Business – Page 71 – Michmutters
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Simple way to fix Australia’s east coast energy crisis

Slowly but surely, the story of the greatest rip-off in Aussie history is coming out. It’s not a great train robbery. Not a Sydney wealth management fraud. It is an investment boom that miraculously turned east Australian resources bounty into a pair of concrete boots for the broader economy.

This is the sorry tale of how foreign cartels stole Australian gas reserves and fed them to China while the local economy was starved of it.

It began during the GFC-period when advances in unconventional gas extraction (fracking, shale, coal seam etc) made huge reserves in Queensland viable for extraction. Three conglomerates of largely multinational firms built infrastructure systems across the east of the state to extract, pipe and freeze that gas for export.

They spent some $80 billion doing so, in a mad race that duplicated everything, over-invested in production and crashed the global gas price, forcing them to write off tens of billions on their investment.

Meanwhile, in poor little Australia, which actually owned the gas, the moment the export trains opened the price began to rise because there was not enough left over for locals.

The price rose from $4Gj relentlessly until we were paying $20Gj in 2017 – more for our own gas than our Asian customers.

Worse, because gas sets the marginal cost of electricity on the east coast, whenever its cost rises, power prices go mad as well, hugely multiplying the negative impacts on the economy.

The Turnbull government recognized the folly of this in 2017 and installed the Australian Domestic Gas Security Mechanism (ADGSM). That crashed the gas price back under $10Gj, though it remained much higher than it had been traditionally.

But that was not the end of it. Whenever there has been cold weather, or coal or other outages in the power market, or international shortages, the gas cartel has popped up again to squeeze local prices higher.

This serial debacle most recently came to a head with the war in Ukraine and Russian sanctions which have left the world short of gas and Australian prices have gone to as high as $65Gj, the market has been suspended and electricity prices have been driven up by 600 per cent to boot.

This is a $50 billion gouge by the energy cartels that are effectively war-profiteering at every Australian’s expense. Soon, these price rises will deliver an extra 6 per cent CPI inflation, ensuring the RBA has to drive interest rates higher than many households can bear.

And for what? The gas cartel will not invest anymore. There’ll be no jobs created. Governments will receive no tax dividend owing to broken laws and the massive writedowns on the projects.

Indeed, this episode will be recounted by economic historians as the worst case of the “resources curse” ever. (It’s sometimes called Dutch Disease after the Netherlands’ broader economy suffered in the ’70s with the development of North Sea oil resources that lifted its currency and falling competitiveness hollowed out the industry.)

If Dutch Disease is a national cold, then Australian Disease is like an inoperable brain tumour. It has allowed miners to steal the resource, pay no tax, force scarcity pricing on the extractive nation, and raise the currency. All of which have already decimated industry, hobbled national income, and will soon begin to deflate household wealth as well.

how to fix it

The new Labor Government has been forced to confront this reality to some extent. Untenable energy prices have triggered a review of the Turnbull domestic reservation mechanism. This is all to the good, but what should it look like?

First, the reformed ADGSM must include a price trigger. As it stands, it is a volume measure that is too unwieldy to be effective. The ADGSM should automatically divert gas from export the moment the price goes over $7Gj. This is plenty high enough for the gas cartel to make money out of it. The reserves are quite cheap and since they’ve written off so much investment, the gas has become even cheaper on a cash basis.

The new ADGSM should apply to all three conglomerates. Although it is the Santos-led GLNG that has come to be most short of gas and openly lied about it, all three joint ventures knew what they were doing when they overinvested to leave Australia short of gas. Besides, as Bass Strait gas bleeds out, the shortage will only get worse and the future will require as much as 15 per cent of the gas currently exported to remain at home. That’s a burden best shared by all three projects.

A second option is to use export levies. If we set a baseline for profits at pre-Ukraine war prices around $7Gj, then levy the gas cartel for every export dollar above that price, then the local price of gas would collapse and Australians collect the war windfall instead of firms that have no right to it.

Third, we could install a super-profits tax on the cartel and recycle that revenue as energy subsidies for everybody else. That is a pretty clunky solution but it delivers the same end.

