Business – Page 84 – Michmutters
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Mortgage pain for home owners as Reserve Bank governor Philip Lowe announces rate rise

The rapid fall in house prices demonstrates that the RBA rises are hitting that mark.

Having begun tightening monetary policy too late, the RBA’s catch-up is occurring at warp speed and borrowers can do little but buckle up and brace for impact.

The RBA has lifted the official interest rate by 0.5 percentage points for a third consecutive month, taking the cash rate to 1.85 per cent.

The RBA has lifted the official interest rate by 0.5 percentage points for a third consecutive month, taking the cash rate to 1.85 per cent.Credit:

The velocity of the house price falls won’t be a concern for the RBA – quite the opposite – it will be a demonstration that its policy is working, at least in the housing market.

The RBA jury is not so certain about how this is flowing through to household spending.

“Employment is growing strongly, consumer spending has been resilient and an upswing in business investment is under way,” the RBA said on Tuesday while announcing the latest rate rise.

Painful as this will be to some mortgage holders, for the RBA, this represents positive pain – the kind that borrowers need to endure to fix the economy’s more dangerous ailment, inflation.

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With inflation breaking its own records, running at its highest pace in 21 years, its treatment needs to be painful.

In previous rising interest rate cycles or when introducing changes to macro prudential measures, the RBA was alive to the desire to manage the impact on house prices. But this time around, it is more prepared to risk housing price deflation.

The central bank is laser focused on seeing inflation peak no later than the last quarter of this financial year and at no higher than its anticipated 7.75 per cent. It also needs the community and business to avoid a mindset that inflation could become a medium or longer-term feature of the Australian economy.

Borrowers will be collateral damage.

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The majority of borrowers are ahead in mortgage payments and given we are experiencing unemployment at a 50-year low, loan serviceability has been regularly called out by lenders as something of a non-issue.

There is little or no evidence to date from banks that delinquencies from home loans have grown; there are even suggestions they have failed since the RBA began boosting interest rates in May.

There is a vintage of borrowers who came to the market last year when rates (particularly fixed interest rates) were at an historic low and property prices were peaking and who were lulled by the RBA projections that rates wouldn’t rise before 2024, who will be especially vulnerable to this round of rate rises.

For Australia’s largest lenders, the four major banks, it’s become a case of, be careful what you wish for.

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The rising rates are widely expected to provide a sugar hit to bank earnings – expanding the previously shrinking net interest margins.

The withdrawal – a slowdown in loan growth – will be more painful for earnings.

Where the RBA moves from here is clear enough from Tuesday’s statement. The round of rate rises is not over yet.

But the size and timing is now an open question.

“The size and timing of future interest rate increases will be guided by the incoming data and the Board’s assessment of the outlook for inflation and the labor market,” the RBA said on Tuesday.

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Inside Emirates’ Premium Economy Cabin as it lands in Australia

Premium Economy cabins are becoming more and more popular among travellers, as they offer the chance to upgrade your flying experience without having to shell out a massive amount of extra cash to do so.

And now Aussies will have another airline to choose from, as Emirates has today celebrated the arrival of its Premium Economy Cabin to Australia for the first time.

A total of 56 Premium Economy Seats are now available on the airline’s twice-daily service from Sydney to Dubai on board its flagship A380 aircraft.

READMORE: Aussie mum’s shock diagnosis after hip pain

emirates premium economy class cabin arrives in australia sydney to dubai A380
Emirates Premium Economy Cabin has arrived in Australia for the first time. (Supplied)

Flight EK412 touched down in Sydney shortly after 6am.

As part of the celebrations, passengers received exclusive gifts, including certificates, passport holders, special polaroids, and an individual cake.

Customers have been able to book Premium Economy seats since June 1, with the airline recording a significant demand for this cabin since announcing its debut in Sydney.

The A380 Premium Economy also comes with a dedicated airport experience and check-in areas exclusive to the Premium Economy passengers.

On board you’ll enjoy more legroom and footrests and a separate dining experience with elements inspired by Business Class.

