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Asian shares rally while US dollar weakens

Asian shares rally while US dollar weakens

The Advertiser7 hours ago

Asian shares have hit their highest level in more than three years as they tracked a Wall Street rally, though the dollar struggled on concerns about the Federal Reserve's independence and expectations for early rate cuts.
Stock indexes worldwide look set to end the week on a positive note, with worries about tensions in the Middle East and uncertainty over tariffs and trade deals on the backburner for now.
MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan touched its strongest level since November 2021 early in the session. It last traded 0.2 per cent higher and is set to clock a 3 per cent gain for the week.
Japan's Nikkei jumped 1.5 per cent and surpassed the 40,000 mark for the first time in five months.
Reasons for the upbeat mood included news that Washington has reached an agreement with Beijing on how to expedite rare earth shipments to the United States.
US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent also said on Thursday that he has asked Republicans in Congress to scrap the Section 899 retaliatory tax proposal from their tax and spending bill after Washington reached an agreement with Group of Seven industrial countries.
"That was something that had been making some investors, especially foreign investors, nervous when that provision was passed by the House. So if that provision gets removed, then that allays one of the concerns from foreign investors," said Khoon Goh, head of Asia research at ANZ.
"The accumulation of these various... positive developments all helped to contribute to the buoyant market mood we're seeing."
European futures also gained, with EUROSTOXX 50 futures and DAX futures both up 0.6per cent, while FTSE futures advanced 0.16per cent.
US stock futures were little changed, though Wall Street had on Thursday closed near record highs, further supported by expectations of imminent Fed rate cuts.
Much of the focus for markets over the past two sessions has been on the prospect of an early change of guard at the Fed, after the Wall Street Journal reported that US President Donald Trump has toyed with the idea of selecting and announcing Fed Chair Jerome Powell's replacement by September or October.
That knocked an already battered dollar even lower as traders fretted about an erosion of Fed independence and as they moved to price in more US rate cuts this year.
The dollar languished near a 3-1/2-year low on Friday and was headed for a 1.4 per cent weekly loss, its largest decline in over a month.
For the year, the greenback is already down more than 10 per cent and if it stays that way in the next few days, that will mark its biggest first half-year fall since the start of the era of free-floating currencies in the early 1970s.
Against a weaker dollar, the euro was perched near its highest in over three years at $1.1688. Sterling rose 0.03per cent to $1.3730.
"Trump's desire to 'shadow' the Fed using a designated replacement for Chair Jay Powell isn't a good way to promote the perceptions of integrity and autonomy in US policymaking and, by extension, that of the reserve currency status of the US dollar," said Thierry Wizman, global FX and rates strategist at Macquarie Group.
Adding to the Fed cut bets has been a raft of weaker-than-expected US economic data, with attention now shifting to Friday's release of the core PCE price index, the US central bank's preferred measure of inflation.
US Treasury yields were steady in Asia after falling the previous session, with the two-year yield at 3.7418per cent and the benchmark 10-year yield last at 4.2554 per cent.
In commodities, oil prices were set for a weekly decline with the Iran-Israel ceasefire holding and easing concerns over Middle East supply risks.
Brent crude futures were up 0.41per cent at $68.01 a barrel while US crude rose 0.46per cent to $65.53 per barrel on Friday, but both were headed for a fall of more than 10per cent for the week.
Spot gold fell 0.23per cent to $3,320.25 an ounce.
Asian shares have hit their highest level in more than three years as they tracked a Wall Street rally, though the dollar struggled on concerns about the Federal Reserve's independence and expectations for early rate cuts.
Stock indexes worldwide look set to end the week on a positive note, with worries about tensions in the Middle East and uncertainty over tariffs and trade deals on the backburner for now.
MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan touched its strongest level since November 2021 early in the session. It last traded 0.2 per cent higher and is set to clock a 3 per cent gain for the week.