With any and all of these solutions, the cartel will scream “sovereign risk”. But so what? It was its mistakes that created this untenable situation. Australians should not have to pay for them.

Moreover, export gas contracts are renegotiated all the time. Just a few weeks ago, one member of the gas cartel, Shell, declared force majeur (that is undelivered but contracted gas) over something as trivial as a maritime labor dispute.

The larger truth is that the cartel is a risk to the sovereign and everyone within it.

Read related topics:Cost Of Living

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Honda HR-V, CR-V and Accord prices rise by up to $2000

The Honda HR-V hybrid has been hit with a $2000 price rise, alongside cost increases for other models – but existing orders are protected at the previous RRPs.


honda australia has increased prices across three of its four models by between $100 and $2000 – but buyers who signed on the dotted line before 1 August 2022 will be “price protected” and the original RRPs will be honored.

Since this month, prices across 10 of the 13 Honda model grades in the HR-V small SUV, CR-V mid-size SUV and Accord mid-size sedan have risen in price, due to “current market conditions.”

Hardest hit is the HR-V e:HEV L hybrid, which received a $2000 price increase from $45,000 to $47,000 drive-away – after arriving in showrooms in April.



Meanwhile, the Accord VTi-LX petrol has risen by $500, to $57,900 drive-away – one month after the hybrid version was hit with a $1500 price increase, to $61,900 drive-away.

Hybrid versions of the HR-V and Accord are facing wait times of about 10 months, a Honda Australia spokesperson told Drivedue to a “build-up of customer orders”.

Prices of the CR-V mid-size SUV, have risen by between $100 and $300 for August depending on model grade. These compounds earlier increases of similar amounts – though no variant is more than $800 dearer than it was when Honda Australia adopted fixed prices last July.



While prices have risen, Honda Australia says customers who signed a contract prior to 1 August 2022 will be protected from the price rises – even though models such as the HR-V and Accord hybrids may not be delivered until mid-2023.

“A number of models/grades in the Honda line-up received pricing adjustments as of August 1, which are reflective of the current market conditions, with demand continuing to exceed forecast production levels and the global supply chain continuing to be impacted by parts shortages , rising raw material and energy prices, and other logistics challenges,” Honda Australia said in a media statement.

“Honda’s price protection policy will apply to any contracts signed prior to the change, where the vehicle is yet to be delivered. This means there will be no change for customers who signed a contract prior to August 1 – the drive-away price will remain unchanged at the pre-price-rise level.



“With a build-up of customer orders resulting in extended lead times on a number of vehicles, such as HR-V hybrid and Accord hybrid (both currently at 10 months), [some of] the recent price changes would only come into effect on vehicles to be delivered well into 2023.”

The Honda Civic hatch continues to be priced from $47,200 drive-away, with no changes to its price applied since it went on sale in December 2021. The HR-V Vi X petrol – as well as the CR-V VTi 7 +Luxe special edition – are not affected by the August price rises.

The price rises for Accord, CR-V and HR-V – as well as Accord Hybrid last month – represent the first major price increases since Honda Australia adopted a fixed-price “agency” business model on 1 July 2021.



2022 Honda HR-V Australian pricing

  • HR-V Vi X – $36,700 (unchanged)
  • HR-V e:HEV L – $47,000 (up $2000)

2022 Honda CR-V Australian pricing

  • CR-V Vi five-seater – $35,900 (up $300)
  • CR-V VTi five-seater – $38,900 (up $100)
  • CR-V VTi 7 seven-seater – $40,900 (up $200)
  • CR-V VTi X five-seater – $41,900 (up $200)
  • CR-V VTi 7 +Luxe seven-seater – $43,700 (unchanged)
  • CR-V Black Edition five-seater – $44,900 (up $200)
  • CR-V VTi L AWD five-seater – $46,200 (up $200)
  • CR-V VTi L7 seven-seater – $49,500 (up $300)
  • CR-V VTi LX AWD five-seater – $53,600 (up $200)

2022 Honda Accord Australian pricing

  • Accord VTi-LX petrol – $57,900 (up $500)
  • Accord VTi-LX hybrid – $61,900 (unchanged)

alex misoyannis

Alex Misoyannis has been writing about cars since 2017, when he started his own website, Redline. He contributed for Drive in 2018, before joining CarAdvice in 2019, becoming a regular contributing journalist within the news team in 2020. Cars have played a central role throughout Alex’s life, from flicking through car magazines as a young age, to growing up around performance vehicles in a car-loving family.

