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What a 10 Percent Drop Means for Buyers, Sellers and Renters

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Sydney

SYDNEY — Australian house prices are slowing for the first time in years following a sweeping federal budget overhaul of the country’s property tax settings, and the big banks are now projecting declines across major capital cities that could represent one of the most significant corrections in the market’s modern history.

National Australia Bank has forecast a 2 per cent price drop across major capital cities, while Commonwealth Bank revised its growth estimate down to 3 per cent from 5 per cent. Investment bank Morgan Stanley has gone further, predicting house prices could fall between 5 and 10 per cent, describing the scenario as “one of the largest price corrections over the past 40 years.” Sydney has already recorded a 1.2 per cent monthly decline, and auction clearance rates have fallen across major markets as buyers and investors alike reassess the landscape following the May federal budget.

The catalyst was a pair of significant tax changes. The Albanese government amended the capital gains tax discount for investment properties, replacing the existing 50 per cent flat reduction with a smaller discount tied to the inflation rate. Separately, changes to negative gearing rules altered the financial calculus for property investors who use the strategy of deducting rental property losses against their taxable income. Together, the changes were explicitly designed to reduce competition between investors and first home buyers in a market that has become one of the least affordable in the developed world.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese addressed the criticism head-on in a recent television interview, framing the changes as a fairness issue rather than a risk to property values.

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“Everyone has acknowledged during this debate that the housing system is broken,” Albanese said. “Therefore we had to do something about it.”

The scale of the affordability problem those changes are intended to address is stark. The median house price in Australia is now 8.9 times the average income, according to data from property research firm Cotality, a ratio that independent economist Nicki Hutley described as making Australia one of the most unaffordable housing markets anywhere in the world on a price-to-income basis. House prices have increased by more than 400 per cent since 2000, rising at an average of approximately 8 per cent per year across that span.

Hutley framed the intent behind the tax changes clearly: “The idea behind the tax changes is to make fewer investors compete with particularly first home buyers so that the house prices will come down and make them more affordable.”

But who actually gets hurt and who benefits from a falling market depends almost entirely on where a person sits within the housing ecosystem, and the human consequences of price movements in either direction are far from abstract.

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For prospective buyers like 25-year-old Brisbane resident Zakariah Northcott, the prospect of falling prices represents what he calls a market correction that is long overdue. Northcott, who works as a customer service manager and has been saving for a home with his partner for years, describes the sustained price surge as a system rigged against younger Australians with ordinary incomes.

“It feels like the game’s rigged against us,” Northcott said. “Houses need to fall for it to be a reasonable thing for anyone to buy a house. If house prices continue to go up at the rate they are, it doesn’t matter if we save till we’re 45, we’ll never have a big enough deposit.”

Northcott’s concerns go beyond the financial to the deeply personal. He says that at current prices, his family plans are at risk. “If house prices don’t fall, that might mean that we just flat out don’t get to have kids. It’s our life goal. We’ve always wanted a family, a home, the same thing that our parents and grandparents had.”

For recent buyers, the equation is more complicated. Daniel Jones, a 27-year-old in Perth, purchased a two-bedroom apartment with his wife last September for approximately $725,000. The property was smaller than the couple, now new parents, would have liked, but they entered the market to stay close to family in Perth’s inner western suburbs. Jones says he supports falling prices even if it means his own home is worth less, framing the long-term trajectory of the market as an investment casino that has strayed far from its fundamental purpose.

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“It’s becoming an investment casino rather than what it should be, which is a place for people to live,” Jones said. He added that the increase in prices over recent decades is unsustainable and has systematically excluded younger Australians from home ownership.

Hutley cautioned that for buyers who entered the market recently and at high prices, a correction does carry real financial risk, particularly the possibility of negative equity, where a property’s value falls below the outstanding mortgage balance.

“There is a risk young new home buyers who’ve got higher levels of debt, if they lose their job and they have to sell and the house price is worth less, then that’s a big problem,” Hutley said. “Not so much for the banks because they have mortgage lenders insurance, but for a person to walk away with less than they started is problematic.”

For sellers, the dynamics shift again. Larissa Ferguson, a single mother of three in Victoria Point in Brisbane’s southeast, spent the last three years building a three-bedroom home at a total cost of approximately $830,000. She had planned to sell within the next year and use the proceeds to upgrade to a larger family home. Those plans are now on hold.

