Categories
Business

Sydney, Melbourne house price plunge likely to accelerate

“We’re seeing Sydney housing values ​​now falling at the fastest rate they have since the early 1980s, and in Melbourne, nearly as quickly as what we saw during the global financial crisis,” Lawless said.

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“It does look like this downturn is going to be a relatively sharp one, and maybe a short one as well, depending on what happens with interest rates. But it’s reasonable to expect that this rate of decline will probably worsen before it gets any better.”

The regions where price declines are the most pronounced are often those that saw the sharpest rises early in the pandemic, he says, meaning while the fall in valuations may look steep, prices are still far above where they were three years ago.

“The market does have quite a bit of room for values ​​to fall, and the vast majority of homeowners will still be in a positive position compared to what they paid for their property,” he said.

However, some economists have warned a full retracement of the strong price gains made during the pandemic could be possible in some regions.

Shane Oliver, chief economist at AMP, said the country’s housing market was “losing altitude rapidly”, forecasting average property prices to fall between 15 per cent and 20 per cent, as interest rates continue to rise and housing supply increases in Sydney and Melbourne.

“Assuming the cash rate tops out around 2.6 per cent early next year, as we expect, then average prices are likely to fall 15-20 per cent from top to bottom, with the low likely being reached in the second half of next year, ” he said.

“The fall in home prices this cycle could well see some cities – notably Sydney and Melbourne – reverse all or much of the boom in prices since their 2020 pandemic low, which will likely see a rise in negative equity for recent low-deposit buyers. ”

However, the economist acknowledged the plunge was still within the bounds of the typical cyclical nature of the housing market “albeit a bit more rapid”.

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For aspiring home buyers or sellers, Lawless advises against trying to time the market, saying people should work within the scope of their own financial circumstances. However, I have acknowledged that selling conditions would likely remain difficult from here on out, with the RBA likely to keep raising rates until Christmas.

“We’re not seeing any signs of panic selling, or dumping of [housing] stock on the market but, come spring, that will start to reverse, and you’ll see a lot more newly listed properties coming on the market at a time when demand is being negatively impacted,” he said.

“This means, for buyers, there’s going to be a lot more choice, less competition, and not much urgency – they can negotiate pretty hard.”

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Categories
Technology

US players spent less money on video games now than they did last year

What you need to know

  • According to the NPD Group, spending on video games has fallen compared to 2021.
  • Spending for Q2 2022 reached $12.35 billion in the US, a decline of $1.78 billion compared to Q2 2021.
  • The NPD Group cited a lack of new game releases and the rising costs of necessities like food and gas as some of the reasons for the decline in spending.

Players in the US are spending less money on video games compared to last year, according to a report from the NPD Group.

The NPD Group shared (opens in new tab) a report on Q2 2022 spending across the video game industry in the US, revealing that spending reached $12.35 billion for the quarter, a drop of $1.78 billion compared to 2021.

Categories
Sports

North Melbourne should target David Mundy says Nick Riewoldt and Mark Robinson, age, contract

Two Fox Footy pundits have urged North Melbourne to make a “Luke Hodge-style play” for outgoing Docker David Mundy to boost the bottom-placed club’s leadership prospects.

Mundy, Fremantle’s games record-holder, on Monday called time on his celebrated AFL career, three days after making his 371st appearance.

It places Mundy in the 10th spot on the all-time VFL/AFL games played table, with Scott Pendlebury (352), Joel Selwood (350) and Lance Franklin (335) the closest to him among active players.

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Speaking on Fox Footy’s On The Couch on Monday night, Mundy, 37, said he was pretty happy and content” with his decision after a pre-season ankle injury kickstarted retirement thoughts, but said there was “nothing set in concrete” for post-footy life.

Asked if he would’ve played on at Freo had his body allowed him to, Mundy told On The Couch: “No I don’t think so. I’m really proud to still be able to strongly contribute on gameday in the 22nd.

“I’ve been thinking for a long time that I’d feel really guilty if I hung on and battled my way through a year and ended as a broken, crippled old man. To go out on top I feel a great deal of pleasure in.”