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Australia’s economy is set to grow slower than it ever has outside of recession. This is bad news for our standard of living | Greg Jericho

The Reserve Bank of Australia has slammed on the brakes harder than it has for 28 years, and now anticipates over the next two years the economy will grow slower than it ever has in a non-recessionary period. That is bad news for people’s standard of living.

Back in April the average home loan rate was 2.65%, the cash rate was at 0.1% and monthly repayments on a $500,000 home loan were $2,015.

And yet, just four months later, the cash rate is up to 1.85% and those monthly repayments are now $2,504.

Just a lazy 24% increase.

In its April monthly statement, the RBA said that while inflation was rising “growth in labor costs has been below rates that are likely to be consistent with inflation being sustainably at target”.

This was in line with what the RBA had long been saying.

A year ago, the bank stated it would “not increase the cash rate until actual inflation is sustainably within the 2 to 3 per cent target range. The central scenario for the economy is that this condition will not be met before 2024.

“Meeting this condition,” the statement concluded, “will require the labor market to be tight enough to generate wages growth that is materially higher than it is currently.”

And now the cash rate has risen 175 basis points in four months – the fastest increase since 1994:

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So that means wages are now “materially higher” than they were a year ago?

Well… sort of.

In Tuesday’s statement, the governor merely noted that the bank’s “liaison program and business surveys continue to point to a lift in wages growth from the low rates of recent years as firms compete for staff in the tight labor market”.

Cryps.

If all you can say when unemployment is 3.5% is that there has been “a lift in wages growth” from the record low growth of the previous years, then clearly the labor market is broken.

But with inflation growing at 6.1% the RBA has slammed on the monetary policy brakes.

Just how hard has the bank gone?

This is already the fastest rates have initially gone up in 12 months since the late 1980s.

And more rises are on the way:

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But the circumstances have changed.

In 2007 for example, when the RBA increased rates the standard variable rate went from 8.1% to 9.6%.

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Back then the average new mortgage was around $250,000. It meant mortgage repayments increased $278 a month from $1,847 to $2,215 – a 15% increase.

Right now the market is factoring in another 135 basis point rise by next March.

If that happens the standard variable rate would have gone from 4.52% to 7.62%.

The actual average rate held by mortgage holders is lower than the “standard rate”, but a 310 basis points rise from the April average of 2.65% would still see it go to 5.75% by March.

That would cause monthly repayments on a $500,000 loan to go from $2,015 to $2,918 – a 45% increase.

Little wonder the market is getting nervous about its previous rate rise predictions and is now predicting rates will have to be cut next year.

Six weeks ago, the market priced in a cash rate of 4.25% by May next year; now it expects rates to top out at 3.2% before falling to 2.85%:

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A 4.25% cash rate would in my view absolutely cause a recession. Could you imagine what home loan repayments rising 60% in one year would do to the economy?

I also think the current expectation of 3.2% is too high and would be more likely than not to produce a recession. I am much more in line with the Commonwealth Bank’s estimate of a 2.6% peak.

But even still that would have a massive impact on the economy.

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The Reserve Bank already expects the economy to grow by just 1.75% next year and in 2024.

That is truly saying.

Since 1980 there have only been six calendar years with GDP growth below 2%. If the RBA is right this would be the first time since the 1990s recession it has happened two years in a row:

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That might not be a recession, but it would not be anything good.

GDP growth is closely linked with unemployment. As a rule, over the past 40 years to keep the unemployment rate stable GDP needed to grow at least 2.75%:

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Two years of 1.75% growth would likely see unemployment rise – the RBA expects to 4%. But as unemployment rises, wages growth falls, all at a time where the RBA is also estimating inflation growth of “a little above” 4% in 2023 and “around” 3% in 2024.