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“With housing prices possibly going down, I might not be able to get what I had hoped for which will impact me getting something big enough for us,” Ferguson said.

University of Sydney economist James Graham offered a perspective that he acknowledged often gets overlooked in the public debate around falling prices.

“If all houses are falling by 10 per cent, your house falls by 10 per cent, but so does the house that you want to buy,” Graham said. “So for that person, there’s not really any worse off than they were a month or two ago. People sometimes forget that. They feel like they’ve lost wealth, but as long as what you want to do with the wealth is just buy another home, it’s kind of a wash.”

Graham also put the scale of the projected correction in historical context: “House prices have been growing rapidly year on year for at least four or five years. 10 per cent sounds large and it is for some people, but it’s not that large in the grand scheme of ongoing house price growth that we’ve seen.”

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If the 10 per cent correction Morgan Stanley projects actually materializes, Australian house prices would return to approximately where they were in late 2024, erasing only the most recent phase of gains in a market that remains, by virtually any measure, among the most expensive in the developed world.

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Winmar conviction creates Cook conundrum

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Winmar conviction creates Cook conundrum

The Cook Government has known for more than a year this moment might arrive.

When former AFL star Nicky Winmar was charged over an alleged assault last May, a political risk emerged alongside the criminal proceedings.

Winmar is not just another sporting great; He is the only individual honoured with a permanent statue at Optus Stadium, a monument supported by the State Government to commemorate his defining stand against racism in Australian football. It was unveiled by then-Premier Mark McGowan.

Now that Winmar has been convicted of assault offences against a female, the government can no longer avoid the question.

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Does the statue stay?

Whatever answer it gives will come with political consequences.

If the government leaves the statue in place, critics will ask why Western Australia’s premier sporting venue continues to honour a man convicted of assaulting a woman. 

Ministers regularly speak about respect for women and the importance of tackling family and domestic violence. Those statements will inevitably be measured against the decision they make about Winmar.

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But removing the statue presents an equally difficult political challenge.

Winmar remains one of Australia’s most significant Indigenous sporting figures. His stand against racism in 1993 changed Australian football and became part of the nation’s broader story about race and reconciliation. 

Imagine, for a minute, Winmar’s became just the second statue to be taken down in Western Australia because of the poor behaviour of the subject. The first featured Captain James Stirling, who led the 1834 Pinjarra Massacre for which Governor Chris Dawson has recently apologised.

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Statues of John Septimus Roe (a member of the massacre party who didn’t fire a shot and also the surveyor-general charged with carving up land stolen from the Indigenous people) and the Explorer’s Monument at Fremantle that commemorates Maitland Brown (who led a punitive raid in which up to 40 Indigenous people were killed in retribution for the murder of three explorers) are still standing.

And that is where the Cook Government finds itself wedged.

This is a government that has already discovered how politically volatile Indigenous issues can become. The Aboriginal Cultural Heritage Act remains one of the defining political failures of its time in government, leaving ministers understandably cautious about decisions that intersect with Indigenous recognition and symbolism.

Against that backdrop, removing one of the city’s most prominent statues of an Indigenous person would be politically risky.

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Leaving it untouched may prove no less so, and doubtless they will wait for the appeal period to expire before making the call.

Meanwhile, the AFL is no less wedged. The country’s highest-profile sporting body commissioned the statue and, presumably, still has a stake in its appearance at the stadium. Its position on this matter, given the slew of issues it has had with the poor behaviour of men, deserves scrutiny.

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India’s June services growth slips to 17-month low as demand, hiring cool, PMI shows

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India’s June services growth slips to 17-month low as demand, hiring cool, PMI shows


India’s June services growth slips to 17-month low as demand, hiring cool, PMI shows

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Padwick Farm livery sees bookings rise as horse owners struggle with costs

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A resident at the Brainkind clinic meets Remy at a therapy session in York. The horse has dark skin and hair, with the participant wearing a suit and tie.

“We’ve experienced someone struggling to put food on the table for their children and they decided to put their horse to sleep,” Fiona Long said.

The National Equine Welfare Council (NEWC) found that more than 80% of equine owners across the UK, external were concerned about the continued pressure of increased costs of equine-keeping.

