One of its founders, CEO Noah Hickey, will continue to run the company from the US.
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Forty years ago, former Prime Minister Robert Muldoon said people wouldn’t know a deficit if they tripped over it.
ANALYSIS: Many Kiwi backyards feature a Hills Hoist, invented in Australia but now manufactured in China by a US company. How did we get here?
Shane Campbell and Thomas Westaway have teamed up to offer a new kind of disputes practice in the South Island.
Seven out of 10 liquidation applications now initiated by Inland Revenue, Centrix says.
Co-op silent on speculation over succession planning.
The unions want a New Zealand right to disconnect law, as Australia’s one faces a legal challenge for the first time.
And Nvidia bets big on photonics.
The economic recovery is still fragile, so firms are hoping it won’t be a messy campaign.
Manuka Doctor is a major sponsor of the New Zealand Tennis Classic, the NZ Olympic Team, and the NZ Golf Open.
LISTEN: Both National and Labour are focusing on the super city as a crucial path to power at this year’s general election.
WATCH: Dollars & Sense debates the election year economy, but expect no champagne corks popping about a rockstar recovery.
ANALYSIS: Former head of the GCSB gives his take on US and Israel’s attack on Iran.
ANALYSIS: It’s important to consider whether current profits are being boosted at expense of future growth or company is reducing current profitability for a healthier long-term outlook.
ANALYSIS: About US$1 trillion was wiped off the value of technology companies offering software as a service in February. Is this a market over-reaction or a fundamental change in the business model?
ANALYSIS: Today’s inflation persistence is not a mystery, it is the predictable consequence of an economy that has struggled to expand its productive capacity.
Bremworth is finding there are still some believers in wool.
The boss of the listed jeweller says the company has been ‘more homogenous’ than it needed to be in the past.
The Commerce Commission is reviewing whether a deal to sell Bremworth to the owners of Godfrey Hirst will dampen competition in the New Zealand flooring market.
New Governor Anna Breman is getting out and speaking with businesses this month to gauge the health of the economy.
A December rate hike is likely, but an earlier move upwards can’t be ruled out, Forsyth Barr’s Zoe Wallis tells NBR.
It has to apply standardised approach to capital, while the big banks use internal models.
Reaction on world markets has been muted, he says.
Orchardists and vegetable growers concerned a tax or auction system for natural resources such as water could be introduced under controversial planning rule changes.
It suggests regional councillors be retained until the end of this term.
A new investment framework argues New Zealand must move from shareholder primacy to intergenerational thinking.
Ten major iwi investors posted a 3.9% return in 2025, marking a third straight difficult year as property valuations and carbon markets weighed on results.
With $179m under a reset commissioning model, one of Whānau Ora’s new commissioning chairs is promising stronger governance, clearer data, and measurable impact.
When seed funding is, literally, for nuts.
On a good news day for farmers, the milk price forecast also gets a boost.
In the second of a two-part series on the industrial hemp reforms, we look at the sustainable building material’s use in the building industry.
The bank executive had sued over bonuses he said were part of his contract.
With polls showing plummeting support, the party has elected a conservative as leader as it seeks to differentiate itself from the Labor Government.
Helen Lofthouse is stepping down as chief executive, with no replacement announced as the ASX goes on a global search.
The Canterbury startup is signing up customers for its pharmacy management platform but faces an incumbent player with a market stranglehold.
The contract comes as the company considers a sizeable funding round to accelerate its already rapid growth.
The new lobby group has launched in election year, pushing a barrow of policies to change the country’s thinking on economic growth and innovation.
Lender foiled in long-running litigation linked to failed finance company FE Investments.
Environmental group Save Our Springs has sought judicial review of permits in the Tākaka area.
Matthew Pringle, the son of Lynette Erceg, is now the subject of a legal campaign in the UK.
The central bank wants fair capital settings to support a ‘sustainable’ economy and manage the risk of failure.
Profits up, margins tighter as Kiwibank focuses on business startups and entrepreneurs in need of a financial injection.
CEO Vittoria Shortt champions higher lending growth across small business, commercial, and the rural sector in New Zealand.
LISTEN: He runs an international hotel chain ... and hails from a Taranaki dairy farm. Gavin Faull co-owns Swiss-Belhotel, a 165-hotel management company in 20 countries, a figure he wants to more than triple.