But Herald Sun Journalist Jon Ralph reported Mundy “just wasn’t offered a new deal and he would’ve played on”.

“I asked his management … Two weeks ago, he said ‘I’ll keep playing at this club until they kick me out’ … He was hopeful with contract negotiations as recently as two weeks ago and it didn’t happen,” Ralph told On The Couch.

“That’s not a pot on Fremantle, they just decided to go another way and that’s fine.”

St Kilda champion Nick Riewoldt said it was a “surprising” call by Mundy, who was awarded AFL Coaches’ Association MVP votes for his 35-disposal, 15-contested possession and 10-clearance display against Melbourne last Friday night.

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It’s why Riewoldt encouraged the 18th-placed Kangaroos to target Mundy this off-season

“I understand his reasons because you want to go out maintaining that really strong level of performance, but he wasn’t showing any signs of slowing down,” Riewoldt told On The Couch.

“He sounded definitive then, but if you’re North Melbourne, would you say to him: ‘Dave, come play for two years, stick around and be an assistant because we need some leadership’ – would you make the phone call?”

Fellow Fox Footy panelist Garry Lyon added: “It’s not the silliest idea you’ve ever had.”

David Mundy of the Fremantle Dockers addressing the media after announcing he will be retiring. Picture: Paul Kane/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

Herald Sun chief football writer Mark Robinson echoed Riewoldt’s thoughts minutes later, saying the Kangaroos should look at what Brisbane did in late 2017 when it traded in four-time premiership Hawk Luke Hodge as its young group moved into finals contention.

“I think North Melbourne should go after him and offer him a one-year deal to come over to Victoria and help the young kids at North Melbourne,” Robinson told Fox Footy’s AFL 360. “Like (Luke) Hodge, like the first-year Giants in James McDonald and a few others (in 2012).

“I think if he wants to continue playing, North Melbourne should look at a Luke Hodge-style play for David Mundy.

“He’s playing good enough. He’s not ‘at the end’, so if he’s a really good footy club person, give him a deal that (includes a) coaching role as well.”

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Categories
Australia

Canterbury apartment of Saudi sisters who died under mysterious circumstances listed for rent

The Sydney apartment where two sisters were found dead under mysterious circumstances has now been listed for rent, with a disclaimer for any prospective tenants.

In early June, two Saudi-born sisters Asra, 24, and Amaal Alsehli, 23, were found dead in separate beds inside their Canterbury unit in “unusual circumstances”.

They were believed to have been dead for up to a month before their bodies were found inside the inner-west apartment on June 7.

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The cause of death is still unknown, with Detective Inspector Claudia Allcroft saying the deaths were “suspicious in nature in that we don’t know the cause of death”.

Now, the Canterbury Road apartment where the two sisters were found is up for rent again for $520 a week, with the listing informing those interested of the deaths early last month.

“This property has found two deceased person on 06/07/2022, crime scene has been established and it is still under police investigation,” the listing said.

“According to the police, this is not a random crime and will not be a potential risk for the community.”

The sisters’ apartment is now up for rent again. Credit: Domain
Mystery continues to shroud the deaths of the two sisters, who arrived in Australia from Saudi Arabia as teenagers in 2017. Credit: Domain

The apartment – which is available now – is described as a “newly renovated modern 2-bedroom apartment with timber flooring in the bedroom” that “ensures a life of seamless and luxurious comfort”.

Mystery continues to shroud the deaths of the sisters, who arrived in Australia from Saudi Arabia as teenagers in 2017.

A worker with access to the apartment claims two crucifixes were found inside the Sydney unit after the sisters’ bodies were removed, the ABC reported.

It has been reported that the pair renounced Islam and changed their names after arriving in Australia.

The sisters both seemed to be extremely nervous and paranoid, with those who knew the sisters saying they seemed to live in fear and were “very afraid of something”.

A plumber who attended the apartment told building manager Michael Baird he was never going back to the apartment again.

