Business
Evans Dixon chief confirms related party fee pivot – The Australian Financial Review
Evans Dixon says it is pivoting away from related party fees as revenues slide.

That raised concerns about conflicts of interest that arose due to Dixon Advisory’s vertically integrated model as clients that sought advice were heavily invested in expensive and under-performing in-house products.
Among them was the US Masters Residential Fund, or URF, that once again wrote down the value of its assets this week. .
In the full year presentation, the new strategy was described as a “pivot away from related revenue” which the company said had impacted the full year result.
T…
-
Noosa News24 hours ago
Terrifying break-in at childcare centre on Sunshine Coast ends with death of man
-
Noosa News21 hours ago
ADF to introduce billion-dollar drone dome over Brisbane 2032
-
General19 hours ago
Queensland government strikes new deal with Bravus to defer royalties, expand Carmichael coal mine
-
Business24 hours ago
Everything you need to know about the BHP dividend