Five percent were considering euthanising their horse due to rising costs, with owners unable to afford the farrier and regular vet call-outs.

It was more common and affordable to have horses in the past but these days it was a “luxury” as the cost of grass seed, bales of hay and vet prices rise, Long said.

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“A big bale of hay was £10 around 30 years ago, now it’s £90. Livery costs were static for around 20 years before owners started putting up prices two years ago,” she added.

The farm co-owner said that offering lower prices was a way to “give back” to horses and allow them to continue living for years after they stop being ridden.

“Horses aren’t a hobby, they are a lifestyle and they offer us so much fulfilment, so for them to be horses themselves, that’s giving back to them,” staff member Jo Woods said.

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Hitachi Energy, GE Vernova, Siemens Energy, other power equipment stocks crash up to 10%. Here’s why

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Hitachi Energy, GE Vernova, Siemens Energy, other power equipment stocks crash up to 10%. Here’s why
The shares of power equipment suppliers like Hitachi Energy, GE Vernova T&D India and others crashed up to 10% on Friday morning despite the overall market uptrend, after media reports said that the government has granted two-year exemption to four Chinese electrical equipment companies to participate in government tenders for critical power projects.

Hitachi Energy India shares tumbled nearly 8% to Rs 31,150 apiece, while those of GE Vernova T&D India crashed around 10% to Rs 4,361 apiece. Siemens Energy India shares dropped over 6%, while CG Power and Industrial Solutions plunged over 7%. Cummins India shares fell 2% on Friday morning.

Chinese power equipment suppliers to participate in govt tenders

The government granted exemptions to four Chinese companies, namely TBEA Energy, Nanjing ‌Electric India, ⁠New ⁠Northeast Electric India and Taikai Electric (India), for a period of two years, allowing them to supply electrical equipment in India and participate in the tenders, the order from India’s Ministry of Finance dated June 24 and reviewed by Reuters said. The reported government notification highlighted that the exemption should not be treated as a precedent for other companies.

Earlier this year, Reuters reported citing government officials that India has begun easing its restrictions on buying Chinese equipment after a deadly 2020 border clash, allowing state-run power and coal companies to start limited imports as shortages and project delays mount.

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Following the 2020 clash, Indian government mandated that Chinese bidders must register with a government panel and secure political and security clearances before competing for any state contract. However, the report had then said that India has now begun to allow state-run entities to procure a power-transmission component from China without ⁠government approval.

Also Read | India eases curbs on Chinese equipment imports for power, coal as projects delayed

India-China ties

This comes at a time when India and China are beginning to rebuild their commercial ties. China has overtaken the US to emerge as India’s largest trading partner in 2025-26, with bilateral trade reaching $151.1 billion, while the country’s trade deficit with Beijing widened to an all-time high of $112.16 billion during the period, according to the Indian Commerce Ministry data.


India’s exports to China rose 36.66% to $19.47 billion during the last fiscal year, while imports increased 16% to $131.63 billion. The trade deficit swelled to an all-time high of $112.6 billion in 2025-26 as against $99.2 billion in 2024-25.
Also Read | Indian envoy holds talks with senior Chinese commerce ministry official on trade ties(With inputs from agencies)

(Disclaimer: Recommendations, suggestions, views and opinions given by the experts are their own. These do not represent the views of The Economic Times)

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Opinion: Old tradition gets new face

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Opinion: Old tradition gets new face

OPINION: There has been a noticeable change in how European food and wine establishments interact with tourists.

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Sensex surges 650 points, Nifty above 24,350. 7 key factors behind today’s D-Street rally

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Sensex surges 650 points, Nifty above 24,350. 7 key factors behind today's D-Street rally
The Indian stock market extended sharp gains on Friday, with Sensex and Nifty rising more than 0.8% each on the back of easing Middle East conflict, lower expectations of Fed rate hikes, and other key factors.

Sensex gained over 650 points, while Nifty 50 rose above 24,350 during Friday’s trading session. The sharp gains added nearly Rs 2.4 lakh crore to the total market capitalisation of all companies listed on BSE, pulling it up to Rs 482 lakh crore.

