Federal grants remain the best hope for local officials aiming to adapt to climate change but who oversee communities with limited tax bases, such as eastern Kentucky, according to Roy Wright, who ran FEMA’s risk mitigation programs until 2018.

The Biden administration has invested billions of dollars in those programs, including adding new money to a grant program at FEMA called Building Resilient Infrastructure and Communities, or BRIC, to try to blunt the effects of climate change.

But the grants are heavily oversubscribed — and communities’ only chance at the money comes if state governments file applications on their behalf.

“They need to lean harder on their state to tap into the dollars that Congress and this administration has made available specifically for this purpose,” said Mr. Wright, who is now president of the Insurance Institute for Business & Home Safety, a research group .

On that front, the people hit by recent flooding have lately struck out. In the most recent round of funding, Kentucky applied for BRIC grants for just two projects, far fewer than most states. And neither project focused on the eastern part of the state.

In the end, it did not matter. FEMA rejected both applications.

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Business

Potential curb on Australian LNG exports is another blow to Asia-Pacific gas markets

The Asia-Pacific gas market has suffered another blow after major natural gas producer Australia signaled it could potentially cut down liquified natural gas exports as the region battles tight gas supplies, high prices and competition from gas-short European buyers.

Australia is looking to trim its overseas sales in favor of domestic consumption ahead of a projected shortfall in local supplies next year

As energy protectionism takes hold globally, last week, the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission called on Canberra to protect domestic gas supplies and curb LNG — cooled natural gas — exports after projecting the east coast of the country could face a shortfall of 56 petajoules of gas next year.

For months, the Asia-Pacific region has faced competition for fuel from European buyers looking to replace restricted Russian gas.

These European countries, in scrambling for LNG to mitigate a shortage of pipeline gas ahead of the northern winter, have outbidden some less developed Asian countries.

“To protect energy security on the east coast we are recommending the Resources Minister initiate the first step of the Australian Domestic Gas Security Mechanism (ADGSM),” ACCC Chair Gina Cass-Gottlieb said last week.

“We are also strongly encouraging LNG exporters to immediately increase their supply into the [local] market.”

A liquefied natural gas tanker berth in Japan, on Dec. 17, 2021. Should Japan ever exit the Sakhalin energy projects in Russia and their stakes were acquired by Russia or a third country, this would weaken the effectiveness of Western sanctions and benefit Russia, Japan’s industry minister said on Friday.

Kiyoshi Ota | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Most of the gas used on Australia’s east coast is produced by companies that are also LNG exporters to Asia-Pacific and other countries. The ADGSM stops these producers from exporting LNG if there is a shortfall domestically.

While most LNG sales to overseas buyers are made through long-term contracts, Australian LNG producers also sell ad-hoc and non-contracted LNG on the spot market. Countries without the ability to strike competitive long-term contracts are forced to buy them on the spot market.

It is this LNG supply that the ACCC says producers should avoid selling to the overseas market — currently flushed with gas-starved buyers — and save it for local consumers.

Gas lobby group the Australian Petroleum Production & Exploration Association however has assuaged markets, saying despite the ACCC warning, there is more than enough gas next year and that there has never been an actual shortfall previously.

“It’s certainly been the case throughout the existence of the export industry, that there has been a surplus of gas into the domestic market. So we have been able to achieve both. We don’t go for the idea that it is one or the other,” acting chief executive Damian Dwyer told CNBC’s “Squawk Box Asia” on Tuesday.

“There’s been significant investment into the export industry. And that investment has brought on significant domestic supply. One complements the other.”

But if the mechanism is successfully invoked, new supply and price pressures will be felt by the region’s biggest LNG buyers such as Japan and South Korea as well as newcomers to LNG imports such as the Philippines, analysts say.

LNG prices have soared nearly 80% since before the Ukraine war started in late February, according to the Platts JKM pricing index.

“Since April, there had been no [spot] tend sales from the three major LNG export facilities on Australia’s east coast, indicating that some exports were slowing down,” S&P Global Market Intelligence APAC LNG pricing regional manager Kenneth Foo said.

The Philippines is entering the global LNG market at a time of extreme uncertainty. Global LNG supply is constrained due partly to the Russian invasion of Ukraine, and LNG prices continue to hit record highs.

Sam Reynolds

Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis

“The lack of spot availability from East Coast Australia could in turn further tighten LNG supply within the Asia-Pacific region, especially heading into peak winter demand season in the fourth quarter,” Foo said.