READMORE: Passenger slammed for ‘gross’ act on flight

emirates premium economy class cabin arrives in australia sydney to dubai A380
56 seats are now available on the airline’s twice-daily A380 service from Sydney to Dubai. (Supplied)

It comes after Emirates recently held a national recruitment drive, looking for prospective Australian candidates to join its multinational cabin crew team.

The Dubai-based airline held recruitment open days at three locations across the country last month.

Emirates’ Australian cabin crew member, Laura Garside, says that since working with the airline she has visited 45 countries worldwide and has reaped the many benefits that come with living at the airline’s exciting Dubai base.

“Emirates has provided me with not only a dream job, but the incredible training and resources that have allowed me to fully immerse myself in a new career and foreign country,” she said. “This job has given me my happiest moments, greatest achievements and provided me with the most unique, life-changing experience.”

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vintage plane food

Vintage airline photos shows plane food wasn’t always so bad

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Renting: The “aggressive” number that exposes Australia’s rental crisis

These are the two graphs that expose the true depth of the rental crisis in Australia, and the “aggressive” increases faced by tenants in the hunt to secure a home.

In its weekly economic report, major real estate agency Ray White broke down renting costs, showing a mismatch between inflationary rental price rises and advertised rental price rises, which were much more “aggressive.”

The inflation rental price increase is 1.6 per cent, Ray White chief economist Nerida Conisbee said in the report.

However, advertised rents – also known as the market price – are painting a tougher picture, at a 13.6 per cent price increase.

Inflationary rental prices are calculated in line with the Consumer Price Index, which was 6.1 per cent over the 12 months to the June quarter.

“Rents increased by only 1.6 per cent, well below the inflation rate. This is inconsistent with what we are seeing on the ground with available rental properties, as well as the rate of growth in advertised rates,” Ms Conisbee wrote in her report.

READMORE: The Adelaide rental with a quirky ‘shoilet’ on offer for $290 a week

Ray White rental prices tenants
The difference between rental prices on listings and the CPI rental price rise, showing one is more aggressive. (Ray White)

“While inflation numbers are showing a 1.6 per cent increase in rents, data on median advertised rents shows a much more aggressive increase of 13.6 per cent for the same geographic area (average of eight capital cities). Why is there such a mismatch between the two numbers?

“Our first thought was that someone’s data collection is not working properly.

“The strong increase in rental increases showing up in advertised rents is however consistent with what we are seeing with Ray White rental listings.

“There has been a dramatic fall in properties available, which supports strong growth in what people are advertising vacant rental properties.

“Anecdotally, our property managers are also seeing a shortage of properties available – demand is much higher than available supply.”

READMORE: Rainforest block with ‘derelict beach house’ commands $6.9 million

Ray White renting tenants graphs data
Ray White rental listings over five years show the decline in options. (Ray White)

Ms Conisbee said the discrepancy with rental prices could be that tenants who are already locked into a lease are not paying the higher “market prices” (the advertised price).

And this means the rental crisis is impacting new tenants on the hunt for a lease, and not necessarily those in an agreement, the report found.

Ray White also tracked the number of rental listings between 2018 and 2022.

It shows the volume of tanking options for both metro and regional addresses, well below the January 2019 peak for house supply, and an abundance of apartments in December 2018.

“Although landlords could theoretically take their property to market and achieve a better rent, they aren’t doing so right now,” Ms Conisbee said.

“There are a number of reasons why this may be the case. The main reason is that it likely takes some time for the sharp increase in advertised rents to show up in sitting rents. Leases are typically signed for 12 months and breaking leases by a landlord is relatively uncommon.

READMORE: Affordable neighborhoods shine in the property market downturn

“Rent increases for sitting tenants also can’t be implemented immediately and there is a notice period that must be given.”

Ms Conisbee said that a stable tenant is valuable for a landlord, and chasing a “better rent” may not be seen as worthwhile.

“Overall, what this shows is that for renters right now with secure leases, we are not seeing a rental crisis” she said.

“The crisis however is occurring for those that are looking for a rental property right now, whether that is because their lease term is over, they are looking for a bigger (or smaller) property to live in or they have moved to a different geographic area.”