If the graph does not display click here

Given that at this current state of 50-year low unemployment we are only seeing “a lift in wages growth” above record lows, that does not bode well for people’s standard of living.

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Interest rates: Peter White urges borrowers to beware of the hidden dangers associated with refinancing following RBA rate rise

A leading loans expert is urging mortgage holders to be wary of the hidden dangers associated with refinancing as the big four banks look to entice more customers with “cheap deals” following this month’s rate rise.

Peter White AM, the managing director of the Financial Brokers Association of Australia (FBAA), is asking Australians who are considering whether they should switch up their home loan to proceed with caution, warning that “cheaper isn’t always better”.

The director’s message comes after the Reserve Bank of Australia increased the cash rate by 50 basis points for the fourth time in as many months on Tuesday.

With the base rate now standing at 1.85 per cent, Mr White is asking borrowers to be on alert as major banks look to lure vulnerable customers who are struggling with their repayments to sign up to its services.

“Some banks at the moment are offering cheap variable rates to new borrowers only. This is a trap,” Mr White told news.com.au.

“For the lender it’s about using a marketing budget to generate more customers, knowing that most customers will stay as it costs to change again.”

It’s all part of a “vicious cycle” lenders use to draw customers into borrowing from them, Mr White explained, where new customers are blindsided as the rate on offer doesn’t always mean the customer will be better off in the long term.

“There is a hidden danger at times like this that is rarely spoken about,” Mr White said.

“Banks will be looking to attract those considering refinancing as new customers, and will offer cheaper variable interest rates that are significantly below their fixed rates, which are rapidly climbing. This is a case of ‘buyer beware’.”

Cashbacks and exclusive rates at discount prices for new customers are some of the lures banks are using to attract new borrowers.

Both come at the cost of disadvantaging the lender’s current customer base as their higher interest rates make up for the lower rate offered to new customers.

“Borrowers should be aware that next time around they will be the existing customer facing higher rates and will be disadvantaged during rate increases,” Mr White said.

“It’s an old game to lure new customers with a perceived advantage only to be taken advantage of with the next move.”

Additionally, some banks use a tactic where they attempt to give you a better rate after you’ve agreed to another offer.

“If they were serious about looking after you they would have offered this when you first approached them, so ignore this offer and don’t be distracted as this will cause you even more headaches, and makes the process even more complex,” he said .

While Mr White advises borrowers to refinance with caution, saving on your home loan isn’t entirely off the cards.

Rather than focusing on the big four banks, Mr White recommends looking at what second tier banks such as Suncorp, and non-banks such as Bluestone, have on offer.

“Going with the major banks is often the most expensive way forward and may not be in your best interests due to constraints and other factors specific to you,” Mr White said.

“Remember the big banks can only sell you their products, and their aim is to look after themselves and their shareholders, not to act in your best interests.”

It’s also advised that borrowers go through a mortgage broker, rather than directly through a bank. Brokers are free to use as they receive commission from lenders once they sign a customer up to a service.

They also have access to a range of offers that aren’t always available to borrowers who go through the back directly and can find a rate and repayment schedule that suits a borrower’s needs.

“A finance broker is obliged to act in your best interests and sometimes this means explaining that the best option may be not to refinance,” Mr White said. “(They’re also) charged by law to act in your best interests, whereas banks are not.”

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CBA responds to RBA interest rate hike, ANZ, NAB, Westpac stay silent

Australia’s largest bank has finally responded to the interest rate rise two days after it was initially announced.

On Thursday morning, the Commonwealth Bank of Australia revealed it will pass the full cost of the rate hike onto customers.

The Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) hiked interest rates on Tuesday for the fourth consecutive month.

Australia’s central bank increased the interest rate by 50 basis points, or by 0.5 per cent, bringing the cash rate from 1.35 per cent to 1.85 per cent, largely in line with economist’s predictions.

Up until now Australia’s biggest four banks — The Commonwealth Bank (CBA), ANZ, NAB and Westpac — hadn’t made any changes in response to the latest rate hike.

But just before 10am, the CBA said variable home loans would increase by 0.5 per cent per year from August 12 while term deposits would kick in with the higher return from August 8.

