Business
Are you buying the companies of the past, or the future?

I got on a train, this morning.
In more normal times, that isn’t newsworthy.
But a check of my Opal card activity (I’m based in NSW) confirmed what I expected: I hadn’t used it since February 20, last year.
It is – like the half-price face masks on special when I was at Woolies yesterday – a reminder that life, in Australia at least, is getting back to something approaching normal.
Yes, the train carriage was emptier.
Yes, I expect the city to be less busy than last time I made a peak-hour visit to the CBD.
And yes, we’re only 2 weeks into the post-JobKeeper world, and I’m sure there are second-order effects yet to be felt.
And yet, it feels pretty normal.
I know that’s tempting fate.
I know we’re only one hotel…
-
General21 hours ago
Footballers and movie stars: PM’s Shanghai tourism push
-
Business20 hours ago
Nvidia reaches the $4 trillion mark. Can it hit $5 trillion in 2025?
-
Business19 hours ago
This artificial intelligence (AI) and “Magnificent Seven” stock will be the next company to surpass a $3 trillion market cap by the end of 2025
-
General18 hours ago
‘Hidden and radical’ power of First Nations women unlocked in big hART’s Punkaliyarra project