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The one time you shouldn’t trust your kids

But she does put me on to Narelle Devine, Telstra’s chief information security officer, who says the reason it’s so bad right now is because Australia, with help from other nations and Interpol, killed off the flubot scam earlier this year. The thieves, robbers and fraudsters have just moved to a new business model. Exhausting. But Devine says every time we report a scam, it gives her new information to feed the machines, so they know best what to look for.

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What’s her number-one golden rule for fending off these attacks? Whether it’s love or money, if it’s too good to be true, it probably is. And I thought Yo had trust issues.

Scamwatch, run by Australia’s consumer watchdog, the ACCC, has an impressive and depressing list of the latest scams – from rare ferret sales to Afterpay verification codes, from banks you’ve never banked with to texts asking you to click on a link to confirm an order you never made. The most disrespectful of all time – texts pretending to be from Australia Post with the URL AustraliaPostDelay. As if Australia Post would ever admit to delays in a URL.

Delia Rickard, the ACCC’s deputy chair and queen of Scamwatch, has her own personal way of avoiding scams. She hasn’t picked up her home phone in years. She talks to everyone about how scams work. Both of her kids from her. Friends and family. Rickard’s mum fell victim to a social security scam because the fraudsters played on the anxiety around pensions. Honestly, these people are just the worst. And it is hard to get ahead of organized criminal behaviour. These kids aren’t in a basement looking to rip you off once.

“It’s an arms race. We find new ways to stop them and they find new ways to get around them.”

I ask her what she thinks about Telstra’s anti-spam technology. Mostly I ask her this because the ACCC has spent a lot of time clobbering Telstra, quite rightly, but she’s very on-board. She says Telstra is the market leader in spam-blocking.

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What can we do? Trust nobody. What can telcos do? Be more like Telstra (even though I am a devoted and long-standing customer, that’s something I never thought I’d write). And what can banks do? Make it possible for us to see exactly where our money is being directed, says Paul Haskell-Dowland, a cybersecurity expert at Edith Cowan University. PayID is a good example. He’s also very pro-reporting on what happens to you if you get scammed.

There’s no shame, he says. Reporting it quickly sometimes makes it easier to get your money back.

But the best defense is to lack trust in everyone. Even your kids.

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Melbourne councils push for kerbside electric vehicle charging

“People are doing this stuff already. It would be much better if the council fixed the underlying problem and allowed them [electric car owners] to do it in a safe way.”

Councilor Jolly referred to similar trials being undertaken by local councils in the UK, where shallow trenches are dug into the footpath to embed charging cables or chargers are installed in street lights.

The kerb model would only be for residents who live in detached homes and those who had paid for a charger would not have ownership of the car spot next to the charger, as it remained on public land.

But despite these issues, Jolly said he believed the move could be a “small, worthwhile addition to the fight against climate change and encourage electric vehicle use”.

If the Yarra council agrees to a motion on Tuesday night, a report with various options would be created by council staff and presented at a later date for a decision.

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A similar motion will also be considered at a Hobsons Bay City Council meeting next Tuesday.

Independent Hobsons Bay councilor Daria Kellander, who is bringing the motion, said she had also been contacted by a resident who canceled an order for an electric car because of the lack of charging facilities in the area.

“When we look at our municipality, we only have three public electric vehicle chargers in an area with 100,000 residents and one has been down [out of order] for a number of months,” she said.

“Governments are implementing planning changes for future developments, but no one has looked at the legacy [residential] issues and that’s something that needs to be addressed.”

Melbourne company Kerb Charge is partnering with Port Phillip Council for its trial, which was greenlit in September last year. The first charger will be installed this month.

A pilot scheme in Central Bedfordshire Council in England allows electric vehicle owners to charge their cars on the street outside their homes with a charging cable embedded into the pavement.

A pilot scheme in Central Bedfordshire Council in England allows electric vehicle owners to charge their cars on the street outside their homes with a charging cable embedded into the pavement.Credit:Central Bedfordshire Council

Kerb Charge spokesman Rod Walker said the units to be placed next to residential street gutters were “about as tall as a Coke bottle and a bit wider in circumference”. The chargers can slide flat into the ground when not in use and can even be mowed over.