“When (he) came out of that unit, he said that he was concerned that there was something untoward happening in the apartment. He got a very bad vibe,” Baird told the ABC.

Asra Abdullah Alsehli, 24, and her sister Amaal Abdullah Alsehli, 23. Credit: NSW Police

The women also claimed a suspicious man had been lurking outside their unit in the months before their deaths.

When building management checked CCTV, a man was spotted, however he was not deemed suspicious due to the busy location.

“That spot is busy. There is a burger shop there and Uber Eats drivers coming and going all the time. He could have been anyone,” an employee from the building management company told The Daily Mail.

“We couldn’t determine why he was there, but he didn’t look like he was doing anything untoward, so there was no need to chase it up further.”

The sisters also allegedly had concerns that someone was tampering with their food deliveries and contacted building management in January, but surveillance cameras again found no evidence.

Burwood detectives have established Strike Force Woolbird to investigate the women’s deaths.

“As the investigation is ongoing, police continue to appeal for information in relation to the death of the two women,” NSW Police told 7NEWS.com.au on Tuesday.

Anyone with information is urged to contact Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000.

Aussie sprinter benefits from rivals’ big mistake.

Aussie sprinter benefits from rivals’ big mistake.

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Categories
US

Live results, races to watch

Polling locations throughout most of Michigan close at 8 pm EST, bringing an end to the August primary election Tuesday to decide which Republican candidate will emerge from a crowded field to face Gov. Gretchen Whitmer this fall along with several hotly contested intraparty congressional and state legislative fights.

Hundreds of thousands of Michigan voters returned absentee ballots before Election Day and by Tuesday morning, more than a million absentee ballots had been received by election officials across the state, according to the Secretary of State’s office.

>> LIVE: Michigan primary election results here

Those casting absentee ballots have until 8 pm Tuesday to return theirs. Polling locations serving in-person voters also close then, but those in line by 8 pm can still vote.

While voting ends at 8 pm EST the vast majority of the state, voting in the four Michigan counties in Central Time Zone — Dickinson, Gogebic, Iron and Menominee counties — is still underway for another hour.

Categories
Business

ASX falls sharply, Wall Street sinks on US-China tension and economic uncertainty

Australian shares have dropped in morning trade, as ongoing economic uncertainty and flaring US-China tensions weighed on global market sentiment.

The arrival of US House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi in Taipei, despite warnings from Beijing, prompted China to launch war plans and buzz the Taiwan Strait in protest.

The ASX 200 dropped by a steeper-than-expected 0.9 per cent, to 6,938 points, by 10:35am AEST.

Nearly every sector traded lower, with utilities and materials suffering the biggest losses. Seven out of every 10 stocks were in the red.

Some of today’s worst performers include Champion Iron (-5.3pc), APA Group (-3.2pc), Seven Group (-3.2pc) and Eagers Automotive (-3.2pc).

On the flip side, some of the best performing stocks were Pinnacle Investment Management (+10.7pc), Block (+4.9pc), and Lynas Rare Earths (+4.6pc).

Aussie dollar sinks

The Australian dollar fell 0.4 per cent, to 68.9 US cents. That was on top of its sharp loss of 1.5 per cent overnight.

The sell-off began yesterday, when the Reserve Bank lifted its cash rate target by 0.5 percentage points, which takes the new rate to a six-year high of 1.85 per cent.

The weaker Australian dollar was also driven by a stronger US greenback as investors piled into currencies that are seen as “safe havens”.

In that regard, the Japanese yen jumped 0.9 per cent against the greenback, and was on track for a fifth day of gains, its longest winning streak since 2020.

“There is the uncertainty surrounding Pelosi’s trip to Taiwan and there’s additional data, regarding economic softness,” said Sam Stovall, chief investment strategist of CFRA Research.

“Regarding recession [in the United States]it’s not a question of ‘if’ but ‘when’ and how deep.”

‘An open question’ about further rate hikes

On Wall Street, the S&P 500 slipped by 0.7 per cent, to end the session at 4,091 points.