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The CBA’s variable mortgages as well as term deposit accounts and its NetBank Saver accounts will be impacted by the change.

Owner occupiers and investors on variable rate home loans will have to fork out an extra 0.5 per cent in interest every year.

Term deposits and CBA’s savings account will also increase by 0.5 per cent/

The new term deposit rate will be available from 8 August, while the new NetBank Saver rate will take effect on August 12 along with home loans.

Group Executive, Retail Banking, Angus Sullivan, said: “We have been helping customers understand the changing rate environment and consider what it means for them, and we will continue to be there for them.”

Since May, the cash rate has risen by 1.75 percentage points, after four months of back-to-back increases by the central bank.

However, the CBA is so far the only one of the big players to respond, and that was nearly 48 hours later.

In stark contrast, within hours of the announcement, a smaller bank, Macquarie Bank passed on the rate rise almost straight away.

Macquarie Bank was the first bank to say it would increase variable mortgage rates by 0.5 per cent by August 12.

Rates on its savings and everyday transaction accounts also increased by 0.50 per cent.

The move impacts the estimated 2 million people who are customers of Macquarie Bank.

However, CBA, ANZ, NAB and Westpac have between 8.5 million to 17 million customers each, according to Statista.

Last month, Westpac gave customers the most amount of time to prepare for a change in its variable mortgages and also its savings rates, taking two weeks for the change to come into effect – although it announced the change within 24 hours.

The other three banks passed the change onto customers within 10 days after a swift response.

The August hike isn’t expected to be the last, with economists forecasting that interest rates could peak up to two per cent by the end of the year.

Tuesday’s rate rise means those paying off the average home loan of $500,000 will need to cough up an extra $140 a month.

Tuesday’s decision marks the first time the RBA has lifted the rates for four months in a row since the introduction of the two to three per cent inflation target in 1990 in a sign of the inflation and cost of living crisis across the country.

This follows last week’s increase in annual inflation, which hit 6.1 per cent, which was its highest level in 21 years since 2001.

Tuesday’s rate rise means those paying off the average home loan of $500,000 will need to cough up an extra $140 a month.

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Perth venues Gangemi’s Fine Wines & Food and the Comedy Lounge awarded City of Perth redevelopment grant

Two Perth businesses are sprucing up their shopfronts with help from the City of Perth.

West Perth’s Gangemi’s Fine Wines & Food and the Comedy Lounge on Murray Street are two of several Perth businesses which have been awarded City of Perth business improvement grants this financial year.

Gangemi’s owners Edward Johnson and Tobias Goyder-Ewan told Perth Now this week the $20,000 grant would go towards a major redevelopment of the well-known corner bottle shop and liquor store on Hay Street.

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The duo said they believed their business was the first metropolitan standalone liquor store to trade in Perth, having been open since 1911.

Co-owners Tobias Goyder-Ewan and Edward Johnson, Gangemi's Fine Wines.
Camera IconCo-owners Tobias Goyder-Ewan and Edward Johnson, Gangemi’s Fine Wines. Credit: Andrew Richie/Perth Now

The historic establishment will receive an interior facelift to turn it into an 80-person small bar with indoor dining, an alfresco area and European style charcuterie food on offer. Drinks will be served until 10pm.

The business will also build a coffee window which will be open from 7am.

“We have been liquor retail and wine retail and we’re going to be wine retail and liquor retail-focused with the addition of being able to sit down and have a glass of wine on top, and it extends that ‘try before you buy ‘ethos,” Mr Johnson said.

“We are changing it from just retail to being an on and off premise consumption and a place for the community.”

Artist impression of the new bar at Gangemi's Fine Wines & Food during the evening.
Camera IconArtist impression of the new bar at Gangemi’s Fine Wines & Food during the evening. Credit: Gangemi’s Fine Wines and Food

Mr Johnson said the grant would go towards paying for the “base build”, including the construction of toilets, amenities and access for people with a disability.

Re-development of the site is set to start as soon as next week, with the duo aiming to not close the store during construction and have the additions ready by October.

“You can have a chat to us, you can have a sit down, we can talk about the wine if people are interested in that,” Mr Johnson said.

“Or they can just have a place to hang out, eat some bread and cheese and have a glass of wine.”

