Markets are in a holding pattern. We've got a date for the next Bond movie - but no confirmed star. Amazon is betting on the farm. And it's only Tuesday...
A self-described "Tinder for jobs" software startup has secured $1.9 million of new capital, and is helping the Australian Defence Force recruit more women into traditionally male positions.
The Australian dollar held comfortably above the US 79 cent level overnight, essentially entering a holding pattern ahead of key market-moving events that will arrive over the next 48 hours.
Iron ore spot markets edged higher on Monday after two days of heavy losses, and with Chinese futures pushing higher again overnight, it looks like that move may extend into Tuesday trade.
CommSec founder Paul Rickard and finance media figure Marty Switzer are joining the board of Australian online mortgage marketplace startup HashChing after joining in the company's $6 million capital raising round.
North Korea shocked the world with a July 4 launch of an intercontinental ballistic missile, but according to a new analysis done by Breaking Defence, the missile is basically useless.
Google's parent company Alphabet beat expectations for its second-quarter earnings on the top and bottom lines, but investors who have bid up the stock nearly 30% this year wanted more and the shares in the company slid after the announcement.
OTSAW Electronics has created a self-driving car that patrols streets and can launch a surveillance drone. The machines will arrive in Dubai by the end of 2017. By 2030, Dubai wants robots to make up 25% of their police force.
No comments:
Post a Comment