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Categories
Technology

Wayward Strand announces dazzling Australian and international cast

Wayward Strand, the narrative adventure game developed by Melbourne-based studio Ghost Pattern, has announced the hefty Australian cast bringing its characters to life. They include the likes of Michael Caton (The Castle), Jenny Seedsman (Blue Heelers), and Anne Charleston (neighbors), among many others.

Set on a floating hospital in an alternate-reality 1970s Australia, the VISCREEN-funded game follows teenage protagonist Casey as she discovers more about the hospital’s inhabitants and story. The environment works like clockwork – inhabitants move and events occur whether Casey is there to witness them or not – meaning that you can choose to have Casey follow particular characters and narrative threads of your own accord.

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The fourteen-year-old Casey is played by Nancy Curtis, who recorded over 1,200 pages of dialogue, according to Ghost Pattern. Curtis is joined by a veteran roster of Australian actors, including: Anne Charleston (Best known as Madge from neighbors) who plays Ida Vaughan; Michael Catton (The Castle, The Sullivans, Last Cab to Darwin), who plays the ‘loquacious’ Neil Avery; and Jenny Seedsman (Neighbors, Blue Heelers, State Coroner) who plays the stern Ruth Beaumaris.

Joining them is Bunurong man Shane Clayton, who Ghost Pattern says brought ‘warmth and heart’ to the character of Ted Muir; prominent Austrian and German actor Erhard Hartman, who plays Heinrich Pruess; and Australian director Michela Ledwidgewho acts as Esther Fitzgerald (pictured above).

Additional roles will be played by theater actor and anthropology scholar Josiah Lulham ace hospital director Felix Pettigrew; John Barrett as Devin the cook; actor, producer, and horticulturalist Harriet Wallace Mead as nurse Lily Marshall; actor and healthcare worker peter paltros as nurse Joe Tagliabue; and Jennifer Vuletic as Dr Margo Bouchard.

Finally, the character of Dr Celene Shen is played by Renée Lim, who is both a practicing actor and a practicing doctor.

Voiceover work was recorded at Original Score in Melbourne, ZigZag Post in Sydney, Innenhof in Vienna and Voiceover Soho in London.

Despite this hefty cast announcement, Ghost Pattern teased that even more characters – and the actors behind them – were yet to be revealed, kept as a secret until Wayward Strand’s possible release.

Wayward Strand will be available on 15 September 2022 on PC via Steam, as well as PlayStation 4, PlayStation 5, Xbox One, Xbox Series X/S, and Nintendo Switch.

Categories
Sports

Goalkeeper Bernd Leno completes £8m transfer to Fulham from Arsenal | Fulham

The German international keeper Bernd Leno has completed his move to promoted Fulham from Arsenal after signing a three-year contract.

The Cottagers, who have the option of a further 12 months, have agreed to a deal reportedly worth up to £8m for the 30-year-old, for whom the Gunners paid around £20m when they signed him from Bayer Leverkusen in June 2018.

Leno, who lost his place to Aaron Ramsdale last season, told FFCtv: “It feels amazing to finally be here. I can’t wait to join the team, to train and play with the team. I’m relieved that everything is done. I’m just happy to be here. It took a little bit of time, but in the end we made it and that’s the most important thing.”

Leno, who had 304 games for Leverkusen under his belt by the time he arrived in north London, kept 37 clean sheets in his 125 appearances for Arsenal.

Fulham vice-chairman Tony Khan said: “Bernd Leno is the goalkeeper whom we have pursued steadfastly throughout this transfer window, and we’re very excited that we’ve reached a transfer agreement and he’s now fully committed to Fulham.

“He has played at the highest level, and he’ll bring this experience and his leadership to our team. He’ll be a great addition to [head coach] Frames [Silva] squad, who are all excited for the season ahead.”

Categories
Australia

Man stabbed during road rage argument in Melbourne’s west

Police are calling for the public’s help to track down two men after a road rage incident ended in a man being stabbed on a Melbourne street in the middle of the afternoon.

The attack occurred on Carinza Avenue near Oakdene Grove in Altona Meadows, in Melbourne’s west, just before 2.30pm on Tuesday, November 2, 2021.