IT stocks continued to record strong gains, with HCL Tech, Tech Mahindra, Infosys and TCS shares rising 2-5% to lead gains on the Sensex. Tata Steel, Bajaj Finserv and Bharat Electronics shares followed, rising more than 1% each. Bucking the trend, M&M shares fell nearly 1% on Friday morning.

Broader markets, however, sharply underperformed benchmarks, with the Nifty Midcap 100 index rising only 0.2% and the Nifty Smallcap 100 index rising 0.5%. This came as India VIX, which measures volatility in the market, dropped over 1% to 12.13.

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Also Read | Adani Enterprises increases QIP size to Rs 15,000 crore, draws bumper 3.8x bids

Sectorally, Nifty IT jumped more than 2% to lead gains. Nifty Metal also rose over 1.5%. Nifty Auto and Nifty PSU Bank indices, however, slipped into the red. The overall market breadth was positive, with 1,832 advances and 607 declines on the NSE, while 91 remained unchanged.
Here are the key factors boosting market sentiment today:

1) Fed rate hike worries cool down

US job growth slowed sharply in June and payroll gains for the prior two months were revised lower, data released on Thursday showed, pointing to a cooling labour market and prompting financial markets to reduce expectations for a near-term rate hike. The unemployment rate dropped to 4.2% last month from 4.3% in May as workers left the labour force, pushing the participation rate to the lowest level in more than five years.”The figures challenged the narrative that the Fed remains on track to hike in the second half of this year,” Reuters quoted Westpac analysts as saying in a research report. The tepid jobs data doused traders’ expectations of an imminent rate hike and raised the odds that the Fed will keep rates on hold until October.

Traders are now pricing in a 46.8% probability that the U.S. central bank will keep rates steady at its meeting on September 15 to 16, compared to a 35.8% chance a day earlier, according to the CME Group’s FedWatch tool.

2) Rupee opens higher

Rupee rose 18 paise to 95.17 against the US dollar in early trade. This came on the back of a weaker US dollar after the tepid jobs report. The dollar index, which measures the greenback against a basket of currencies, was 0.2% lower at 100.77 after a 0.5% decline on Thursday. It is on course for its biggest weekly drop since early April.

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3) FII outflows taper off

Foreign investors remained net sellers of Indian equities, net selling shares worth nearly Rs 312 crore on Thursday, according to provisional data on the NSE. This is marginal when compared to the massive FII outflows seen earlier this year during the raging war in the Middle East.

4) Heavy buying in IT stocks

The overall market optimism was boosted by strong buying in heavyweight IT stocks like HCL Tech, TCS and Infosys. The IT stocks are extending sharp gains today, after tumbling to fresh 52-week lows earlier this week.

IT companies derive a significant portion of their revenue from the North American market. Rate hikes or a spike in inflation in the US can weigh on discretionary spending, which, in turn, may affect the sector’s growth prospects. Hence, lower expectations of Fed rate hikes, along with low valuations, are boosting the IT stocks.

5) Positive global cues

Dalal Street is accompanying global peers in sharp gains today. South Korea’s Kospi jumped 2.5%, while Japan’s Nikkei gained around 1% on Friday morning. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng and China’s Shanghai Composite also rose nearly 1% each.

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On Wall Street, the Dow Jones Industrial Average rose more than 1% to post a record closing high on Thursday and a fourth straight week of gains. European markets also closed in the deep green yesterday.

6) Iran-US peace efforts

“No news is good news” is what can summarise today’s market scenario. The peace efforts in the Middle East are holding well so far, and no escalation has been reported yet. This comes after Iran and the US held peace talks in Doha earlier this week.

Iran is now preparing for the days-long funeral for the late Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, whose death early in March had sparked the raging war. US President Donald Trump, meanwhile, has claimed that Iran has conceded to nearly all American conditions in the ongoing diplomatic negotiations while emphasising that the primary objective of the discussions remains preventing Tehran from obtaining nuclear weapons.

7) Oil prices

Oil prices inched up slightly to $72 per barrel, but continue to hover near the pre-war levels as the peace efforts continue to hold well so far. Kuwait’s oil production rose sharply to 1.65 million barrels per day in June from 580,000 bpd in May, Reuters reported, citing sources on Thursday, as the OPEC member boosted exports following the US-Iran interim peace agreement.

