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Markets,
News, Biz, Mining, Energy, Politics: Australia and
World
November
2025
Nov
28
Heavy
Industry News
Mack
Trucks wins Media Man 'Truck Manufacturer Of The
Month' award
Caterpillar
wins Media Man 'Heavy Equipment Manufacturer Of
The Month' award
Bingo
Industries wins Media Man 'Construction Brand Of
The Month' award
Elders
wins Media Man 'Agribusiness Of The Month' award
Landman
wins Media Man 'Streaming Series Of The Month' award
(Oil/mining industry based story via Paramount Plus)
Jim's
Mowing wins Media Man 'Franchise Of The Month' award
News
Markets
Australian
Dollar: $0.6529 USD (up 0.0009 USD)
Iron Ore: $106.70 USD (up $0.10 USD)
Oil: $59.10 USD (up $0.40 USD)
Gold: $4,157.44 USD (down $8.15 USD)
Copper: $5.1625 USD (down $0.0410 USD)
Bitcoin: $91,056.34 -0.12%
Dow Jones: 47,427.12 (closed for Turkey Day)
News
Labor
urged to bite the bullet on energy bills
Treasurer
Jim Chalmers recently indicated that the federal
government has yet to decide whether to extend its
electricity bill rebates beyond December 2025. The
rebate was introduced in 2023 and extended by six
months in the March budget. The expiry of state
energy rebates contributed to the higher-than-expected
3.8 per cent headline inflation rate in the year
to October. Economists have urged the government
to end the rebates, contending that they have a
distortionary impact on inflation and have cost
the federal budget about $6.8bn to date. Challenger's
chief economist Jonathan Kearns notes that rebates
also risk lifting expectations of higher inflation;
indeed, ANZ-Roy Morgan Inflation Expectations have
risen to a two-year high. (RMS)
News
ASX
up as tech stocks rally, WiseTech gains
The
Australian sharemarket posted a modest gain on Thursday,
with lower trading volumes ahead of Wall Street's
closure for Thanksgiving Day; the S&P/ASX 200
added 0.1 per cent to close at 8,617.3 points. WiseTech
Global was up 6.9 per cent at $69.72, Bellevue Gold
rose 3.2 per cent to $1.29 and Reece advanced four
per cent to $12.73. However, DroneShield was down
7.8 per cent at $2 and Santos fell 1.8 per cent
to end the session at $6.44. (RMS)
News
What
bubble? AI investors double down
Australian
technology investors have used a slump on the US
Nasdaq earlier in the month to boost their exposure
to the artificial intelligence sector. Those investors
included Munro Partners, which has topped up its
exposure to Nvidia, Alphabet and Taiwan Semiconductor,
while Loftus Peak's holdings of US tech stocks include
Amazon, Microsoft, Nvidia and Taiwan Semiconductor.
For his part, Joseph Ziller from Ziller Funds Management
says he avoids AI stocks that are not creating value
today from their huge capital expenditure. (RMS)
News
Snowy
Hydro signs renewable power deals
Snowy
Hydro will announce today that it has signed a 15-year
deal to purchase power from a wind farm in South
Australia that is being developed by Aula Energy,
and which Rystad Energy says could cost between
$810 million and $945 million. In addition to the
deal with Aula Energy, Snowy Hydro will also announce
that it has entered into a 15-year contract with
French-backed TagEnergy to access 105 megawatts
of capacity at the Golden Plains storage battery,
which will be located alongside a large wind farm
site near Geelong in Victoria. (RMS)
News
Tech
giants target roadblocks to AI spending
Australian
Bureau of Statistics figures shows that investment
in machinery and equipment by IT firms in the September
quarter came in at $2.8 billion, which was double
the previous record of $1.4 billion set in the previous
quarter. The figure includes investment in routers,
cooling towers and servers used to construct data
centres, and technology companies such as Microsoft
and TikTok, along with data centre operators such
as NextDC and AirTrunk, have got together to form
Data Centres Australia. It will lobby for reforms
to energy, water and planning approval and copyright
laws, so as to encourage investment in AI-linked
investment. (RMS)
News
Atlassians
resist Allan's crusade
Atlassian
is expanding its operations in Victoria, where Premier
Jacinta Allan wants to legislate the right to work
from home two days a week for private and public
sector employees. Although he is an advocate of
hybrid work arrangements and once stated that his
employees can work from anywhere, Atlassian co-founder
Mike Cannon-Brookes is against the idea of work-from-home
mandates, believing that flexible work arrangements
should be up to business to decide. As to the future
of the Australian tech sector, Cannon-Brooke is
very optimistic, even though the federal government
seems set to fail in its target for the nation to
employ 1.2 million tech workers by the end of the
decade. (RMS)
News
Online
out to pasture as Tabcorp bets big on pub and club
punters
Tabcorp
CEO Gillon McLachlan announced a major shakeup of
its retail wagering operations earlier in the yea
with McLachlan ditching a strategy by his predecessor
that was heavily focused on internet betting growth.