The most recent available data shows there were 10,311 electric vehicles registered in Victoria as of June 2021, up from 6749 the previous year.

Electric car chargers across the city have been plagued by ongoing faults and outages that providers have blamed on supply chain issues.

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Melbourne single mum struggling to pay extra $360 a month after RBA interest hike

A single mum’s “dream” of becoming a homeowner has become more like a nightmare as she struggles to survive amid the rising cost of living.

Jodi Cameron, 40, from Melbourne, currently has nothing in her bank account after building her house cost more than expected. She can’t even afford to complete the house, with her driveway unfinished because she ran out of cash.

On Tuesday afternoon, she was hit with more bad news; the Reserve Bank of Australia had increased interest rates again, for the fourth month in a row.

It means the single mum, with two daughters aged four and eight, must now fork out an extra $140 every month to pay back her mortgage.

In total, since the central bank started increasing interest rates in May, the family is now paying back an extra $360 a month — money it desperately needs.

“It’s just horrible,” Ms Cameron told news.com.au.

“I do find myself in a situation where paying rent and a mortgage and daycare fees, there’s nothing left.”

Currently, her savings account stands at $0, she said.

The mum worked throughout the Covid pandemic as a disability support worker and blames her current predicament on one thing — missing out on a government grant.

She had factored in receiving a $15,000 grant to help her build her own home but missed out, leaving her financially wrecked.

“I just wanted to own my own home,” Ms Cameron explained.

“It’s just disgusting, it’s so frustrating, I work my guts out, all I wanted was the great Australian dream.”

Her variable interest rate has gone up from 2.79 per cent to 4.5 per cent in the past three months, and is set to go up even further after the rate hike on Tuesday.

“I’m not on a fixed mortgage, I don’t know how I’m going to do it,” Ms Cameron said.

“I’m probably going to have to pull my [youngest] daughter out of daycare because I can’t afford daycare. That also means, how am I meant to work from home with a child?”

As a single mum with no family to fall back on, Ms Cameron had resigned herself to renting but in 2020, she was given hope that she might be able to break into the property market.

The federal government announced the HomeBuilder grant scheme in a bid to increase the disruption to the economy and the building sector during Covids, where eligible homeowners received $15,000 to form part of the payment for a building project for their primary residence.

Ms Cameron met all the criteria for the grant so bought a $263,000 block of land in Lang Lang, a regional town southeast of Melbourne, in August 2020 in the hopes of setting herself up financially for the future.

“I got on the low deposit scheme, I didn’t need a massive deposit,” she explained.

Then in March the following year, she signed a build contract which cost $300,000 for a four-bedroom, two-bathroom home.

She only needed a 5 per cent down payment for the land and the build contracts and was expecting the extra $15,000 from the grant to provide a helpful buffer to afford the progress payments.

But then she logged back onto the HomeBuilder online portal and was devastated to discover she had missed a key due date — which her broker and bank had never mentioned to her.

“I missed a portal cut off date that was never shown or advertised anywhere,” Ms Cameron lamented.

As a result, she was not able to be part of the scheme.

Near the end of her build, the mum ran out of funds and couldn’t afford to pay for a driveway.

“I’ve got no driveway, it’s just mud, I can’t afford it, it’s not nice to have that money you relied on ripped away from you,” she added.

“I owe the real estate the last month’s rent which I can’t pay.

“I assumed I would have this $15,000 to help me out, I don’t have it. This grant meant a lot.”

The mum is now waiting with bated breath as the Reserve Bank is expected to keep hiking interest rates till the end of the year.

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Sydney and Melbourne airport chaos as dozens of travelers told to expect huge queues and delays

Airport chaos as 20 flights from Melbourne and 21 out of Sydney are canceled due to ‘domino effect’ from Qantas IT glitch – causing massive queues through terminals

  • Chaos at Melbourne Airport with huge queues stretching across the terminal
  • Similar scenes at Sydney Airport on Monday as 21 domestic flights canceled
  • Delays come after Qantas flights grounded due to IT glitch on Sunday night
  • Weary passengers took to social media to complain about widespread delays

Dozens of travelers at Sydney and Melbourne Airport have been warned to expect long queues, delays and cancellations just hours after an IT glitch.