Developing Asian countries like Bangladesh and Pakistan have had to bow out of buying LNG on the spot market, Sam Reynolds, an analyst at the Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis, said.

“Inability to procure LNG volumes in these countries has caused fuel shortages and blackouts, pushing countries to the brink of economic collapse,” he said.

The Philippines, a debutant to the LNG import market, will face tough conditions when it tries to import its first ever shipment of LNG, he adds.

Read more about energy from CNBC Pro

“Inability to buy LNG at competitive rates could leave new terminals and LNG-fired power plants unused and stranded,” he said.

Such setbacks may derail the Philippines’ efforts to boost its LNG sector, already suffering from years of setbacks, Reynolds says.

While countries without long-term contracts like the Philippines may suffer, generally the region’s LNG supply is secure.

Proposed cuts are small

The proposed Australian cuts amount to roughly 14 LNG charges. This is a drop in the ocean of contracted charges shipped each month. In July, Australia exported 100 cargoes among over 300 cargoes shipped into Asia, Reynolds says.

“Cuts would only limit exports of LNG that is not sold under long-term contracts. This means that cuts would have minimal effects on buyers like Japan, Korea, and China, which buy 70% to 80% of their LNG via long-term contracts,” Reynolds said.

LNG markets have bigger problems than Australian curbs. Europe’s jostling for Asia-Pacific’s LNG supply remains the biggest threat, Reynolds says.

Consequently, the rise in energy prices globally have contributed to the surging inflation that many central banks are racing to rein in.

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Technology

Marvel’s Midnight Suns delayed, likely into 2023

A staggered console release is also on the cards.

Marvel’s Midnight Suns has likely been delayed into 2023, Firaxis and 2K have announced today. The title, meant for a 7 October release, will now ship sometime before 31 March 2023.

What’s more, PC and current-gen consoles will get the title first when it’s ready, followed by a staggered release on Switch, PS4 and Xbox One.

“After discussion with the team, we’ve made the decision to move back the launch timing of Marvel’s Midnight Suns to ensure we are delivering the best possible experience for our fans,” reads an update on Twitter.

“We know fans are looking forward to playing Marvel’s Midnight Suns and we will use this extra time to make sure we are delivering the best possible experience for everyone,” the update continued. Marvel’s Midnight Suns is easily the biggest game we’ve ever made and we’re incredibly appreciative of all the support players have shared with us throughout the years.”

This is the title’s second delay after first being pushed further into 2022.

Marvel’s Midnight Suns is planned for Windows PC, Xbox One, Xbox Series S, Xbox Series X, PS4, PS5 and Switch. We previewed the title here.

This article may contain affiliate links, meaning we could earn a small commission if you click-through and make a purchase. Stevivor is an independent outlet and our journalism is in no way influenced by any advertiser or commercial initiative.

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Sports

Wayne Carey breaks his silence over ‘heated clash’ with Anthony Stevens 20 years after sex scandal

Kangaroos premiership star Wayne Carey has broken his silence over reports he had a heated altercation with Anthony Stevens outside a Melbourne pub on Saturday, 20 years after the pair fell out over Carey’s infamous affair with his teammate’s wife.

Carey’s fling with Stevens’ ex Kelli became the biggest sex scandal in Australian sports history when they were caught together in a toilet at a house party, leading to the two-time premiership captain leaving the club in disgrace.

The pair were at Yarraville’s Railway Hotel on Saturday night for a 1996 premiership reunion when Carey ‘went at’ Stevens, according to SEN’s Sam Edmunds.

They allegedly needed to be separated after Carey ‘went at’ Stevens after accusing him of ‘talking behind his back and telling people he couldn’t be contacted and to not bother trying to catch up with him, but then being fine in-person’ , the report said.

Carey (left) and Stevens went from celebrating the 1996 grand final win as great mates to a vicious falling-out just six years later

Carey (left) and Stevens went from celebrating the 1996 grand final win as great mates to a vicious falling-out just six years later

Kangaroos legend Carey was caught red-handed having an affair with Stevens' then-wife Kelli (pictured together) during a party attended by other North Melbourne players

Kangaroos legend Carey was caught red-handed having an affair with Stevens’ then-wife Kelli (pictured together) during a party attended by other North Melbourne players

While Carey joined his teammates as they were paraded around the ground during the Kangaroos’ clash with the Swans at Marvel Stadium on Sunday, Stevens was nowhere to be seen.

