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Aussie equities push lower as tariff threat returns

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Aussie equities push lower as tariff threat returns

Australia’s share market has retreated from the previous week’s record high as investors weigh the latest twist in the Trump tariff saga.

The S&P/ASX200 fell 55.4 points on Monday, down 0.61 per cent to 9,026, as the broader All Ordinaries gave up 51.7 points, or 0.56 per cent, to 9,251.5.

Gold miners were a lonely success story, helping lift the basic materials sector 1.2 per cent as investors sought safe havens following US President Donald Trump’s threat to lift global tariffs to 15 per cent after a US court ruled against his previous tariffs.

While local markets got off to a shaky start, the impacts on Australia’s economy should be minor, IG Market analyst Tony Sycamore said.

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“It doesn’t really impact our GDP (gross domestic product) given we don’t have a huge export sector to the US,” he told AAP.

“This isn’t a toxic outcome for the Australian stock market or for Australian exporters net-net, and it may actually turn out to be a boon because China, where most of our exports go, has gotten out of it with a lower effective tariff rate.”

Only three of 11 local sectors ended the session higher, led by a 1.5 per cent boost to basic materials as investors ploughed back into gold stocks.

Spot gold is buying $US5,156 ($A7,294) an ounce, supporting names such as Evolution Mining and Northern Star, which each rallied 3.5 per cent.

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Iron ore giants were mixed, with BHP lifting to its best-ever closing price of $54.02, while Rio Tinto and Fortescue fell behind.

Lynas Rare Earths ticked higher ahead of its earnings update later in the week and lithium producers Liontown and PLS each gained more than three per cent.

Financials were heavy, down 1.2 per cent as all four banks sold off, led by a 2.3 per cent slump in ANZ shares.

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Commonwealth Bank lost 0.6 per cent to $178.53, but has held onto most of its recent earnings season gains.

Energy stocks tumbled 1.7 per cent despite oil prices hovering near recent highs as tensions between Iran and the US persist.

Coal producers were also in the red while uranium stocks ran into profit-taking after strong performances the previous week.

Ampol shares faded more than two per cent as its first-half statutory net profit after tax fell by roughly a third on the equivalent half to $82.4 million.

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IT stocks were the worst-performing segment, down 4.6 per cent despite a positive lead from Wall Street on Friday, as concerns about artificial intelligence disruption to software companies loomed.

Health care was also under pressure, the sector losing 2.4 per cent as CSL tanked to its lowest price in more than six years.

The slip came despite strong earnings and guidance from Fisher and Paykel Healthcare (up 4.0 per cent) and Regis Healthcare (up 7.6 per cent).

Consumer cyclical stocks gave up almost 1.8 per cent in a broad-based slump that overshadowed positive earnings reports from Kogan (up 5.5 per cent) and Adairs (up 10.5 per cent).

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Looking ahead, earnings season continues with Woolworths and Nine Entertainment among companies reporting on Tuesday and Fortescue, Yancoal, Domino’s and Qantas to follow later in the week.

The Australian dollar is buying 70.74 US cents, up from 70.43 US cents on Friday afternoon.

January inflation figures come out on Wednesday, and any upward surprise in price growth could significantly increase the odds of a Reserve Bank interest rate cut in March.

ON THE ASX:

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* The S&P/ASX200 fell 55.4 points, or 0.61 per cent, to 9,026

* The broader All Ordinaries lost 51.7 points, or 0.56 per cent, to 9,251.5

CURRENCY SNAPSHOT:

One Australian dollar trades for:

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* 70.74 US cents, from 70.43 US cents at 5pm AEDT on Friday 

* 109.25 Japanese yen, from 109.37 Japanese yen

* 59.84 euro cents, from 59.92 euro cents

* 52.32 British pence, from 52.38 British pence

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* 118.19 NZ cents, from 118.3 NZ cents

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Archer Aviation’s 48% drop validated InvestingPro’s bearish call

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Archer Aviation’s 48% drop validated InvestingPro’s bearish call

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Earnings call transcript: Sasol sees positive cash flow but faces impairments in H1 2026

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Earnings call transcript: Sasol sees positive cash flow but faces impairments in H1 2026

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Netflix boss defends bid for Warner Bros as Paramount deadline looms

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Netflix boss defends bid for Warner Bros as Paramount deadline looms

Ted Sarandos says his company’s offer is better for industry growth as it is “buying assets we don’t currently have”.

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Wetherspoons boss Tim Martin warns minimum wage is lowering living standards

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He argues it is causing a reduction in investment and job vacancies

Founder and Chairman of JD Wetherspoon, Tim Martin, speaking at a press conference in the Hamilton Hall pub, in central London, following the publication of the pub chain's full year results in October 2020.