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Also, at least five supertankers carrying around 10 million barrels of Saudi oil have exited the Strait of Hormuz, with Saudi Aramco switching to spot pricing to speed sales in Asia, Reuters further reported.

What lies ahead?
India’s outperformance continues, aided partly by the weakness in KOSPI and the general weakness in the chip trade, said VK Vijayakumar, Chief Investment Strategist at Geojit Investments. He added that the continuing tapering of the FII outflows is another significant factor supporting the market. But the rally will not sustain unless it is supported by fundamental factors.

“The crash in crude to pre-war level is the strongest macro support to the economy and the market. Purely from the market perspective, a strong fundamental support is the gaining strength of the banking stocks. Latest news regarding the FCNR (B) scheme is that it is receiving a good response, particularly from West Asia, where HNIs are eager to get good and safe returns in the context of the uncertainty caused by the war,” according to the analyst.

Leading banks are offering attractive leverage on deposits and mobilising big money, Vijayalkumar said, noting that there are reports that this scheme may succeed in mobilising up to $60 billion. Since there is impressive credit growth in the economy, these FCNR (B) deposits will come in handy for the deposit-starved leading banks to significantly scale up their lending. “In brief, banking stocks have the fundamental strength to sustain the rally in Bank Nifty. The IT stocks are witnessing an uptrend triggered by low valuations. But the sector has no fundamental strength to sustain the rally,” he added.

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Technical view on Nifty
The near-term outlook remains cautiously optimistic, according to Rajesh Palviya, Head of Research at Axis Direct. “Sustained strength above the 24,000 mark keeps the broader trend positive, with immediate resistance seen at 24,300, followed by 24,450. On the downside, 24,050 remains a key support, while a breach could trigger a corrective move towards 23,900,” he said.

Investors, however, should remain watchful of the ongoing global technology selloff, as renewed weakness in semiconductor stocks could prompt profit booking after the recent sharp rally in domestic IT names, he added.

(With inputs from agencies)
(Disclaimer: Recommendations, suggestions, views and opinions given by the experts are their own. These do not represent the views of The Economic Times)

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Bajaj Housing Finance shares rally 5% as Q1 AUM climbs 24% YoY

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Bajaj Housing Finance shares rally 5% as Q1 AUM climbs 24% YoY
Bajaj Housing Finance shares gained 4.5% to Rs 92.65 during Friday’s trading session after the company reported robust business updates for the June 2026 quarter, driven by strong growth in assets under management (AUM) and healthy loan disbursements.

The company reported gross disbursements of approximately Rs 19,500 crore in Q1FY27, marking a sharp increase from Rs 14,651 crore in the corresponding quarter last year. Sequentially, disbursements also improved from Rs 17,506 crore reported in Q4 FY26.

Assets under management (AUM) rose 24% year-on-year to approximately Rs 1,49,610 crore as of June 30, 2026, compared with Rs 1,20,420 crore a year earlier. On a sequential basis, AUM expanded by around Rs 8,904 crore during the quarter.

The company’s loan assets (AR) also witnessed healthy growth, increasing to approximately Rs 1,31,150 crore as of June 30, 2026, from Rs 1,05,954 crore in the same period last year, reflecting sustained demand for housing finance.

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Stock price trend and technical outlook

Bajaj Housing Finance has remained in an uptrend, with the stock advancing nearly 15% over the past three months. It currently commands a market capitalisation of Rs 73,866 crore, while its 52-week high stands at Rs 124.

From a valuation perspective, Bajaj Housing Finance trades at a P/E multiple of 28.85, with a price-to-sales ratio of 5.46 and a price-to-book ratio of 3.28, reflecting its current market valuation relative to its financial performance and net worth.


From a technical perspective, the stock continues to display positive momentum. Its 14-day Relative Strength Index (RSI) stands at 60.8, indicating strengthening buying interest while remaining below the overbought zone of 70. Additionally, the stock is trading above seven of its eight key simple moving averages (SMAs), reinforcing the prevailing bullish trend.
Also read: HCL Tech surges 6% on $1.14 billion AI deal; Mercedes-Benz likely clientThe shareholding pattern showed mixed trends during the March 2026 quarter. Foreign Institutional Investors (FIIs) marginally raised their stake in Bajaj Housing Finance to 0.99%, up from 0.94% in the previous quarter, signalling continued institutional interest. In contrast, mutual funds trimmed their holding to 0.35% from 0.63%, indicating some profit booking. Meanwhile, promoter ownership remained unchanged at a robust 86.70%, reflecting sustained confidence from the company’s promoters.

