Plus: Meta shares fall as FT flags mega share sale ahead; SpaceX USD75b IPO already oversubscribed; Blowout jobs number cements Fed hike bets before year end.
Laurel Henning
Laurel joined Capital Brief from MLex where she spent a decade covering topics ranging from competition law and data privacy to white collar crime and criminal cartels. She also spent five years in Brussels covering European energy and climate policies.
Contact Laurel via email or Signal.
Plus: SpaceX files Australian Prospectus; Musk kicks off record roadshow, Goldman pitches 100-fold AI revenue growth; Blackstone latest to cap withdrawals as private credit stress spreads.
Plus: Trump proposes 12.5% tariff on Australia; Iranian strikes Kuwait airport killing one; Wall Street snaps winning streak as oil rises and private credit cracks.
Plus: RBA reviews KPMG whistleblower hotline as scandal spirals; SpaceX squeezes bankers with sub-0.75% IPO underwriting fees: Bloomberg; Goldman’s Solomon warns greed is beating fear.
Plus: Nvidia re-enters PC market with AI chip challenging Intel, Qualcomm; Elliott in golden Northern Star raid; Trump says Israel and Hezbollah agreed to halt attacks.
Ashurst partner and regional head for Australia, Lea Constantine, explains the firm’s expansion of its Risk Advisory service — and why it’s here to stay.
The Coalition’s nuclear-energy plans have seen international firms in Australia face a flurry of client queries and lean on in-house experts overseas.
US legal debates on diversity, equity and inclusion programs are being watched closely by law firms in Australia. But no one really wants to discuss it.
Newly released court documents for the first time detail why EVP made the extraordinary decision to call police on its own portfolio company.
The corporate watchdog's findings on super funds' poor handling of death benefit claims highlights the growing risks facing directors and executives operating in Australia's $4 trillion retirement savings sector.
Meta has pushed back against a Treasury request for feedback on whether social media should be prioritised under proposed digital competition rules.
TikTok has used its response to consultation over Treasury's 'ex-ante' digital competition regime to take a swipe at YouTube and Google.
After months of relative silence on non-competes, the Albanese government used its budget to announce a ban. But will it change anything?