McLachlan instead plans to focus on punters in clubs
and pubs, where it has an advantage over rivals
such as Sportsbet and Ladbrokes. Its new strategy
will see it pay pubs and clubs hundreds of thousands
of dollars to help entice punters to gamble in their
venues, while it will allocate $50 million to pay
for bonus bets and other inducements for gamblers
in pubs and clubs. (RMS)
News
High
Court challengers of teen social media ban want
Musk, Google to fund case
A
group called the Digital Freedom Project is challenging
the federal government's under-16 social media ban
in the High Court, with the plaintiffs in the challenge
being teenage children of members of the group.
The group's president is NSW Libertarian Party MP
John Ruddick, who is encouraging the big tech companies
to fund its challenge, while he says it should be
the responsibility of parents to be aware of what
their children are doing online and to educate them
about the harms of social media. Minister for Communications
Anika Wells told parliament on Wednesday the government
was committed to the ban, and that it will not be
intimidated by legal challenges. (RMS)
News
Cricket's
shot at $1.2bn Big Bash prize
Cricket
Australia is aiming to partially privatise the Big
Bash League, although it will need the consent of
the various state cricket bodies. There are currently
eight teams in the BBL, with Cricket Australia hoping
to expand it to 10 teams; it has placed a value
of $1.2 billion on a 10-team BBL, meaning that it
stands to make a $600 million windfall if its plans
go ahead. Most potential bidders are likely to come
from India, with Cricket Australia not optimistic
that local buyers would be able to meet its asking
price. (RMS)
News
Critical
minerals rise from waste ashes
Latrobe
Magnesium recently received a letter of interest
from the US Export-Import Bank, which offered to
provide up to $US122m ($187m) to help build a magnesium
plant in Victoria. Latrobe CEO David Paterson says
China accounts for about 90 per cent of the global
supply of magnesium, which is vital to the manufacture
of electric vehicles and military aircraft. Latrobe's
technology can convert the fly ash produced by coal-fired
power stations into magnesium oxide. It has built
a demonstration plant near the site of the defunct
Hazelwood power station, and the funding from the
US export credit agency will be used to build a
commercial plant. (RMS)
News
Mineral
explorers bounce on 81pc funding surge
Data
from advisory firm BDO shows that the 739 pre-revenue
minerals exploration companies on the ASX raised
more than $3.49bn in total during the September
quarter. This is 81 per cent higher than the June
quarter, and Sherif Andrawes from BDO expects this
growth to continue. Meanwhile, total exploration
expenditure by pre-revenue companies rose by 16
per cent to a two-year high of $843.6m in the September
quarter, while the average cash balance of mineral
explorers increased by 20 per cent to $11m. Andrawes
anticipates strong IPO activity among pre-revenue
explorers in the December quarter. (RMS)
News
Palmer's
Covid drug donation behind tax dispute
Clive
Palmer is in a dispute with the Australian Taxation
Office over a purchase he made of a shipment of
the antimalarial drug hydroxychloroquine during
the COVID-19 pandemic. He is seeking a tax deduction
of almost $13m for his purchase, which was made
at a time when US President Donald Trump was
promoting hydroxychloroquine as a way of combatting
COVID-19, with Palmer claiming his deduction as
a donation for defending Australia, although the
drug was never distributed. (RMS)
News
'How
far is it going to escalate?' Fear Santos gas plan
in Beetaloo basin could be start of NT fracking
rush
Gas
and oil company Santos has announced plans to drill
12 fracking wells at Tanumbirini Station, which
is a large cattle station in the Northern Territory's
Beetaloo basin. Environment Centre NT executive
director Dr Kirsty Howey is worried that if Santos's
plans lead to to full-scale production, that over
6,000 wells could be drilled through "our precious
aquifers, polluting our groundwater with toxic chemicals",
with ninety percent of the NT's water supply coming
from groundwater. Howey says Santos should be a
"good corporate citizen" and refer its
proposal to be assessed under federal environment
laws.