Passengers were confronted with chaotic scenes at the airport on Monday morning with lines seen stretching all the way to the international terminal.

Queues also formed at the airport’s service desk after 20 domestic flights were canceled leaving travelers scrambling to book another flight.

Similar scenes unfolded at Sydney Airport where 21 domestic flights were scrapped across four airlines throwing the travel plans of hundreds into disarray.

Dozens of travelers at Melbourne Airport have been warned to expect delays as giant queues are seen snaking across the terminal on Monday morning (pictured)

Dozens of travelers at Melbourne Airport have been warned to expect delays as giant queues are seen snaking across the terminal on Monday morning (pictured)

Qantas, Virgin Australia, Jetstar and REX have canceled flights out of Sydney with some frustrated travelers receiving just a few hours notice.

Virgin Australia axed 10 flights, Qantas canceled eight, with two flights dropped by Virgin and Rex dumping one.

In Melbourne, Qantas dropped seven flights, five from Emirates and Virgin Australia, two from American Airlines and one from British Airways.

The canceled flights at both airports were between 6:30am and 7pm on Monday.

It’s understood the flights were canceled to and from Sydney due to operational reasons, including resourcing challenges and engineering requirements.

The delays come just hours after the travel plans of thousands of Qantas passengers were disrupted by a nationwide computer glitch.

Hundreds were left waiting onboard grounded plans on runways across the country on Sunday night after an IT glitch delayed up to a dozen domestic flights.

Frustrated passengers took to social media to vent their frustration

Frustrated passengers took to social media to vent their frustration

Hundreds of passengers spent hours in airport lounges waiting to board delayed flights

Hundreds of passengers spent hours in airport lounges waiting to board delayed flights

The computer glitch has also impacted flights trying to take off across New Zealand

The computer glitch has also impacted flights trying to take off across New Zealand

Qantas said the issue was discovered at about 4:30pm on Sunday and had impacted 12 domestic flights with some grounded for nearly two hours. The glitch was fixed at about 6pm but caused flow-on delays throughout the evening.

Furious travelers keen to get home in time for the start of the working week took to social media to vent about the delays.

‘Any update on your international computer outage impacting every single flight from departing???? Sitting on fully packed plane on tarmac for 90mins for 2hr is pretty ridiculous!’ one grounded traveler smoked on Twitter.

The computer glitch has also affected Qantas flights across the Tasman trying to take off in New Zealand.

‘Still waiting at 7pm to leave on my Qantas plane from Auckland that was meant to leave at 5.40. Paperwork still has to be signed off,’ one traveler wrote.

Wet weather as well as a surge in flu and Covid cases for airline staff have been blamed for the pattern of delays and cancellations in Sydney and Melbourne.

Passengers were confronted with chaotic scenes at the airport on Monday morning with lines seen stretching all the way to the international terminal (pictured)

Passengers were confronted with chaotic scenes at the airport on Monday morning with lines seen stretching all the way to the international terminal (pictured)

The latest blunder comes on the back of a tough year for Qantas, with travelers reporting long delays, lost luggage and problems with customer service.

Qantas has cut more flights from its schedule as the airline is plagued with industrial disputes, understaffing, poor organisation, cancellations and delays as furious passengers share their horror experiences of traveling with the national carrier.

The news prompted Qantas Domestic and International CEO Andrew David to issue an on-air apology and vow to do better in the future.

‘Let me start by saying an apology to all your listeners. We are the national carrier, people have high expectations of us, we have high expectations of ourselves and clearly over the last few months we have not been delivering what we did pre-Covid,’ he told 2GB’s Ben Fordham last week.

Mr David confirmed Qantas had ‘reduced some of our flying this month’ and was ‘planning to do the same next month’ amidst ‘operational pressures’.