LISTEN: Green shoots, cost-of-living crisis, recovery, and slow lane. The economy is the issue for this election, so we ask National’s Nicola Willis, Labour’s Barbara Edmonds, and two economists for their take on the economic road to polling day.
LISTEN: They’re soft drinks that contain no water and don’t come in a bottle. It’s West’s next startup after successfully exiting beauty company Ethique.
The daily deals business was placed into liquidation last year.
The Auckland software construction company is considering external capital for the first time as offsite manufacturing gained favour after Covid.
And a trip to Estonia was undertaken in private capacity, with no funding provided to either the chair or former FMA staffer there at the same time.
The deal goes against the industry trend, and integrates investment banking and funds management.
From co-governance to control: after the debate over iwi influence in Three Waters governance, Ngāti Toa is not just looking for a seat at the table.
The annual M&A Forecast Report thinks buyers and sellers will have an easier meeting of minds this year.
Company chair signals the motorhome company is open to a revised bid from the Apollo RV founder consortium or ‘other potential bidders’ at above $663m level.
The new rules should be in place by April.
Powerboat and water ski racing returns to the Wairoa River, giving the flood-weary Hawke’s Bay town a reason to gather, remember, and enjoy itself for a weekend.
‘We are seeing the benefit of the taxpayers’ investment,’ Peters says.
The country’s busiest port hopes to have the all-clear for its long-awaited terminal extensions by about August or September.
People and car arrival numbers were up, coal was down on last year's record, and full-year guidance remains 'on track' for npat of $95m.
The listed property company will upgrade its key remaining office asset, after failing to offload the city tower less than two years ago.
Commercial property developer and landlord says an institutional investor is already doing due diligence on its flagship PwC office tower.
Housing agency paid a ‘retail’ price for the 95ha site, of which about a third is considered developable.
Carden Mulholland ordered to pay costs of $6300 after pleading guilty to ethics breach.
Local law firms among ‘the most technologically advanced and forward-thinking law firms’ in the world, Jack Newton argues.
Bruce Wallace says the country’s largest accounting firm had a softer FY25 than FY24.
Peter Dunne thinks this is a peculiar election, with the National Party set to lose support whether it is in government or not.
Corporate asset sales, insolvency processes, and equity raise recapitalisations have contributed heartily to M&A advisers’ work this year.
Accounting firm had a hand in 25 closed deals during the year ended June 30, 2025, collectively worth just over $1 billion.
The ground floor retail space will be anchored by a luxury New Zealand-owned retailer, which has yet to be named.
The Kiwi-founded footwear retailer will focus on e-commerce in an attempt to boost profitability.
The international retailer reported a $9.6m profit in the year ended August 31 in New Zealand.
‘You wouldn’t want to leave your cell phone at one end of this home’, realtor says.
International buyers ramp up interest for homes above $5m; Aussie developer sells down Albert St tower, digs into Queenstown.
For the NBR Rich Listers and other high-net-worths who have everything, comes 800 pieces of art, a high-class restaurant – and pink snails.
Carry On: Dreamliners for Vietnam and Kazakhstan, record year for business jets.
The statue is a replica of the original warplane at the Air Force Museum at Wigram.
Airways New Zealand to provide round-the-clock air traffic control.
World fuel stocks are in good shape, says an analyst, but there are risks if Strait of Hormuz stays closed for long.
Genesis cites contracts for coal stockpile as potential model for its main gas-fired generator at Huntly.
EECA says energy savings of $1.5b for each gigawatt of peak demand reduction could be realised by taking up energy management systems ‘at scale’.
In the lead-up to the 40th edition of the Rich List in June, NBR is opening the archives to reproduce some of the best content from the past four decades.
It’s estimated the Wi Pere Trust will need another three years to repair hill country fences affected by Cyclone Gabrielle and rebuild soil structure and fertility on its 7000ha of hill country.
The listed casino operator had been distributing PDF copies of NBR articles to staff using just one subscription.
Investigations suggest the A$79b market cap firm shared one subscription among dozens of staff.
The investment firm used one subscription for multiple staff over several years.
After 13 years in Silicon Valley, Bowen Pan returned to New Zealand in 2025.
Ed Smithies joins the real estate team.
Sirma Karapeeva has been in the role for six years.