(Disclaimer: Recommendations, suggestions, views and opinions given by the experts are their own. These do not represent the views of Economic Times)

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Messi’s Argentina vs Cape Verde and a Historic Egypt-Australia Clash Friday

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Lionel Messi will lead Argentina as the six-time Ballon d'Or winner aims to finally break his trophy drought in top level international competition

MIAMI — The 2026 World Cup’s round of 32 reaches its final day Friday, with three matches completing the first knockout stage of an expanded 48-team tournament that has already produced its share of upsets, records and memorable moments. The headliner is unmistakably the late-afternoon showdown in Miami, where reigning champion Argentina and the record-setting Lionel Messi face a Cape Verde side that has captivated fans worldwide with one of the most improbable group stage runs in recent tournament history.

But Friday’s card begins in Dallas at 2 p.m. ET, where Australia takes on Egypt in a match carrying genuine historical weight for both sides. Neither nation has ever won a World Cup knockout match, making the Dallas opener a first for one of them regardless of what happens. Australia is playing in just its third-ever knockout round, having lost twice in agonizing fashion, once to Italy in 2006 on a stoppage-time winner and once to Argentina in 2022. Egypt’s appearance in the knockout stage is only the second in its World Cup history, with the first coming in 1934 under a single-elimination format with no group stage whatsoever.

Egypt enters the match with significant injury uncertainty surrounding its most important player. Captain and all-time leading scorer Mohamed Salah was forced off in the 57th minute of Egypt’s group stage finale against Iran with a hamstring strain. Coach Hossam Hassan has expressed optimism about Salah’s availability, but without the former Liverpool forward, Egypt’s offense has little of the individual quality needed to break down a resolute Australian defensive shape. Compounding the concern, left-back Ahmed Fatouh and central defender Mohamed Abdelmonem are both listed as doubtful, leaving Egypt potentially depleted across multiple positions of the backline.

Australia under coach Tony Popovic has not been a high-scoring team through the group stage. The Socceroos scored twice in their opening 2-0 win over Türkiye but were then shut out in a 2-0 loss to the United States and earned a 0-0 draw against Paraguay without finding the net. That scoring drought reflects a team comfortable playing deep and looking to capitalize on counter-attacking opportunities rather than imposing possession-based football on opponents, a style that could prove well-suited to navigating Egypt’s injury-diminished lineup if the Australians can keep things tight defensively.

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One of the match’s defining storylines involves who is standing in goal for Australia. Shortly before the tournament’s first match, coach Popovic made the surprising call to bench veteran captain Matthew Ryan in favor of Patrick Beach, a largely inexperienced goalkeeper who plays domestically for Melbourne City and had only five international caps entering the tournament. Beach delivered a stunning performance in the Türkiye victory and added a second clean sheet against Paraguay, quickly justifying the unconventional selection. He is likely to be tested early and often if Salah plays, and his form on the day may ultimately determine the outcome.

The second match, in Miami at 6 p.m. ET, frames itself as the round’s most one-sided matchup on paper and also its most narratively compelling underdog story. Cape Verde, representing an archipelago nation of just 525,000 people off the west coast of Africa, advanced to the knockout stage without losing a single group stage match. The Blue Sharks drew 0-0 with Spain, 2-2 with Uruguay and 0-0 with Saudi Arabia, finishing second in their group. Their opening stalemate against Spain, still one of the tournament’s most technically refined sides, announced Cape Verde as a team organized far beyond expectations, built around a disciplined 4-5-1 formation that sits deep and offers opponents almost no space between the lines.

Central to Cape Verde’s run has been 40-year-old goalkeeper Vozinha, who has been one of the tournament’s most celebrated individual performers, particularly during the Spain match, where his command of the penalty area and shot-stopping quality kept the scoreline level against one of the world’s leading attacking lineups. At 40, Vozinha is a story in himself, a late-career achievement that connects Cape Verde’s remarkable group stage to the personal arc of an individual who was never expected to be here.

