logo
Manly Sea Eagles co-owner sells stylish Bellevue Hill home circa $17m

Manly Sea Eagles co-owner sells stylish Bellevue Hill home circa $17m

The Age5 days ago

With gardens designed by renowned landscaper Jamie Durie, the home is fitted with state-of-the-art solar panels and a Tesla battery, which allows it to operate almost entirely off the grid.
'It's the best street in the world, especially for surfing families. It's pretty exceptional [place to live],' Trueman told this masthead.
Loading
A surfing enthusiast and engineer by trade, Trueman has had a long career in various roles, including the project directing Circular Quay's Overseas Passenger Terminal, and more recently NorthConnex. The former McKinsey consultant has turned his focus in recent years to the renewable energy transition, helping businesses and governments reduce pollution in construction and infrastructure projects in particular.
The 60-year-old has channelled his passion for preserving the environment as the chief executive for Twiggy and Nicola Forrest's now-defunct Sea the Future, a not-for-profit plastic recycling enterprise. He now runs his boutique advisory firm Bluewater Impact Partners and is a director of not-for-profit Surfrider Foundation Australia, which protects Australia's ocean, beaches and waves.
The home is being sold through Michael Clarke of Clarke & Humel Property.
Watsons Bay blank canvas sells to real estate scion
Meriton executive Ariel Hendler, grandson of Australia's second-richest person, billionaire real estate mogul Harry Triguboff, has emerged as the $15.7 million buyer of an unrenovated Watsons Bay home, settlement records reveal.
The 32-year-old is the director of asset management of his grandfather's company, overseeing Meriton's built for rent portfolio, which is the largest of its kind in the country, so he may know a thing or two about renting.
He is still based, according to corporate records, at the Vaucluse address of his parents Sharon Hendler, Triguboff's daughter, and her husband, Gary Hendler. His older brother Daniel was announced as Meriton's deputy managing director as part of Triguboff's succession plans.
Ariel purchased the four-bedroom, two-bathroom blank canvas with secure access to Camp Cove Reserve in the exclusive harbour enclave from property investor Jason Camuglia, who made a paper profit of $3.32 million after holding it for just four years. Before Camuglia offloaded it, he was renting it out for $3000 a week since 2022.
While the home was being offered to the market as a package deal of more than 1300 square metres with a combined asking price of $23 million to $25 million, the neighbouring property set on 441 square metres is still on the market with a $7 million to $7.5 million guide.
The selling agent on both homes is Paul Biller of Biller Property, who declined to comment when contacted.
Ex Rugby chief's holiday home
Rugby Australia's former chief executive Bill Pulver and his landscape architect wife Belinda Gibson have sold their Central Coast weekender for $2.45 million.
The sold sticker went up on the couple's Avoca Beach property, which they bought as land for $85,000 in 1988. They went on to rebuild the property in the 2000s, turning it into a contemporary coastal retreat.
Billed as a lucrative holiday rental, idyllic weekender or permanent coastal home, the five-bedroom, two-bathroom house set on 885 square metres features floor-to-ceiling glass, bi-fold doors and Blackbutt timber flooring.
Pulver was the Union's chief executive over a tumultuous period between 2013 and 2018, overseeing the prolonged decision to axe the Western Force from the Super Rugby competition.
The 65-year-old went on to become a director at language data services company Appen, where he made a fortune to the tune of $9.6 million, according to The Australian Financial Review.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Wall Street dips as investors focus on US jobs data
Wall Street dips as investors focus on US jobs data