It was reported he didn’t attend because he was too ‘shattered by the heated exchange’, but other ex-North Melbourne stars later said he was ill and didn’t boycott the event.

Now Carey has told his colleague at Channel Seven, Tom Browne, that there wasn’t an intense altercation and they didn’t have to be kept apart.

Carey (second from right) is pictured at the Kangaroos reunion on Sunday to mark their grand final win.  Stevens was nowhere to be seen after their alleged clash the day before

Carey (second from right) is pictured at the Kangaroos reunion on Sunday to mark their grand final win. Stevens was nowhere to be seen after their alleged clash the day before

Carey added that Stevens stayed with the group of North Melbourne ex-players as they went to St Kilda, and the Herald Sun reported that the pair ‘shared a beer afterwards’.

Stevens is now a Kangaroos board member and president of the club’s past player association, and was a key driver behind organizing the event.

It included an informal catch-up at the pub on Saturday night, before the premiership players took part in a motorcade and photo opportunity before the Kangaroos game on Sunday.

Carey’s affair with Kelli emerged in 2002, after an encounter at a party hosted by club champion Glenn Archer attended by Kangaroos players.

Kelli followed Carey into a bathroom to discuss their sordid relationship, which started weeks earlier.

Kelli Stevens (pictured) found herself at the center of the biggest sex scandal in Australian sport when her affair with Carey was exposed

Kelli Stevens (pictured) found herself at the center of the biggest sex scandal in Australian sport when her affair with Carey was exposed

Stevens and Carey played together for North Melbourne from 1989 to 2001 before the betrayal was uncovered.

After leaving the club in disgrace, Carey joined the Adelaide Crows in 2003, and took the field against his former teammates in a fiery clash that saw him come face-to-face with Stevens.

In a twist, Stevens was named captain of the club following Carey’s departure.

In an interview with veteran journalist Mike Sheahan on Fox Footy in 2015, Stevens said he told his ex-teammate to ‘stick it’ at the time, but was also disappointed in Carey’s behavior following the betrayal.

‘It’s the one thing he has never done,’ Stevens said, when asked by Sheahan if Carey has apologized.

Stevens (left) had a fiery on-field clash with Carey in 2002 after he joined the Adelaide Crows.  in 2015 he called his former mate out for not apologizing for the affair

Stevens (left) had a fiery on-field clash with Carey in 2002 after he joined the Adelaide Crows. in 2015 he called his former mate out for not apologizing for the affair

‘He has never actually gone out of his way to say sorry – for whatever reason.’

Carey did eventually apologize the following year – a full 14 years on from the sordid event.

Carey rehashed the while appearing on SAS Australia earlier this year, telling Chief Instructor Ant Middleton that the affair was a huge moment in his life.

‘It’s haunted me for over 20 years. I was in self-destruction mode. You know, I guess my life started to unravel,’ he said under interrogation.

At the time Carey was also married, to his first wife Sally McMahon. Stevens was even the groomsman at the wedding.

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US

Victims in Texas golf cart crash by alleged drunk driver ID’d

Four people, including two children, who were killed when an alleged drunk driver plowed into their golf cart in Texas over the weekend have now been identified, police said Monday.

Police named Felipe Bentacur, 49, Destiny Uvalle, 25, Brailyn Cantu, 14, and 4-year-old Kaisyn Bentacur as the victims of the fatal crash in Galveston late Saturday night.

The relationship between the four slain victims wasn’t immediately known, but police said two different families were riding in the cart at the time.

Bentacur died at the scene, while Uvalle and the two children were pronounced dead after being rushed to the hospital.

Two other golf cart passengers, an adult and juvenile, remained in the hospital in critical condition, police said. Their identities haven’t been released publicly.

The six victims had been traveling in the golf cart when a suspected drunk driver, Miguel Espinoza, 45, flew through a stop sign at about 11:30 pm

Galveston police Sgt. Derek Gaspard said Espinoza allegedly crashed his SUV into a pickup truck, which then struck the golf cart.

Tire tracks are seen on the ground.
An alleged drunk driver killed four people after crashing into their golf cart in Texas.
Fox 26 Houston

Espinoza and his passenger suffered minor injuries in the ordeal. They were treated in the hospital and later released, police said.

Gaspard said that he believes the rented golf cart was operating legally on the city street at the time of the crash.

The street where the crash occurred.
Miguel Espinoza allegedly flew through a stop sign at about 11:30 pm
Fox 26 Houston

Galveston Mayor Craig Brown added that golf carts had become “quite a prolific mode of transportation” for residents and visitors to the island resort area.