Founder and chairman of JD Wetherspoon Sir Tim Martin

The founder and chairman of JD Wetherspoon has warned the minimum wage is diminishing people’s living standards by restricting companies’ capacity to boost pay and recruit staff.

Sir Tim Martin, who lives in Devon, argues that rather than function as a safety net to safeguard workers, minimum wage is now causing more damage than benefit, following rises under both the previous Conservative administration and the current Labour government.

In an interview with the Telegraph, Sir Tim said: “The minimum wage seems to be lowering the standards of living by reducing investment and job vacancies and by increasing pay for new starters at the expense of experienced staff.

“It was a supposed to be a safety net but it’s turned into a competition between political parties as to who will offer the biggest rise.”

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Most recently, the government confirmed the hourly rate for over-21s will climb by 50p to £12.71, whilst workers aged 18-20 will witness an 85p increase to £10.85, from April 2026, as reported by City AM.

A decade ago, the minimum wage stood at £7.20, with the policy introduced in 1999 to eliminate low pay.

Sir Tim’s remarks position him as the latest senior figure to question the standards of minimum wage, after Reeves’s hike was claimed to be pushing up employers’ labour expenses.

Scrutiny has gathered momentum, as Britain continues to wrestle with a cooling employment market, with the latest data showing headline unemployment has reached a five-year high of 5.2 per cent.

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Inflation-busting rises have resulted in businesses recruiting fewer staff, particularly younger and less experienced workers, with the hospitality sector especially hard hit as pubs grappled with increasing business rates.

However, from April 2026, pubs in England will benefit from a 15 per cent reduction on business rates following widespread outcry. Official data revealed that the number of payrolled employees dropped by 124,000 in the 12 months to January.

Sir Tim has also previously supported Reform’s proposed pub support package, contending it would “utterly transform” the pub landscape.

In a stock exchange announcement, Martin said Reform’s proposals would provide pubs with “tax parity” with supermarkets.

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He said: “By eliminating the tax differential between supermarkets and the hospitality industry, and restoring margins to devastated businesses, these changes would enable pubs to regain some, or all, of their lost trade.”

Reform’s £2.3bn pub package includes a commitment to reduce VAT in the hospitality sector by 10 per cent as well as beer duty by 10 per cent.

The party has also vowed to reverse Labour’s rise in employers’ national insurance contributions and progressively remove business rates for pubs.

The government has also committed to abolishing what it described as “discriminatory age bands” by scrapping the youth rate of minimum wage, which has existed since the system was introduced in 1999. However, the government is now understood to be reconsidering the move amid concerns it could exacerbate youth unemployment.

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Graduates have increasingly been raising alarm about the jobs market, as fierce competition, reduced recruitment across certain sectors and a decline in vacancies has left many struggling to find work.

Combined with employers’ economic anxieties and technological shifts, entry-level positions in particular have taken a significant hit.

Alan Morgan, chief executive of Bella Italia owner Big Table Group, cautioned that the government’s ambition to scrap the youth rate of minimum wage would result in fewer employment opportunities.

Morgan said: “We completely agree with giving people the same pay for the same experience and outputs.

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“However, by making the pay rates the same for age groups who have less or no experience, it does create a risk of employers reducing the amount of younger people they employ.”

Jeremy Hunt abolished the youth rate for 21 and 22-year-olds during his tenure as chancellor in 2024.

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Floods shut Western Australian freight rail link

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Floods shut Western Australian freight rail link

Western Australia’s stores of goods could be tested after flooding damaged the TransAustralian Railway over the weekend.

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Dollar retreats amid renewed trade uncertainty; euro, sterling edge higher

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Dollar retreats amid renewed trade uncertainty; euro, sterling edge higher

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West African to continue govt dialogue

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West African to continue govt dialogue

West African Resources says it will continue to engage in discussions with the government of Burkina Faso in relation to ownership of its Kiaka gold project.

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Helicopter maker Leonardo ‘hopeful’ about future of Somerset factory

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The Italian-headquartered firm has been in talks for months over £1bn contract with the UK government

Leonardo's AW149 demonstrator landing at Thorne House

A Leonardo helicopter completes a flight from Bristol Airport to Yeovil, in Somerset(Image: Simon Pryor)

A Somerset helicopter maker says it has had “good dialogue” with the government regarding a £1bn contract just three months after it warned its only UK factory was under threat.

Italian-headquartered Leonardo owns Britain’s last helicopter plant in Yeovil. The West Country site has been an aerospace hub for more than 100 years and employs thousands of people directly and in the supply chain.