West Australian

timean hour ago

  • West Australian

Wall Street dips as investors focus on US jobs data

US stocks have dipped, dragged down by Tesla's shares, while investors looked ahead to the monthly jobs report to gauge the health of the labour market amid concerns of an economic slowdown. Chinese President Xi Jinping held talks with US President Donald Trump by phone, China's state-run news agency Xinhua reported, as bilateral relations have been strained by trade disputes. The call comes amid accusations between the US and China in recent weeks over critical minerals in a dispute that threatens to tear up a fragile truce in the trade war between the governments of the two biggest economies. Weaker-than-expected US private payrolls and services sector data on Wednesday raised concerns about the effects of Trump's erratic trade policies, with investors focusing squarely on Friday's non-farm payrolls report. Initial jobless claims data showed people in the US filing new applications for unemployment benefits last week rose for a second straight week. "I don't think it's some sort of big warning sign right now but it speaks to the fact that the labour market has been softening more and just getting gradually weaker," said Kevin Gordon, senior investment strategist at Charles Schwab. The jobs report comes ahead of the Federal Reserve's policy decision later this month, where policy makers are widely expected to hold interest rates. Despite continued calls from Trump to slash interest rates, Fed chair Jerome Powell has opted to stand pat so far, awaiting further data to help dictate the policy decision as tariff volatility prevails. US equities rallied sharply in May, with investors boosting the S&P 500 index and the tech-heavy Nasdaq to their biggest monthly percentage gain since November 2023, thanks to a softening of Trump's harsh trade stance and upbeat earnings reports. The S&P 500 remains nearly 3.0 per cent below record highs touched in February. US central bank officials including Fed Board governor Adriana Kugler, Fed Kansas City president Jeffrey Schmid and Fed Philadelphia president Patrick Harker are scheduled to speak later in the day. In early trading on Thursday, the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 126.69 points, or 0.30 per cent, to 42,301.05, the S&P 500 lost 12.71 points, or 0.21 per cent, to 5,958.10 and the Nasdaq Composite lost 31.13 points, or 0.16 per cent, to 19,429.36. Eight of the 11 major S&P 500 sub-sectors fell, with consumer staples declining the most with an about 1.0 per cent fall. Brown-Forman fell 14.9 per cent, the most on the S&P 500, after the Jack Daniel's maker forecast a decline in annual revenue and profit. Procter & Gamble said it will cut 7000 jobs, or about 6.0 per cent of its workforce, over the next two years, as part of a restructuring. Shares of the consumer goods bellwether fell 1.3 per cent. Tesla fell 4.5 per cent, touching an over three-week low. The car maker's sales dropped for the fifth straight month in several European markets, data early this week has showed. Declining issues outnumbered advancers by a 1.08-to-1 ratio on the NYSE and by a 1.46-to-1 ratio on the Nasdaq. The S&P 500 posted 12 new 52-week highs and three new lows while the Nasdaq Composite recorded 37 new highs and 16 new lows.

Wall Street dips as investors focus on US jobs data
Wall Street dips as investors focus on US jobs data

Perth Now

timean hour ago

  • Perth Now

Wall Street dips as investors focus on US jobs data

US stocks have dipped, dragged down by Tesla's shares, while investors looked ahead to the monthly jobs report to gauge the health of the labour market amid concerns of an economic slowdown. Chinese President Xi Jinping held talks with US President Donald Trump by phone, China's state-run news agency Xinhua reported, as bilateral relations have been strained by trade disputes. The call comes amid accusations between the US and China in recent weeks over critical minerals in a dispute that threatens to tear up a fragile truce in the trade war between the governments of the two biggest economies. Weaker-than-expected US private payrolls and services sector data on Wednesday raised concerns about the effects of Trump's erratic trade policies, with investors focusing squarely on Friday's non-farm payrolls report. Initial jobless claims data showed people in the US filing new applications for unemployment benefits last week rose for a second straight week. "I don't think it's some sort of big warning sign right now but it speaks to the fact that the labour market has been softening more and just getting gradually weaker," said Kevin Gordon, senior investment strategist at Charles Schwab. The jobs report comes ahead of the Federal Reserve's policy decision later this month, where policy makers are widely expected to hold interest rates. Despite continued calls from Trump to slash interest rates, Fed chair Jerome Powell has opted to stand pat so far, awaiting further data to help dictate the policy decision as tariff volatility prevails. US equities rallied sharply in May, with investors boosting the S&P 500 index and the tech-heavy Nasdaq to their biggest monthly percentage gain since November 2023, thanks to a softening of Trump's harsh trade stance and upbeat earnings reports. The S&P 500 remains nearly 3.0 per cent below record highs touched in February. US central bank officials including Fed Board governor Adriana Kugler, Fed Kansas City president Jeffrey Schmid and Fed Philadelphia president Patrick Harker are scheduled to speak later in the day. In early trading on Thursday, the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 126.69 points, or 0.30 per cent, to 42,301.05, the S&P 500 lost 12.71 points, or 0.21 per cent, to 5,958.10 and the Nasdaq Composite lost 31.13 points, or 0.16 per cent, to 19,429.36. Eight of the 11 major S&P 500 sub-sectors fell, with consumer staples declining the most with an about 1.0 per cent fall. Brown-Forman fell 14.9 per cent, the most on the S&P 500, after the Jack Daniel's maker forecast a decline in annual revenue and profit. Procter & Gamble said it will cut 7000 jobs, or about 6.0 per cent of its workforce, over the next two years, as part of a restructuring. Shares of the consumer goods bellwether fell 1.3 per cent. Tesla fell 4.5 per cent, touching an over three-week low. The car maker's sales dropped for the fifth straight month in several European markets, data early this week has showed. Declining issues outnumbered advancers by a 1.08-to-1 ratio on the NYSE and by a 1.46-to-1 ratio on the Nasdaq. The S&P 500 posted 12 new 52-week highs and three new lows while the Nasdaq Composite recorded 37 new highs and 16 new lows.