“I was out last night,” Brown said on Sunday. “The island was busy and there were golf carts — residential as well as rental golf carts — out all over these streets.”

With Post wires

Galveston police Sgt. Derek Gaspard appears in an interview.
Galveston police Sgt. Derek Gaspard said the rented golf cart was legally operating on the city street at the time of the crash.
Fox 26 Houston

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Categories
Business

Suncorp says profit fell 23%, warns of higher premiums for homeowners

Insurance giant Suncorp New Zealand’s after-tax profits slipped 23% to $165 million in its most recent financial year, despite a huge increase in premiums paid by Kiwi home, car and business owners.

The insurer’s profit drop for the 12 months to the end of June was the result of high inflation, and multiple extreme weather events, the company told investors on the ASX Australian sharemarket.

The company, which owns Vero and has a majority stake in AA Insurance, signaled further premium rises were on the way for policyholders.

Chief executive Jimmy Higgins said: “Multiple weather events experienced during the year resulted in the highest volume of claims since 2018; and customers experienced longer waiting times for repairs to their homes and vehicles because of the delay in getting materials.”

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The profit was also hit by investment results in a highly volatile investment market, increased sickness among employees, and the tight labor market, the company said.

In a presentation to investors, Suncorp said it has posted a 14.1% increase in the premiums paid by its policyholders.

The gross written premiums it collected in New Zealand increased from $1.87 billion in the previous financial year to $2.13b.

Kumeu Gym 24/7 owner Cassandra Keegan was unable to access their business yesterday because flooding last year submerged the gym.

Abigail Dougherty/Stuff

Kumeu Gym 24/7 owner Cassandra Keegan was unable to access their business yesterday because flooding last year submerged the gym.

That included the gross written premiums paid by vehicle owners rising from $460m to $527m, and premiums paid by homeowners rising from $616m to $708m.

Suncorp said the rise in its premium income was the result of both winning new customers, but also price rises on its policies.

Higgins said natural hazard weather events were becoming more frequent and expensive, which had resulted in significant increases to its reinsurance costs.

Net claims, after reinsurance recoveries, were $1.013b, with $107m of that coming from claims related to natural hazards like flooding and hail.

In the previous financial year, total net claims were $864m, with $84m from natural hazards.

The insurer received 9,542 weather-related claims in New Zealand in the 12 months to the end of June.

Higgins said: “Premiums will also be impacted by the pressure on materials and labor costs in repairing homes and cars, as well as the increases in Toka Tū Ake EQC levies following the increased EQC cap changes in October later this year.”

The company had been working on using technology to cut costs.

Suncorp NZ also continued to make ‘remediation’ payments to customers it overcharged for insurance by failing to give the multi-policy discounts.

It had also been working on improving the diversity of its workforce.

It still had a gender pay gap of 13.3%, but now had half of its senior leadership positions filled by women.

Categories
Technology

Marvel’s Midnight Suns delayed, with PS4, XB1, and Switch now “TBA”

Last fall during Gamescom, Take-Two studio Firaxis Games announced a new turn-based tactical RPG from the XCOM team called Marvel’s Midnight Suns. Taking place on the “darker side of the Marvel Universe,” and pitting well-known heroes like Iron Man, Wolverine, Ghost Rider, Blade, Captain America, and Captain Marvel against Lilith, a supernatural villain, it was originally scheduled for release in March before being pushed back until October 7th.

Along with reporting Q1 2023 earnings, today the publisher announced another delay without many specific details on when the game will be released. Also, the game now appears to have a split release strategy, with PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X / S, and PC versions due before the end of March next year (when Take-Two rolls over its fiscal calendar), while PS4, Xbox One, and Switch editions have a “TBA” release date.

In a statement announcing the news given to polygonal, the company said “We have made the decision to move back the launch timing of Marvel’s Midnight Suns to ensure the teams at Firaxis Games and 2K deliver the best possible experience for our fans. The title will launch later this fiscal year on Windows PC, Xbox Series X|S, and PlayStation 5. The Xbox One, PlayStation 4, and Nintendo Switch versions will follow at a later date.”

This report is the first one to include T2’s combined results with newly-acquired Zynga, which has a Disney-licensed title of its own delayed with a non-specific release plan. Two weeks ago Zynga announced Star Wars Huntersa multiplayer “competitive arena combat game” had been pushed back for release at some point in 2023.