Although the site makes helicopters for civil use, such as search and rescue, the MoD is the company’s most important customer. A decision to withdraw from the historic Somerset site would have major implications for the local economy.

In November, Leonard chief Roberto Cingolani told investors the company could not “subsidise Yeovil forever” after delays to an agreement with the British government over the contract. The company is the only bidder and has been in talks with ministers for months, leaving the site’s 3,000-strong workforce in limbo.

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However, it is understood that Leonardo’s vice president of market development, Adam Wardrope, is “feeling hopeful” after recent discussions with officials.

The contract is for Leonardo’s conventional helicopters, but earlier in February the firm unveiled its latest model – Britain’s first autonomous full-size helicopter, known as Proteus. The helicopter has been designed to conduct various missions such as anti-submarine warfare.

Mr Wardrope told the BBC that Proteus is “part of the future of Yeovil” but that Leonardo’s Somerset workforce was “desperate” to learn about the company’s future.

“We’re still very busy, things like Proteus, support contracts, and international customers we’re servicing,” Mr Wardrope told the BBC. “Everyone’s very busy, there’s still a future in the fact that there’s lots of work to do.”

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Ben Clarke of workers union Unite said: “Any employee who works on the Yeovil site is definitely in a slight confusion as to what’s happening at the moment.

“The Government needs to wake up and understand we’re having these delays by not giving an answer to Leonardo either way, it’s putting huge pressure on Leonardo and the constituency.”

The news comes just days after Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer was reported to be considering a hike in the UK’s defence spending.

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Tracy Brabin leads West Yorkshire trade mission to Switzerland and Germany

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Tracy Brabin leads West Yorkshire trade mission to Switzerland and Germany

Tracy Brabin has launched a five-day trade mission to Switzerland and Germany aimed at deepening economic ties, unlocking inward investment and creating new export opportunities for West Yorkshire firms.

The mayor arrived in Zurich at the head of a 12-strong business delegation, marking the first leg of a visit that will also take in Karlsruhe, Heilbronn and Stuttgart. Organised by the West Yorkshire Combined Authority and supported by KPMG, the mission focuses on three priority sectors: financial and digital services, health technology and advanced manufacturing.

Backed by the UK government, the trip is designed to strengthen trade links with two of Europe’s most advanced industrial economies and support thousands of jobs across Bradford, Halifax, Huddersfield, Leeds and Wakefield.

“Europe is our most important trading partner,” Brabin said. “Investment from Swiss and German firms, and exports from our homegrown businesses, support thousands of good jobs across our region.”

A key objective of the visit is to promote West Yorkshire’s £160m Healthtech Investment Zone, which aims to accelerate innovation in medical technology, diagnostics and digital health. The region’s seven universities and strong clinical research base are being positioned as natural partners to Switzerland’s biotech ecosystem.

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Delegates will also highlight the strength of Leeds as a financial hub. Often described as the “Northern Square Mile”, the region is home to 30,000 financial and professional services firms employing almost 300,000 people, with institutions including the Bank of England and the Financial Conduct Authority represented locally.

The mayor is expected to stress the opportunities created by the UK-Switzerland Berne Financial Services Agreement and recent regulatory reforms aimed at boosting competitiveness.

Lucy Rigby, Economic Secretary to the Treasury, said the mission signalled that the UK was “open for business” and ready to deepen European partnerships.

In Germany, discussions will centre on AI-enabled manufacturing and sustainable transport systems, areas where Stuttgart and Karlsruhe are seen as global leaders.

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West Yorkshire is preparing to launch its landmark Weaver Network in 2027, a major transport integration programme, and is seeking to draw lessons from Swiss and German expertise in rail, engineering and urban mobility.

Business leaders on the trip say the mission offers access to new markets and investors. Carly Walter, chief executive of healthtech firm MAGI, said collaboration with European partners would accelerate product development and regulatory pathways. Representatives from digital firms including The Data City and sustainability consultancy NextGen Zero are also participating.

The trade mission forms part of West Yorkshire’s Local Growth Plan and leverages £2bn of devolved funding to attract additional private investment into transport, housing and skills.

For Brabin, the message is clear: West Yorkshire intends to position itself as an outward-looking, export-driven region competing on the global stage, and sees closer European ties as central to that ambition.

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Amy Ingham

Amy is a newly qualified journalist specialising in business journalism at Business Matters with responsibility for news content for what is now the UK’s largest print and online source of current business news.

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Southern Cross Radio-Seven West CEO departs on eve of first financial results

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Southern Cross Radio-Seven West CEO departs on eve of first financial results

The chief executive of merged media giants Seven West Media and Southern Cross Austereo, Jeff Howard, has suddenly stepped down on the eve of his first financial results.

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