News
LNG
levy proposal scared producers
The
federal government is reviewing Australia's east
coast gas market, with it being understood that
it was considering a levy on east coast LNG exporters
at one stage. However, while that idea appears to
have been shelved and the government looks set to
have settled on a gas reservation-style scheme,
the fact that the government was even considering
a levy has sparked concern among the gas industry
about the extent to which the government is prepared
to intervene in the sector. (RMS)
News
Smelters
become a test case for bailouts
Glencore
and Nyrstar are among the companies that have received
financial assistance from federal and state governments
to keep their ageing Australian smelters operating.
China's dominance of the critical minerals sector
has underlined the importance of continuing to produce
metals such as copper and zinc in Australia. Nyrstar's
lead smelter at Port Pirie and its zinc smelter
in Hobart can potentially be upgraded to produce
critical minerals such as antimony, bismuth, tellurium,
germanium and indium; these metals are crucial to
Australia's economic and security equation, particularly
in the wake of the recent critical minerals agreement
with the US. (RMS)
News
Crisafulli
denies favouritism amid mine deals
Harmony
Gold's Eva Copper Mine has received an undislosed
financial incentive from the Queensland government's
Northwest Energy Fund. However, two coal projects
in the state have received no financial assistance
from the government. Premier David Crisafulli has
rejected suggestions that the government is favouring
critical minerals over coal, arguing that it is
providing the coal industry with certainty with
regard to regulation and taxation; the government
has previously been criticised for retaining its
Labor predecessor's controversial coal royalty regime.
Crisafulli adds that the Eva Copper Mine will help
ensure that Glencore's Mount Isa smelter remains
viable. (Roy Morgan Summary)
News
ASX
rally tempers on CPI shock; miners rise
The
Australian sharemarket posted a sold gain on Wednesday,
despite a pullback in response to data showing that
inflation rose to a higher-than-expected 3.8 per
cent in the year to October. The S&P/ASX 200
added 0.8 per cent to close at 8,606.5 points, having
risen by about 1.2 per cent before the monthly CPI
data was released. BHP was up two per cent at $41.80,
Pilbara Minerals rose 7.2 per cent to $4.04 and
Ramsay Health Care advanced 3.8 per cent to $37.32.
However, Temple & Webster shed 32.3 per cent
to end the session at $13.83. (RMS)
News
Fortescue,
former execs settle with each side to pay costs
The
terms of a settlement between Fortescue and three
former executives will remain confidential, after
all parties to the legal dispute agreed to take
no further action. Michael Masterman, Bart Kolodziejczyk
and Bjorn Winther-Jensen had been accused of using
Fortescue's proprietary information when they left
to establish a rival 'green' iron company called
Element Zero in 2022. Fortescue commenced legal
action in April 2024, and attracted criticism for
hiring private detectives to undertake surveillance
on the three former employees and their families.