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Expert who says he invented Bitcoin wins just £1 in damages for giving ‘deliberately false’ evidence

A computer expert who claims to have invented the digital currency Bitcoin has been awarded just £1 in damages after he gave ‘deliberately false’ evidence in a High Court defamation case.

Australian Dr Craig Wright, purportedly Bitcoin creator ‘Satoshi Nakamoto’, sued blogger Peter McCormack for libel over a series of tweets in 2019 that alleged his claim to be the enigmatic inventor was fraudulent.

In a ruling on Monday, Mr Justice Chamberlain concluded the tweets, and a video discussion broadcast on YouTube where Mr McCormack made similar claims, had caused ‘serious harm’ to Dr Wright’s reputation.

But the High Court judge limited Dr Wright’s damages to £1 after he put forward a ‘deliberately false’ case over being disinvited from academic conferences because of the tweets until days before the libel trial in May.

In the tweets made between March and August 2019, Mr McCormack, a podcaster specializing in content about cryptocurrencies, alleged that ‘Craig Wright is not Satoshi’ and is ‘a fraud’.

Australian Dr Craig Wright (pictured), purportedly Bitcoin creator 'Satoshi Nakamoto', sued blogger Peter McCormack for libel over a series of tweets in 2019 that alleged his claim to be the enigmatic inventor was fraudulent

Australian Dr Craig Wright (pictured), purportedly Bitcoin creator ‘Satoshi Nakamoto’, sued blogger Peter McCormack for libel over a series of tweets in 2019 that alleged his claim to be the enigmatic inventor was fraudulent

Amid complaints from Dr Wright’s solicitors, he tweeted in response: ‘Let’s go to court.’

In the lead-up to the libel trial, Dr Wright initially argued that he had been invited to speak at numerous conferences after the successful submission of academic papers for blind peer review, but that 10 invites were withdrawn following Mr McCormack’s tweets.

This included alleged potential appearances at events in France, Vietnam, the US, Canada and Portugal.

But Mr McCormack submitted evidence from academics challenging Dr Wright’s claims which were dropped from his case at the trial in May.

Dr Wright later accepted that some of his evidence was ‘wrong’ but that this was ‘inadvertent’, Mr Justice Chamberlain said.

The judge noted that there was ‘no documentary evidence’ that Dr Wright had a paper accepted at any of the conferences identified in the earlier version of his libel claim, nor that he received an invitation to speak at them except possibly one and nor that any invitation was withdrawn.

In a ruling on Monday, Mr Justice Chamberlain concluded the tweets, and a video discussion broadcast on YouTube where Mr McCormack (above) made similar claims, had caused 'serious harm' to Dr Wright's reputation

In a ruling on Monday, Mr Justice Chamberlain concluded the tweets, and a video discussion broadcast on YouTube where Mr McCormack (above) made similar claims, had caused ‘serious harm’ to Dr Wright’s reputation

Dr Wright’s explanation for abandoning this part of his case because the alleged damage to his reputation from the ‘disinvitations’ was outside England and Wales ‘does not withstand scrutiny’, the judge added.

He concluded that ‘Dr Wright’s original case on serious harm, and the evidence supporting it, both of which were maintained until days before trial, were deliberately false’.

Lawyers for Mr McCormack argued at trial that his tweets were made in ‘flippant and light-hearted terms’ and were in response to posts by Calvin Ayre, a Canadian businessman, ‘goading others into accusing Dr Wright of being a fraud’.

They also claimed there were ‘numerous other individuals who had posted the same allegations about Dr Wright’, Mr Justice Chamberlain explained in his ruling.

Lawyers also ‘relied upon attempts by Dr Wright to sell the rights to his life story as showing that he had not been hurt by the controversy surrounding his claim to be Satoshi and indeed was trying to exploit that controversy for gain’, the judge said.

But the High Court judge limited Dr Wright's damages to £1 after he put forward a 'deliberately false' case over being disinvited from academic conferences because of the tweets until days before the libel trial in May (stock image of bitcoin)

But the High Court judge limited Dr Wright’s damages to £1 after he put forward a ‘deliberately false’ case over being disinvited from academic conferences because of the tweets until days before the libel trial in May (stock image of bitcoin)

Mr Justice Chamberlain concluded that although the tweets were ‘flippant in tone’ they came from ‘a well-known podcaster and acknowledged expert in cryptocurrency’.