Lunch Wrap: ASX creeps lower as IperionX lands Pentagon payday
Lunch Wrap: ASX creeps lower as IperionX lands Pentagon payday

News.com.au

time13 hours ago

  • News.com.au

Lunch Wrap: ASX creeps lower as IperionX lands Pentagon payday

ASX creeps lower despite miners lifting Lynas pops 8pc on China rare earths squeeze IperionX lands $152m Pentagon titanium deal The ASX inched lower by 0.1% at lunch time AEST on Thursday. Miners such as Fortescue (ASX:FMG), which was up by 1%, did the heavy lifting. And Lynas (ASX:LYC) went ballistic, up 10%, after a bit of good news for the rare earths space. Turns out some of Europe's biggest carmakers are starting to feel the pinch from China's rare earths export controls, and Lynas is quickly shaping up as a reliable alternative in a tightening market. In the US overnight, bond yields sank as traders piled into bets that the Fed might deliver not just one, but two rate cuts this year. September is looking like a sure thing now, and you could almost hear the doves cooing from Capitol Hill. Tech sentiment, meanwhile took a wobble after Apple was downgraded by Needham, who reckons it's falling behind in the AI race. Tesla dropped over 3% after Elon Musk went on a full-tilt political offensive, blasting Trump's new tax plan as a 'disgusting abomination' and telling Americans to 'kill the bill.' Back home to the ASX, where just five of 11 sectors were flashing green. The headline of the morning came from $1.4bn market-capped IperionX (ASX:IPX), the titanium player that just scored a golden ticket from the Pentagon. Shares in IperionX rocketed 21% after the company locked in a contract worth up to US$99 million with the US Department of Defense. It's a Phase III SBIR deal, what it really means is IPX has graduated from R&D to full-blown production. The first orders will focus on titanium fasteners for defence agencies, with all the kit built at its plant in Virginia. It's a big nod of confidence for Iperion X, and a win for the US as it tries to wean itself off foreign suppliers. Meanwhile, Magellan Financial Group (ASX:MFG) kept bleeding, but at least it's not gushing anymore. The fundie has just posted $400 million in outflows for May, down from $1 billion the month before. Assets under management inched higher across most of its strategies, with infrastructure holding steady. Total AUM now sits at $39.3 billion. ASX SMALL CAP WINNERS Here are the best performing ASX small cap stocks for June 5 : Security Description Last % Volume MktCap EV1 Evolutionenergy 0.014 75% 2,147,660 $2,901,204 ADD Adavale Resource Ltd 0.002 50% 400,066 $2,287,279 AUH Austchina Holdings 0.002 50% 27,230 $3,025,384 AOA Ausmon Resorces 0.002 33% 375,000 $1,966,820 EEL Enrg Elements Ltd 0.002 33% 1,000,000 $4,880,668 ZEU Zeus Resources Ltd 0.012 33% 12,469,218 $5,766,058 GTR Gti Energy Ltd 0.005 29% 33,710,486 $10,496,324 EDE Eden Inv Ltd 0.003 25% 2,498,367 $8,219,762 ENT Enterprise Metals 0.003 25% 100,108 $2,356,635 ENV Enova Mining Limited 0.010 25% 44,085,113 $11,308,006 OLI Oliver'S Real Food 0.005 25% 30,000 $2,162,928 TMX Terrain Minerals 0.003 25% 22,788 $4,497,113 ION Iondrive Limited 0.027 23% 5,953,328 $26,022,399 LAM Laramide Res Ltd 0.875 22% 580 $14,828,157 CDE Codeifai Limited 0.017 21% 992,179 $4,564,445 IRX Inhalerx Limited 0.040 21% 1,221,477 $7,043,791 HWK Hawk Resources. 