Element Zero's green iron plant in Perth will be
formally opened by Premier Roger Cook today. (RMS)
News
The
rare earths race is on
China
has spent unlimited money to develop the world's
best technology to produce heavy rare earths, while
the French have developed rival technology that
is not as good and is far more expensive. Meanwhile,
Sinosteel's $100m pilot plant in Western Australia
to process ore from Northern Minerals' Browns Range
rare earth project is likely to remain idle, as
Northern Minerals intends to build a new plant at
Browns Range with financial support from the US
Export-Import Bank. Haoma Mining's Bamboo Creek
heavy rare earths deposit is also a threat to China's
dominance of the sector; its Elazac process is now
being used to extract gold and platinum from the
Bamboo Creek material, and it could become a rival
to the Chinese and French technology for extracting
heavy rare earths such as terbium. (RMS)
Nov
26
News
Haoma
Mining: Chairman's Presentation to shareholders
Haoma
Mining NL Announcements
Haoma
Mining held its Annual General Meeting at Tonic
House in Melbourne on 26 November. Chairman Gary
Morgan updated shareholders on Haoma's major activities
in the Pilbara region of Western Australia, including
the use of the Elazac process to produce gold bullion
at the Bamboo Creek Pilot Plant, as well as its
Pilbara Heavy Rare Earth discovery. Shareholders
were also updated on progress at the Pirra Lithium
exploration joint venture between Haoma and SQM
Australia, as well as activities at Haoma's Top
Camp Roadhouse and Caravan Park at Ravenswood in
Queensland. (Roy Morgan Summary)
Lead
Up
Nov
25
Big
super's $110m stake in 'blood oil'
Australian
Federation of Ukrainian Organisations chair Kateryna
Argyrou says Australia's superannuation funds should
divest their stakes in companies such as India's
Reliance Industries. Argyrou's comments follow the
revelation that Reliance has profited from refining
sanctioned Russian crude oil and exporting the resulting
fuels into markets such as Australia. The nation's
four largest super funds have invested nearly $110
million in Reliance; they include AustralianSuper
and the Australian Retirement Trust. (RMS)
Nov
25
Markets
Australian
Dollar: $0.6462 USD (up 0.0009 USD)
Iron Ore: $105.00 USD (up $0.75 USD)
Oil: $58.84 USD (up $0.78 USD)
Gold: $4,123.68 USD (up $58.41 USD)
Copper: $4.9890 USD (down $0.0070 USD)
Dow Jones: 46,478.79 (up 233.38 points)
Bitcoin: $88,103.67 +1.47%
News
Force
miners to sell local: smelter owner
Nyrstar
Australia's CEO Matt Howell says the federal government
should consider implementing a domestic minerals
reservation scheme. It would work in much the same
way as the proposed domestic gas reservation scheme,
and require mining companies to sell a portion of
their mineral ore to Australian refinery operators.
The future of facilities such as Nyrstar's Port
Pirie lead smelter and its Hobart zinc smelter have
been under scrutiny, prompting federal and state
government assistance. However, Howell's proposal
has been dismissed by Minerals Council of Australia
CEO Tania Constable, who has cautioned against government
intervention in the minerals market. (RMS)
News
'Our
gas, our prices': Ed Husic breaks ranks with Labor
to demand an end to 'profiteering' by exporters
Former
Labor industry minister Ed Husic has backed a motion
by independent MP Nicolette Boele regarding east
coast gas prices. The motion calls on the federal
government to "only allow uncontracted gas
to be exported after it has been offered to the
domestic market at a reasonable price", with
Boele saying Australia does not have a gas supply
problem, but rather a gas export problem. Calling
for stronger action against what he labels 'profiteering'
gas exporters, Husic contends that "our gas,
our prices: that should be the bedrock of our thinking.
(Roy Morgan Summary)
News
ASX
to rally in 2026 on mining bounce: UBS
The
benchmark S&P/ASX 200 has retreated from the
record high of 9,904 points in recent weeks, having
closed at 8,525.1 yesterday. However, Richard Schellbach
from UBS is upbeat about the outlook for the local
bourse, forecasting that the ASX 200 will top 8,900
points again by the end of 2026. Schellbach says
there are expectations that earning growth will
exceed 10 per cent in 2026; he adds that although
this will be driven by the resources sector, there
will be earnings growth across the broader sharemarket.