In the CBD, the Comedy Lounge exterior and laneway is set for a facelift.

“Overall we expect the exterior improvements to increase Comedy Lounge’s public awareness and organic traffic,” business development and marketing director Jack McAllister said.

“It’s amazing how many people are unaware Perth has its very own purpose-built comedy club, so hopefully this will help get the word out there.”

Jack McAllister (event organiser) Sunday Singles at the Comedy Lounge will be launching as a weekly Sunday event for Perth singles.  Andrew Richie
Camera IconJack McAllister (event organiser) Sunday Singles at the Comedy Lounge will be launching as a weekly Sunday event for Perth singles. Andrew Richie Credit: Andrew Richie/Community News

The team behind the establishment are researching the possibility of installing 3D projectors which would display the venue’s line-ups and a promotional video.

Mr McAllister said designs were being drafted for the new laneway street art, which would include a portrait of the greatest comedians of all time.

“We’re in a great location where we get a lot of daily traffic passing the venue,” he said.

“It’s one aspect of advertising that we haven’t utilized yet — we want to be noticed as people pass our venue.

“First impressions count and at the moment the look of the building and laneway does not match the quality of entertainment we’re providing.

“The upgrades will help convey to customers that it’s a high-quality establishment with world-class live entertainment.”

Mr McAllister said the $12,950 grant would go towards the works but the upgrade would cost “significantly more”.

“The last few years for businesses have been a rollercoaster, so it’s good to know the government is showing its support,” he said.

“We haven’t made any significant or noticeable upgrades for about three years now, so we are well overdue for a makeover.

“All our recent major upgrades have been interior, which has been money well spent, but it’s time we improve the outside.”

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Rising interest rates set to push property prices lower even in areas so far immune

“NSW definitely hit its affordability ceiling earlier,” she said. “It had always been leading in terms of growth… they’ve galloped towards the finishing line faster, and have now gone past it.

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“Each market has a ceiling … Melbourne is very close to that ceiling, inner Melbourne has gone past it, but regional Victoria is still building up to it.”

She added that while areas of Greater Melbourne had recorded price drops, some pockets were still growing.

The stage of the property cycle in each market was determined by assessing annual growth for the year to June, compared to the previous year, and anecdotal evidence from real estate agents about supply and demand in their local market. Housing data from other sources like property analytics company CoreLogic, were also factored in.

But given how quickly the cash rate was rising, more resilient markets were likely to move into a downturn in the months to come as changes to interest rates typically affected slower markets within three to six months.

Starr Partners chief executive Douglas Driscoll said Sydney buyers and sellers were holding back amid speculation of further rate rises and continued price falls, and those pushing ahead were increasingly looking for a bargain.

Prices in some markets are just hitting their peak, while others still look poised for more growth.

Prices in some markets are just hitting their peak, while others still look poised for more growth.Credit:Peter Rae

“They’ll come to us and try to play hardball on price … and cite various sources that we’re not at the bottom of the market yet, and that the home that they’re looking at will be less in three months’ time ,” he said.

“Undeniably the pendulum has swung and it’s now become a “buyers’ market” or that’s certainly the way buyers perceive it, the truth is we’re somewhere in between.”

Driscoll said price declines across his western Sydney markets were approaching 10 per cent on average, but he did not think there was “a huge amount” left for the downturn. Uncertainty was making buyers wary, and once the dust settled on rate hikes, he expected the market would bounce back quite firmly.

For now, necessity sales, driven by deaths, debt, divorce and downsizing, were driving the market, he said. And while competition for homes had dropped off, genuine buyers were still there.

Ray White Victoria and Tasmania chief executive Stephen Dullens said Melbourne had seen a later shift, as residual demand after multiple lockdowns had propped up the market.

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Prices achieved across Ray White’s Melbourne office last month were down about 12 per cent year-on-year, he said, and he had heard of more drastic declines in the inner suburbs. The huge push to regional areas had also eased, slowing price growth.

Dullens said rising interest rates had decreased demand, with most buyers already pricing in future rate hikes. However, he felt the return of a traditionally quieter winter market was also having an effect on prices.