The victim, a 53-year-old Altona Meadows man, was driving a white Ford Ranger utility when he got into a verbal incident with two men in a gray Volkswagen hatchback.

Police are calling for help to identify these men after a stabbing in Altona Meadows. (Victoria Police)

All three men then got out of their vehicles and got involved in an altercation, which ended in the driver of the ute being stabbed in his upper body.

He was taken to hospital with serious injuries.

The other two men fled in the hatchback and were last seen traveling north towards the Werribee area.

Police have released images of the men and CCTV footage in the hope someone recognizes them and contacts police.

CCTV of man on footpath
Police have released CCTV from the time of the road rage incident in Altona Meadows. (Nine)

The men are both perceived to be African in appearance and aged in their early 20s.

Anyone who witnessed the incident, has dash cam footage or information is urged to contact police.

Categories
US

Senate Passes Burn Pits Legislation, Expanding Benefits for Veterans

WASHINGTON — The Senate on Tuesday approved a bill to create a new entitlement program to treat veterans who may have been exposed to toxic substances from burning trash pits on US military bases, sending President Biden legislation that would expand medical care eligibility to an estimated 3.5 million people.

The bill was approved on a lopsided bipartisan vote, 86 to 11, only days after Republicans pulled their support in a dispute over how to pay for the benefits, imperiling the legislation and drawing days of angry protests from veterans who gathered outside the Capitol to demand action.

The measure would be the biggest expansion of veterans’ benefits since the Agent Orange Act of 1991, which increased access to care for Vietnam War veterans who had been exposed to the toxic herbicide that endangered generations of Vietnamese, Laotians and Cambodians.

The new legislation would effectively presume that any American service member stationed in a combat zone for the last 32 years could have been exposed to toxic substances, allocating a projected $280 billion over the next decade to treat ailments tied to those exposures and streamlining veterans’ access. to such care.

The House approved the bill last month, and Mr. Biden, who has championed the measure, was expected to quickly sign it. He has speculated that toxic substances from burn pits contributed to the brain cancer that killed his son Beau Biden, who served in Iraq, in 2015.

The legislation had drawn broad support on Capitol Hill, but just as it was expected to clear the Senate last week, Republicans in the chamber abruptly withdrew their backing, insisting that Democrats allow them a chance to limit the funding available to treat veterans.

The bill would provide guaranteed funding for treating veterans exposed to toxins by setting up a dedicated fund that would not be subject to the annual congressional spending process. Senator Patrick J. Toomey, Republican of Pennsylvania, warned that the measure was written in a way that could allow for immense new spending unrelated to veterans’ care.

Mr. Toomey tried and failed to cap the amount of money that could be put into the fund every year, a move that Denis McDonough, the secretary of veterans affairs, had warned could lead to “rationing of care for vets.”

Mr. Toomey also proposed shifting the fund for treating veterans into so-called discretionary spending after a decade, meaning that the Department of Veterans Affairs would have to request funding each year. That would subject the funding to Congress’s approval and the annual partisan spending battles on Capitol Hill, rather than having it guaranteed.

Democrats opposed both efforts, saying the legislation did not need to be changed.

“This is a bill that will work for this country, that will work for the taxpayers of this country and it will work, most importantly, for the veterans and their families,” said Senator Jon Tester, Democrat of Montana and the chairman of the Veterans’ Affairs Committee.

Susan Zeier, the mother-in-law of Heath Robinson, a member of the Ohio Army National Guard for whom the bill is named, had been protesting outside the Capitol for days to urge the Senate to pass the measure before leaving for its summer recess .

Mr. Robinson served in Iraq and died in 2020 after battling lung cancer believed to have been tied to burn pit exposure, and the bill is called the Sgt. First Class Heath Robinson Honoring Our Promise to Address Comprehensive Toxics Act of 2022.

“For me and my daughter, this is the satisfaction that we fulfilled our promise to Heath,” Ms. Zeier said. “We hope families don’t suffer like we did.”