News
The risks in the Middle East conflict help explain exactly why one of the region’s major oil players is making a $36 billion bet on Australian energy.
Anyone who doubts the world’s ongoing dependence on fossil fuel should think about the logic of a takeover bid for Santos.
SBS Finance Editor Ricardo Gonçalves speaks with Lochlan Halloway from Morningstar to find out why investors lost confidence ...
Escalating geopolitical tensions in the Middle East rattle oil and commodities markets. An Abu Dhabi based consortium ...
Australian shares fell to a two-week low in early trade on Friday, poised to snap a five-week winning streak, as escalating ...
Regulators will have to balance Australia’s stated desire to attract foreign investment with the need to protect national ...
Treasurer Jim Chalmers will have to make some big calls on allowing foreign investors to buy up critical Australian energy ...
Mr Malinauskas responded to the Santos takeover bid by declaring his government’s “priority at all times is to ensure that ...
One of the biggest foreign takeovers in Australian history will force regulators and politicians to weigh who controls ...
Gas exporter and supplier Santos announced the arrival of the BW Opal FPSO vessel at the Barossa gasfield on June 15 ...
Even the cartel-loving AFR can’t come to grips with selling Santos to the UAE. The strategic rationale for the bid probably ...
Also in today’s newsletter, an interview with former BP chief executive Bernard Looney on the global AI power crunch ...
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