0.018 20% 2,008,040 $4,063,942 ATX Amplia Therapeutics 0.060 20% 5,836,140 $19,397,633 ALY Alchemy Resource Ltd 0.006 20% 871,491 $5,890,381 OMG OMG Group Limited 0.006 20% 966,720 $3,641,474 PER Percheron 0.012 20% 3,787,762 $10,874,376 TEG Triangle Energy Ltd 0.003 20% 2,550,000 $5,223,085 GTI Energy (ASX:GTR) says early numbers from its Lo Herma uranium project in Wyoming look promising, pointing to a potential low-cost in-situ recovery (ISR) operation producing around 800,000 pounds of uranium a year. The scoping study was run by Wyoming-based experts BRS Engineering and outlines a seven-year plan with a total production target of nearly 6 million pounds. It's still early days, though – most of the resource is in the lower-confidence 'Inferred' category, so there's no guarantee the uranium's all there or that it'll stack up economically just yet. FireFly Metals (ASX:FFM) has locked in a C$25.8 million (~A$28.8m) funding deal with BMO in Canada and another $46 million from Aussie investors through placements and a share purchase plan. The funds will go towards advancing its Green Bay copper-gold project in Canada, including underground development, drilling, and pre-construction work. It's a big step forward as it looks to push Green Bay closer to production. ASX SMALL CAP LOSERS Here are the worst performing ASX small cap stocks for June 5 : Code Name Price % Change Volume Market Cap OVT Ovanti Limited 0.002 -33% 3,711,682 $8,380,545 PIL Peppermint Inv Ltd 0.002 -33% 2,830,000 $6,828,269 GMN Gold Mountain Ltd 0.002 -25% 1,347,106 $11,239,518 AVE Avecho Biotech Ltd 0.004 -20% 655,257 $15,867,318 MEM Memphasys Ltd 0.004 -20% 30,805 $9,917,991 1AD Adalta Limited 0.003 -17% 5,146,114 $3,020,120 AJL AJ Lucas Group 0.005 -17% 624,546 $8,254,378 IFG Infocusgroup Hldltd 0.005 -17% 2,989 $1,655,771 JAV Javelin Minerals Ltd 0.003 -17% 537,500 $18,378,447 RFT Rectifier Technolog 0.005 -17% 20,000 $8,291,904 EPM Eclipse Metals 0.016 -16% 18,423,152 $54,450,562 QEM QEM Limited 0.051 -15% 57,568 $11,450,021 RDN Raiden Resources Ltd 0.006 -14% 2,515,475 $24,156,240 SRJ SRJ Technologies 0.012 -14% 769,489 $8,478,093 PEB Pacific Edge 0.091 -13% 2,752 $85,251,177 OLY Olympio Metals Ltd 0.034 -13% 579,499 $3,434,625 AVW Avira Resources Ltd 0.007 -13% 17,217 $1,754,286 KLI Killiresources 0.028 -13% 97,087 $4,487,160 PNT Panthermetalsltd 0.014 -13% 798,024 $4,814,473 WCE Westcoastsilver Ltd 0.080 -11% 1,807,262 $23,410,888 WWG Wisewaygroupltd 0.160 -11% 12,954 $30,123,575 ANX Anax Metals Ltd 0.008 -11% 1,596,673 $7,945,268 LCY Legacy Iron Ore 0.008 -11% 25,000 $87,858,383 Tyro Payments (ASX:TYR) crashed 11% after announcing that CEO Jon Davey is stepping down. He's been offered a new private equity gig, based in Melbourne. Davey's been with Tyro since 2021, arriving via the Medipass acquisition and moving into the top job the following year. He'll hang around for up to six months to help with the handover. IN CASE YOU MISSED IT Two collaborative drilling grants totalling $400,000 have been awarded to Red Metal (ASX:RDM) to test targets across the Gulf and Three Ways copper-gold assets. Challenger also raised $34.5 million to advance its Hualilan gold project into production, with first cash flows expected soon. Locksley Resources (ASX:LKY) is progressing tenders for upcoming drilling at its El Campo rare earths prospect in California after being awarded drill permits.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store