Against Argentina, however, Cape Verde faces a different order of challenge than anything the group stage produced. La Albiceleste has won all three of its group stage games by multi-goal margins and have played with the self-assurance of a team operating with a clear sense of purpose. They have won their last 10 competitive matches and enter Friday as the clearest favorite of any remaining team in the tournament, a status reflected in betting markets where Argentina sit at odds as heavy as negative 694.

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The player around whom everything revolves is Messi, a point that requires no elaboration yet deserves acknowledgment given what the 39-year-old has already produced in this tournament. He has scored in every group match, co-leads the tournament with six goals alongside France’s Kylian Mbappé and has now scored 19 career World Cup goals, the most in the history of the men’s game, a record he set earlier at this tournament. The Blue Sharks kept Spain scoreless over 90 minutes, an achievement of genuine defensive organization and collective discipline, but Argentina’s attack beyond Messi, including the striker partnership with Lautaro Martínez and the creative supporting cast across the front line, presents a dimension of danger Spain’s group stage lineup did not.

A cloud has settled over the Cape Verde camp this week, however. Captain Ryan Mendes is under a criminal investigation in New Zealand following allegations that he raped a woman in March. How the team’s federation and coaching staff have addressed the matter internally has not been fully disclosed publicly, though the news adds an uncomfortable dimension to what had been a purely joyful story for a nation experiencing its first-ever World Cup knockout appearance.

Friday’s final match, at Arrowhead Stadium in Kansas City at 9:30 p.m. ET, features Colombia against Ghana, with the South American side entering as the clear favorite against a Ghanaian team that has relied on deep defensive structure and a deliberate, disciplined game management style to advance from what was widely viewed as a difficult group. Colombia’s emerging quality up front makes them the likely victor in what is expected to be a tactically cautious contest.

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Panic buying warning as bird flu found in third state

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Panic buying warning as bird flu found in third state

Australians have been warned against panic buying eggs and other poultry products as preliminary testing detects a case of avian flu in a third state.

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Thailand’s economy held steady in May, supported by growing tourism and a slight increase in domestic demand

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Asia's Industrial Supercycle awakens

In May, Thailand’s economy stabilized with increased tourism and slight domestic demand improvement. However, exports fell, manufacturing declined, and inflation remained elevated. Key concerns include living costs, geopolitical risks, and El Niño impacts.


Summary

  • The Thai economy in May remained broadly stable compared to the previous month.

    o On the external front, tourism receipts and foreign tourist arrivals overall increased, supported by a recovery in long-haul markets and an increase in tourist arrivals from China and Malaysia due to their long holiday period. However, other short-haul tourists declined due to weaker demand and reduced flights. Merchandise exports excluding gold decreased, mainly due to lower exports of electronics and jewelry following earlier acceleration in the previous period.

    o Domestic demand improved slightly, supported by increases in private consumption and private investment, particularly in the automotive sector. However, consumption and investment in other categories remained relatively stable.

    o On the supply side, Manufacturing production declined in line with merchandise exports, while the services sector remained broadly stable.

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The Thai economy in May remained broadly stable compared to the previous month. Tourism receipts increased overall, in line with higher foreign tourist arrivals, as supported by a recovery in long-haul markets as well as increased arrivals from China and Malaysia due to their long holiday periods. However, arrivals from other short-haul markets declined due to weaker demand and reduced flight services amid elevated energy costs. Merchandise exports excluding gold declined, mainly due to lower exports in electronics and jewelry after having accelerated in the previous period. 

Domestic demand improved slightly, supported by higher private consumption and investment, particularly in the electric vehicle sales, partly reflecting a shift toward the electric vehicle usage amid elevated domestic fuel prices. However, consumption and investment in other categories remained broadly stable. Government expenditure expanded from the same period last year, driven by both current and capital expenditures of the central government. 

On the supply side, economic activity remained broadly stable. Manufacturing production declined in line with weaker merchandise exports, while the services sector remained broadly unchanged.

Headline inflation remained elevated but broadly stable. Energy prices declined slightly, while core inflation increased marginally.

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Key issues to monitor: 1) The impact of elevated cost of living and production costs on households and businesses 2) geopolitical risks and U.S. trade policy, 3) the impact of government measures, and 4) El Niño developments

Source : https://www.bot.or.th/en/news-and-media/news/news-20260630.html

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