(RMS/AFR)
News
BHP
drops second tilt at rival Anglo
BHP
has advised that it has held preliminary discussions
with Anglo American's board regarding a potential
merger, but says it is no longer considering a bid
for its London-based rival. BHP abandoned a previous
takeover bid for Anglo American in 2024, and the
company says it is still of the view that a merger
would have "strong strategic merits" and
create significant value for all stakeholders. BHP
has indicated that it will instead focus on its
organic growth strategy. Meanwhile, the latest aborted
bid for Anglo has prompted speculation that Rio
Tinto could pursue growth via acquisitions. (RMS)
News
Rinehart
puts blowtorch on Rio Tinto, BHP over net zero spending
Hancock
Prospecting's executive chair Gina Rinehart has
criticised major resources groups for spending billions
of dollars on reducing carbon emissions. Rinehart
singled out BHP and Rio Tinto in her speech to mark
National Mining Day; BHP is expected to spend up
to $500m on reducing emissions over the next five
years, while Rio Tinto has committed to halving
its emissions by 2030 at a cost of $US5bn over 10
years. Rinehart contended that the dividends of
BHP and Rio Tinto shareholders are being "sacrificed
on the green altar". The speech was written
by Rinehart but delivered by Hancock Iron Ore's
CEO Gerhard Veldsman via a video message. (RMS)
News
Lithium
prices slide on Chinese mine restart
The
price of lithium fell sharply on Friday, in response
to media reports that China-based Contemporary Amperex
Technology could potentially resume production at
its Jianxiawo mine in early December. Data from
S&P Global Platts shows that the price of spodumene
- the type of lithium that is mined in Australia
- fell by 8.3 per cent to $US1,135 a tonne; the
price of lithium carbonate in turn fell by nine
per cent to 91,020 yuan on the Guangzhou Futures
Exchange. The downturn prompted a fall in the share
prices of Australian lithium producers on Monday.
(Roy Morgan Summary)
News
Santos
hit by delay on Narrabri gas ruling
Santos
has received another setback in its long-running
bid to proceed with the Narrabri gas project in
NSW. A two-day hearing on the Gomeroi people's appeal
against a Native Title Tribunal ruling on the project
had been scheduled to begin in the Federal Court
this week; however, Justice Natalie Charlesworth
recused herself from the case because an associate
had worked for Santos on secondment on two separate
occasions. Another judge is not available to hear
the case, so the traditional owners' appeal has
been pushed back to March 2026. (RMS)
News
Nov
24
UK
launches critical minerals strategy to reduce dependency
on China
British
Prime Minister Keir Starmer has announced a critical
minerals and rare earths strategy, with the strategy
aimed at reducing the UK's dependency on China.
It includes a Stg50 million fund to boost production
at tungsten and lithium mines in Cornwall. Europe's
largest deposits of lithium are in Cornwall, while
the EU has previously singled out the county's tungsten
mine for potential financial support. The strategy
follows a six-week standoff between China and the
EU over the supply of chips used in the car sector,
while it seeks to ensure no more than 60% of any
one critical mineral comes from a single partner
country by 2035; the British government also wants
to produce at least 50,000 tonnes of lithium in
the UK by the same year. (Roy Morgan Summary)
News
Pop
Culture
Gold
Movie
Gold
is a 2016 American epic crime drama film directed
by Stephen Gaghan and written by Patrick Massett
and John Zinman. The film stars Matthew McConaughey,
Édgar Ramírez, Bryce Dallas Howard,
Corey Stoll, Toby Kebbell, Craig T. Nelson, Stacy
Keach and Bruce Greenwood. The film is loosely based
on the true story of the 1997 Bre-X mining scandal,
when a massive gold deposit was supposedly discovered
in the jungles of Indonesia; however, for legal
reasons and to enhance the appeal of the film, character
names and story details were changed.
Trailer
Gold
(YouTube Movies and TV)
https://youtube.com/watch?v=yc0S96OZhi0
Gold
is the epic tale of one man's pursuit of the American
dream, to discover gold. Starring Oscar® winner
Matthew McConaughey (Interstellar, Dallas Buyers
Club, The Wolf Of Wall Street) as Kenny Wells, a
modern day prospector desperate for a lucky break,
he teams up with a similarly eager geologist and
sets off on an amazing journey to find gold in the
uncharted jungle of Indonesia. Getting the gold
was hard, but keeping it would be even harder, sparking
an adventure through the most powerful boardrooms
of Wall Street. The film is inspired by a true story.
News
Citizen
Kane (1941)
Directed
by Orson Welles | Written by Orson Welles &
Herman J. Mankiewicz | Cinematography by Gregg TolandWhy
its considered one of the greatest films ever
made:
Revolutionary
storytelling: Non-linear structure jumping through
multiple perspectives and timelines decades
before it became common.