In Tasmania, prices were still strong, but the market frenzy had subsided, he said. Meanwhile, prices in Adelaide were going wild, with Ray White offices there now seeing the strongest price growth in the country.

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Now Finance is the non-bank lender bracing for a ‘shakeout’

“There’s no doubt that some of those players did list too prematurely, and you’ve got to question what the next step for them looks like.”

But what dismays Blumberg is the lack of institutional support for what he sees as a vital sector of the economy.

“I’m not sure how long it takes the market to recover. I don’t think it’s a quick fix. But I don’t think structurally and strategically that’s good for the sector and for Australia. We just don’t want to go back to the concentration we’ve had previously. You want to see a successful and growing non-bank lending sector.”

‘Some pain… is a good thing’

But Blumberg is also realistic about what’s coming. Those non-bank lenders who have aggressively pursued growth in recent years at the expense of profitability will probably be squeezed as funding becomes more expensive and less plentiful.

“I do think there will be some players in the market that experience some pain in their books and in their margins. And I think that’s a good thing, too. I think it’s important that we have a shakeout.”

Blumberg wants to be on the right side of that.

Now, which specializes in fee-free personal loans to prime or near-prime borrowers, was founded in 2013 and supported by Farrel Meltzer’s Wingate Group, before being spun out to its underlying investors late last year. Blumberg says the business has been profitable since 2017 and conservative in the way it has grown; Although credit inquiries dropped across the sector last month, he says he is not seeing bad debts rise.

“We haven’t seen any issues with delinquencies in arrears. I think the fact that we have full employment is an important consideration.”

Last month, Now tapped debt markets and raised $200 million through the sale of new asset-backed securities. Although Blumberg says credit spreads have widened and liquidity softened since Now was last in the market in September last year, the company’s raising was completed very quickly.

Blumberg is now raising equity to further support Now’s expansion into the auto loans market, which is set for next month. The banks aren’t as active in this market as they were, and Blumberg believes that with pricing of auto loans more rational, there is room for Now’s fee-free product offering.

The auto loan expansion is part of Blumberg’s bigger plan to double Now’s loan book to $1 billion, which he sees as the sweet spot for a niche lender in Australia. The coming shakeout among non-bank leaders might present Now with opportunities.

“To the extent there is distress – and there will be – we are keen to take a look at that and see what opportunities there are to buy into businesses and to buy loan books.”

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ASX to rise, Wall Street snaps two-day losing streak as tech stocks rebound

Australian shares are expected to start the day higher as US technology stocks rebounded overnight, lifting the Nasdaq to a three-month high.

ASX futures were up 0.5 per cent, to 6,913 points, by 7:50am AEST.

The Australian dollar was trading at 69.5 US cents, after a 0.5 per cent rise overnight.

Wall Street’s main indexes rebounded, after dropping for the past two days.

The Nasdaq jumped 2.6 per cent, to 12,668 points, its highest level since early May, and the S&P 500 climbed 1.6 per cent, to end the session at 4,155, while the Dow Jones index rose 1.3 per cent, to 32,813.

Spot gold rose 0.2 per cent, to $US1,763.10 an ounce.

Meanwhile, oil prices fell sharply, with Brent crude futures down 3.4 per cent, to $US97.10 a barrel.

It comes after the OPEC+ group of oil-producing nations, including Saudi Arabia and Russia, announced that it would increase its supply by a mere 100,000 barrels per day.

On top of that, a new report from the Energy Information Administration showed an unexpected surge in US crude and gasoline stocks.

“Oil is still up 25 per cent from the beginning of the year,” said Oliver Pursche, senior vice president at Wealthspire Advisors in New York

“This recent drop is a combined result of that and a reflection that there is going to be an economic slowdown. The market is trying to find equilibrium.”

Stronger-than-expected earnings

Investor sentiment was also boosted by strong earnings reports from PayPal, CVS Health Corp and other companies.

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How to save money on groceries: the best value fresh produce in Australia this August | Australian food and drinks

As Australia enters the final month of winter, traditional root vegetables remain some of the best buys on the shelves, along with a plentiful supply of citrus.

