ANALYSIS: Their companies have performed spectacularly on ASX over the past year, and shares surged when shooting war started in Iran. A big sell-off, however, leaves a question mark over whether 2026 will be the ‘year of the drone’.
Turnbull sticks with controversial policy.
A photo of the All Blacks, their coaches and support staff heading to the current World Cup tournament probably raised a few eyebrows among former players like Sir Colin Meads.
Eroad shareholders must have had their hearts in their mouths last week when the company's share price seemingly fell off a cliff.
Peter Lynch once said insiders might sell their shares for any number of reasons but they buy them for only one: they think the price will rise.
“That's it, after the Rugby World Cup I'm definitely ditching Sky.”
When Smithfield Foods was bought out by a Chinese firm in 2013, its CEO reportedly had to answer to his mother, who asked why he sold to the communists.
There haven't been many failed takeover offers in recent times that Shoeshine can look back in hindsight.
The local sharemarket has more than its fair share of highly illiquid, small or medium-sized companies that don't attract much analyst coverage, if any at all.
Shoeshine must be getting old.