Iconic
moments/lines:
Rosebud
The
campaign speech with the giant Kane poster
The
slow push-in on young Charlie playing in the snow
as his future is decided
Old
age
its the only disease, Mr. Thompson,
that you dont look forward to being cured
of. (Bernstein)
News
Salt
of the Earth (1954
Mexican
workers at a zinc mine call a general strike. It
is only through the solidarity of the workers, and
importantly the indomitable resolve of their wives,
mothers, and daughters, that they eventually triumph.
Best
Quotes
The
best and biggest gold mine is in between your ears."
"You
are a gold mine of potential power. You have to
dig to find it and make it real."
"Your
mind is like a gold mine, if you dig deep you will
find something golden."
"Don't
die without mining the gold in your mind."
"We're
like goldfields. Until we dig deep to find what's
inside us, our true potentials may be hidden forever."
"If
you want to find gold, you've got to love the process
of digging."
"Even
if you're sitting on a gold mine, you still have
to dig."
"Develop
men the same way gold is mined"
"Don't
go into the mine looking for dirt; instead, go in
looking for the gold."
"A
prospector's job is to remove dirt as quickly as
possible"
"A
prospector who analyses every speck of dirt won't
find much gold"
"The
world is sitting on a gold mine but knows it not."
"Make new friends, but keep the old; Those
are silver, these are gold."
"All
that is gold does not glitter."
"Gold
is forever. It is beautiful, useful, and never wears
out"
"Gold
is the money of kings"
"Mining
is the art of exploiting mineral deposits at a profit.
An unprofitable mine is fit only for the sepulcher
of a dead mule."
"Anyone
can find the dirt in someone. Be the one that finds
the gold."
"True
gold fears no fire."
"The
desire of gold is not for gold. It is for the means
of freedom and benefit."
"Make
new friends, but keep the old; Those are silver,
these are gold."
"When
taken for granted, gold in one's hand is sometimes
considered like cheap copper so are people."
Media
Man
Roy
Morgan wins Media Man 'News Services Provider Of
The Month' award; Runner-ups: X, Google News, Yahoo!
Finance
businesswire.com
PR
Newswire
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Markets
and Commodities
October
17, 2024
Australian
Dollar: $0.6670 USD (down $0.0030 USD)
Iron
Ore Nov Spot Price (SGX): $104.55 USD (down $1.85
USD)
Oil
Price (WTI): $70.52 USD (down $0.39 USD)
Gold
Price: $2,673.95 USD (up $12.93 USD)
Copper
Price (CME): $4.3665 USD (up 0.0270 USD)
Bitcoin:
$67,856.42 USD (up 1.50% in last 24 hours)
Dow
Jones: 43,077.70 at 4.20pm NY time (up 337.28 points
on yesterday's close)


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Snapshot
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July
29, 2024
ASX
futures up 60 points or 0.8% to 7938 near 3am AEST
AUD
+0.2% to 65.48 US cents
Bitcoin
-0.6% to $US67,636
Dow
+1.6%
S&P
+1.1%
Nasdaq
+1%
FTSE
+1.2%
DAX
+0.7%
CAC
+1.2%
Gold
+1.0% to $US2387.19 an ounce
Brent
oil -1.5% to $US81.13 a barrel
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ore +2.5% to $US102.40 a tonne


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Elon
Musks X Files Antitrust Suit Against Global
Advertising Alliance
August
6, 2024

Elon
Musks social media platform X has launched
a significant antitrust lawsuit against the Global
Alliance for Responsible Media (GARM) and several
of its member companies, alleging an illegal ad
boycott that targeted the platform. The lawsuit,
filed in Texas, is aimed at GARM, its parent firm
World Federation of Advertisers (WFA), and members
including CVS Health, Mars, Orsted and Unilever.
In
an open letter to advertisers, X CEO Linda Yaccarino
highlighted the reasons behind the lawsuit, stating
that it was a direct response to GARMs actions
which allegedly cost the company billions of dollars.
This is not a decision we took lightly, but
it is a direct consequence of their actions,
Yaccarino wrote. The illegal behavior of these
organizations and their executives cost X billions
of dollars per The New York Post.