‘They were unequivocal in their meaning. Many people who read them would have known that there was a lively debate about whether Dr Wright was Satoshi, but some of them must have been influenced by reading Mr McCormack’s trenchantly expressed contribution to that debate,’ the judge continued.

‘The fact that he was willing to state his views so brazenly in response to threats of libel proceedings is likely to have made those who read them more, not less, likely to believe them.’

But the judge said that Dr Wright’s pre-trial case over the serious harm to his reputation made it ‘unconscionable’ that he should receive ‘any more than nominal damages’.

The judge said the identity of Satoshi Nakamoto was not an issue he had to determine in his ruling as Mr McCormack had earlier abandoned a defense of truth in his case.

CoinDesk reported that Dr Wright’s lawyers distributed a statement which read: ‘I intend to appeal the adverse findings of the judgment in which my evidence was clearly misunderstood.’

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New Toyota Land Cruiser Prado Matte Black Edition Launches In Japan

The Toyota Land Cruiser Prado soldiers on, and it’s now available in a new Matte Black Edition in Japan. This follows the 70th Anniversary Edition that launched last year, just before the new Land Cruiser debuted.

The new Matte Black Edition doesn’t add any performance upgrades, but it does spice up the SUV’s styling. Toyota adds matte black trim pieces all around, including the grille and grille insert, the fog light bezels, and the headlight garnish. The SUV also receives six-spoke 18-inch matte black aluminum wheels.

The updates aren’t significant as the aging SUV needs a significant overhaul. It’s smaller than the Land Cruiser, which entered a new generation last year and went on sale for the 2010 model year. The SUV market has significantly changed since then, and a new LC Prado could be on the horizon.

Toyota launched the all-new Land Cruiser LC300 last year, giving the model all-new underpinnings in the form of Toyota’s TNGA platform. The SUV received a major styling overhaul and a massively revamped interior that aligned the model with the rest of the SUV segment. We expect the Land Cruiser’s new platform to underpin the revamped Land Cruiser Prado whenever the updated version arrives.

The Land Cruiser Prado is exclusively available in either white or black. The new trim does not change the SUV’s powertrain, which appears to continue offering either the 201-horsepower (149-kilowatt) 2.8-liter diesel or the 163-hp (121 kW) 2.7-liter gasoline engine. Power hits all four wheels through a six-speed automatic gearbox.

Toyota is selling the Land Cruiser Prado Matte Black Edition for ¥4.3 to ¥5.1 million ($32,662 to $38,739 at today’s exchange rates). The Land Cruiser Prado is similar to the Lexus GX available in the US. It’s smaller than the standard Land Cruiser and designed to be a little less rugged than its full-blown sibling.

save over $3,400 on average off MSRP* on a new Toyota Land Cruiser

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Australian Investment Council hires from Macquarie for new CEO

Private equity and venture capital industry body Australian Investment Council has appointed Macquarie Group’s Navleen Prasad as its new chief executive officer.

Prasad, who’s expected to start the top job in November, spent almost two decades at Macquarie in a number of roles, most recently head of government and external relations.

AIC chair Alicia Gregory (pictured) said new CEO Navleen Prasad offered strong policy, government and communications credentials. Louise Kennerley

AIC chairperson Alicia Gregory said Prasad had an “outstanding” understanding of the investment management industry. “In a constantly changing environment, Navleen’s skills, experience and fresh perspectives will be highly valued.”

Prasad said it was an honor to work for AIC’s membership base, which she noted invested $28 billion in 2021 and had a further $10 billion ready to deploy.

“Private capital plays a critical role in Australia’s economy through funding innovation, enabling entrepreneurship, creating jobs, investing in services which communities need to prosper, and helping to address profound challenges such as climate change,” Prasad said.

She replaces Yasser El-Ansary, who left AIC to head the Financial Services Institute of Australasia (FINSIA).