“Potatoes and pumpkin are always good buys,” says Luke Bartlett from Luke’s Potatoes and Pumpkin in Brayton near Goulburn, about 180km south-west of Sydney.

“We do one variety that covers everything – Sebago, which is a good all-rounder, are currently sitting at about $2 a kilo.”

Australia’s inflation rate reached 6.1% in the June quarter and fruit and vegetable prices suffered a 5.8% price increase as a result of bad weather in recent months.

Even though the wet weather has played havoc on harvests, and the costs of farming have increased with rising fuel and fertilizer prices, Bartlett is selling three pumpkins for $10, which equates to roughly 50 cents a kilo. Kent and butternut varieties in major supermarkets range from $2 to $6 for half a pumpkin.

Pumpkins are a roasting dish staple perfect for cooking in bulk for salads and leftover lunches, and also make a great classic winter soup. Sweet potato is another star of the root vegetable category and costs around $1.50 a kilo in supermarkets.

Soft, starchy sweet potatoes are easily transformed into everything from mash to fries, but can also be the star of the meal when stuffed and baked. For a more adventurous dish, try Yotam Ottolenghi’s winter spiced sweet potato cheesecake with an amaretti biscuit crust.

leafy greens

After challenging wet weather, some green vegetables are beginning to thrive again, says Teck Wong, a vendor at Goodwill Projects’ Milton Markets in Brisbane.

“The weather is being much kinder to most of your greens like baby spinach, kale, broccoli… with steady supply meaning prices are coming down slowly,” says Wong.

Meng Sun from Sun’s Fresh Farm in Horsley Park in western Sydney recommends sticking to hardy vegetables such as fennel, leeks and celery, and leaving herbs to garnish dishes behind.

“Forget about dill, coriander, mint and parsley. They’re all very scarce because they’re the hardest to grow,” says Sun.

While beans, snow peas and sugar snaps are usually good buys at the end of winter, Sun says the rain has meant their usual crop – two to three fields worth of beans – all have blemishes, which also drives up the price.

“Usually during this season, they would be $6 to $8 a kilo,” says Sun. “At the moment they are at least $10 to $12 a kilo.”

One customer told Sun that at a nearby supermarket, beans were fetching a price of $30 a kilogram.

Prices such as these are a good reminder that frozen vegetables are a thrifty alternative to fresh produce and can be easily added to fritters and pasta dishes. Staples such as broccoli remain at about $9 a kilo in supermarkets, but that price drops to around $6.40 per 1kg when frozen.

Supply of cabbage and lettuce continues to be limited, with prices upwards of $6 each for savoy, green cabbage and iceberg lettuce in supermarkets. But Asian greens such as bok choy, choy sum and Chinese broccoli remain more affordable at about $2.50 a bunch.

For fruit: make it citrus

Navel oranges are good value for money at the moment, especially if you buy in bulk.
Navel oranges are good value for money at the moment, especially if you buy in bulk. Photograph: GomezDavid/Getty Images

The best produce to buy in August is citrus, according to Sun, with oranges selling for under $2 a kilo. “We were selling a big box of navel oranges for $10 a box which weighed about 18 kilos.”

In major supermarkets, oranges are priced around $2.50 a kilo and are the perfect sweet pairing with fennel in salads.

Other fruit can be hit and miss, according to Wong in Brisbane. Avoid out-of-season fruits such as berries if you’re looking for a product in premium condition. “With the cooler weather, bananas, pineapple, tomatoes and pawpaw are taking longer to ripen … therefore reducing the amount available, causing a spike in price.”

Avocados continue to be plentiful and as consumers are being asked to indulge to help relieve Australia’s current glut of the fruit. They are versatile and cheap, and can be used in everything from ice-cream to quiche.

buy
potatoes
pumpkins
carrots
asian greens
fennell
Leek
Celery
oranges
avocado

Watch
Prices are expected to ease on these over the coming month.
silverbeet
kale
broccoli
baby spinach

Avoid
beans:
have been damaged by the rain and are in short supply, driving prices up.
Berries: are out of season and not of premium quality.
Fresh herbs: a luxury unless you’re growing your own.
Lettuce: remains expensive.