The
lawsuit is seeking trebled compensatory damages
and injunctive relief, according to a complaint
viewed by The New York Post. GARM, led by Robert
Rakowitz, is an initiative of the WFA, which represents
many of the worlds largest companies and ad
organizations, including Disney and Coca-Cola. Its
members control 90% of global marketing spending,
nearly $1 trillion per year.
Yaccarino
emphasized that the issue extends beyond financial
damages. This case is about more than damages
we have to fix a broken ecosystem that allows
this illegal activity to occur, she added.
According
to The New York Post, the suit argues that the boycott
undermined the marketplace of ideas by financially
harming certain viewpoints over others. (Credit:
PYMNTS)
Full
article and coverage via PYMNTS
https://pymnts.com/cpi-posts/elon-musks-x-files-antitrust-suit-against-global-advertising-alliance/
PYMNTS
is a former Media Man 'Business News Outlet Of The
Month' award winner and finalist
News
Elon
Musk takes GARM, several companies to court over
alleged advertising boycott of X outlined in bombshell
report
August
7, 2024

Tech
billionaire Elon Musk has taken several companies
and an advertising alliance to court over allegations
of a "boycott" of X.
Elon
Musk has waged war against advertisers
as his social media platform X filed an antitrust
lawsuit against a global ad alliance and several
major companies, accusing them of illegally boycotting
the site.
X
filed a suit in a federal court in Texas against
the World Federation of Advertisers (WFA), the Global
Alliance for Responsible Media (GARM) and its members
CVS Health, Mars, Orsted and Unilever.
The
suit comes after a report from the US House of Representatives
Judiciary Committee found GARM and its members directly
organised boycotts and employed other indirect
tactics to target disfavoured platforms, content
creators and news organisations to demonetise
them.
It
alleges that GARMs boycott led advertisers
to pull money from X under the guise of brand
safety concerns.
Xs
CEO Linda Yaccarino argued this tactic hindered
users on the social media platform from accessing
a wide breadth of ideas by funding alternative viewpoints.
The
consequence - perhaps the intent - of this boycott
was to seek to deprive Xs users, be they sports
fans, gamers, journalists, activists, parents or
political and corporate leaders, of the Global Town
Square, she wrote.
To
put it simply, people are hurt when the marketplace
of ideas is undermined and some viewpoints are not
funded over others as part of an illegal boycott.
Mr
Musk shared his colleagues statement to the
platform and boldly declared: We tried peace
for 2 years, now it is war.
He
later encouraged any company who has been
systematically boycotted to file a suit.
Following
his post, video sharing platform Rumble joined Mr
Musks lawsuit, claiming it has also been impacted
towards GARMs alleged skew away from right
wing voices and ideologies.
The
platform announced its move on X where it accused
GARM of being a conspiracy to perpetrate an
advertiser boycott of Rumble and others, and that's
illegal.
Since
Musk took over the social media platform in October
2022, X has suffered a serious dive in ad dollars
with the platform taking in US$2.5 billion in 2023,
according to Bloomberg.
This
was down from the US$1bn it was bringing in every
quarter of 2022.
Musk
triggered controversy again in November 2023 when
he endorsed an anti-Semitic conspiracy theory that
Jewish communities push hatred against whites.
The
X owner responded: You have said the actual
truth, sparking an advertiser exodus that
was reported to have lost the company as much as
$75m, per The New York Times.
He
made headlines again in the same month after blasting
advertisers boycotting the social media platform,
boldly declaring: Go f**k yourself.
If
somebody is going to try to blackmail me with advertising,
blackmail me with money, go f**k yourself. Go f**k
yourself. Is that clear? I hope it is, he
said. (Sky News Australia)
Full
article and coverage via Sky News Australia
https://www.skynews.com.au/business/media/elon-musk-takes-garm-several-companies-to-court-over-alleged-advertising-boycott-of-x-outlined-in-bombshell-report/news-story/7bac6243aada770042d14ca84afc23e7
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Market,
Commodities and Financial News Snapshot via Media
Man
August
7, 2024
Australian
Dollar: $0.6520 USD (up $0.0024 USD)
Iron
Ore Sep Spot Price (SGX): $102.85 USD (down $0.70
USD)
Oil
Price (WTI): $72.96 USD (down $1.02 USD)
Gold
Price: $2,389.45 USD (down $19.96 USD)
Copper
Price (CME): $4.0095 USD (up $0.0085 USD)
Bitcoin:
$56,485.71 USD (up 3.10% in last 24 hours)
Dow
Jones: 38,997.66 at 5.02pm NY time (up 294.39 points
on yesterday's close)
(Roy
Morgan Summary)
Business
News: Australia
(Roy
Morgan Summary)
ASX
to fall as investors await big tech earnings
July
22, 2024
Futures
pricing suggests that Australian equities will shed
about 0.8 per cent when the market opens on Monday,
following a negative lead from Wall Street. A dearth
of local economic data means that investors will
be focused on offshore markets over the coming week;
the quarterly reporting season in the US is likely
to attract scrutiny, with two of the seven major
technology companies set to release their latest
financial results in coming days. The S&P/ASX
200 fell 0.8 per cent to 7,961.6 points on Friday.
(Roy
Morgan Summary)
News
Lithium
stocks targeted by short sellers
Australian
Securities & Investments Commission data has
revealed that seven companies on the ASX had more
than 10 per cent of their shares reported as shorted
as at 12 July, compared to just one in the previous
year. Companies involved in the mining of lithium
and other materials used in the manufacture of electric
vehicles account for seven of the 10 most shorted
stocks on the ASX, with 21.06 per cent of Pilbara
Minerals shares reported as shorted. Oscar Oberg
from Wilson Asset Management says Pilbara Minerals'
reported short position is unheard of; he adds that
Pilbara Minerals is being shorted because demand
for electric vehicles is not as strong as had been
forecast.
News
Mortgage
cliff turns into a subsiding wave
PEXA
Group's chief economist Julie Toth believes that
the rush for Australians to refinance their mortgage
loans has peaked. She adds that rather than a 'mortgage
cliff', the nation has experienced only a 'wave'
as borrowers have shifted their loans to variable
interest rates after their fixed-loan period expired.
Toth adds that there has been a slight increase
in mortgage arrears and distressed sales in response
to the Reserve Bank's aggressive monetary policy
tightening cycle; she expects arrears to remain
stable if there are no more interest rate increases.
News
CSR's
insulation price rise 'could be gouging'
Insulation
distributor Consolidated Energy alleges that building
materials group CSR misused its market power to
'gouge' suppliers with huge increases in the price
of insulation; it is seeking internal documents
and board papers in order to prove its claim. Consolidated
Energy is asking the Federal Court to grant its
request that CSR be required to hand over information
relating to price increases between June 2021 and
June 2022; Consolidated Energy alleges that CSR
was limiting supply to distributors and imposing
big price increases in order to benefit its own
business.
News
Coal
boss: use gas to ease the transition
Data
from the Australian Energy Market Operator has revealed
that no renewable energy project that was in the
commissioning stage reached full output in June.
This was despite an increase in renewable energy
projects being ready to come online, prompting calls
from Delta Electricity CEO Richard Wrightson for
gas to be included in the federal government's Capacity
Investment Scheme. With Delta being the owner of
the Vales Point coal plant in NSW, Wrightson says
gas is the only technology available now that can
solve the firming problem, but it is the only technology
that is being supported by the government's scheme.
News
Fortescue
now marching 'to the one beat'
July
20, 2024
(Roy
Morgan Summary)
Andrew
Forrest surprised investors at its 2020 AGM when
he outlined a vision for the iron ore mining company
that would see it become a green energy behemoth.
He said Fortescue would be targeting production
of as much as 235 gigawatts or renewable energy,
more than five times the capacity of Australia's
National Electricity Market at the time. However,
Forrest has now conceded it cannot achieve its target
of producing 15 million tonnes of green hydrogen
a year by 2030 because of soaring energy costs,
although he contends Fortescue's green energy dream
is still alive. Fortescue will now bring its iron
ore and green energy units back together, with Forrest
saying that all of the company are "all marching
in the same direction, to the same drum beat".
(Roy
Morgan Summary)


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