Japan's Nikkei jumped 1.5 per cent and surpassed the 40,000 mark for the first time in five months.
Reasons for the upbeat mood included news that Washington has reached an agreement with Beijing on how to expedite rare earth shipments to the United States.
US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent also said on Thursday that he has asked Republicans in Congress to scrap the Section 899 retaliatory tax proposal from their tax and spending bill after Washington reached an agreement with Group of Seven industrial countries.
"That was something that had been making some investors, especially foreign investors, nervous when that provision was passed by the House. So if that provision gets removed, then that allays one of the concerns from foreign investors," said Khoon Goh, head of Asia research at ANZ.
"The accumulation of these various... positive developments all helped to contribute to the buoyant market mood we're seeing."
European futures also gained, with EUROSTOXX 50 futures and DAX futures both up 0.6per cent, while FTSE futures advanced 0.16per cent.
US stock futures were little changed, though Wall Street had on Thursday closed near record highs, further supported by expectations of imminent Fed rate cuts.
Much of the focus for markets over the past two sessions has been on the prospect of an early change of guard at the Fed, after the Wall Street Journal reported that US President Donald Trump has toyed with the idea of selecting and announcing Fed Chair Jerome Powell's replacement by September or October.
That knocked an already battered dollar even lower as traders fretted about an erosion of Fed independence and as they moved to price in more US rate cuts this year.
The dollar languished near a 3-1/2-year low on Friday and was headed for a 1.4 per cent weekly loss, its largest decline in over a month.
For the year, the greenback is already down more than 10 per cent and if it stays that way in the next few days, that will mark its biggest first half-year fall since the start of the era of free-floating currencies in the early 1970s.
Against a weaker dollar, the euro was perched near its highest in over three years at $1.1688. Sterling rose 0.03per cent to $1.3730.
"Trump's desire to 'shadow' the Fed using a designated replacement for Chair Jay Powell isn't a good way to promote the perceptions of integrity and autonomy in US policymaking and, by extension, that of the reserve currency status of the US dollar," said Thierry Wizman, global FX and rates strategist at Macquarie Group.
Adding to the Fed cut bets has been a raft of weaker-than-expected US economic data, with attention now shifting to Friday's release of the core PCE price index, the US central bank's preferred measure of inflation.
US Treasury yields were steady in Asia after falling the previous session, with the two-year yield at 3.7418per cent and the benchmark 10-year yield last at 4.2554 per cent.
In commodities, oil prices were set for a weekly decline with the Iran-Israel ceasefire holding and easing concerns over Middle East supply risks.
Brent crude futures were up 0.41per cent at $68.01 a barrel while US crude rose 0.46per cent to $65.53 per barrel on Friday, but both were headed for a fall of more than 10per cent for the week.
Spot gold fell 0.23per cent to $3,320.25 an ounce.
Asian shares have hit their highest level in more than three years as they tracked a Wall Street rally, though the dollar struggled on concerns about the Federal Reserve's independence and expectations for early rate cuts.
Stock indexes worldwide look set to end the week on a positive note, with worries about tensions in the Middle East and uncertainty over tariffs and trade deals on the backburner for now.
MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan touched its strongest level since November 2021 early in the session. It last traded 0.2 per cent higher and is set to clock a 3 per cent gain for the week.
Japan's Nikkei jumped 1.5 per cent and surpassed the 40,000 mark for the first time in five months.
Reasons for the upbeat mood included news that Washington has reached an agreement with Beijing on how to expedite rare earth shipments to the United States.
US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent also said on Thursday that he has asked Republicans in Congress to scrap the Section 899 retaliatory tax proposal from their tax and spending bill after Washington reached an agreement with Group of Seven industrial countries.
"That was something that had been making some investors, especially foreign investors, nervous when that provision was passed by the House. So if that provision gets removed, then that allays one of the concerns from foreign investors," said Khoon Goh, head of Asia research at ANZ.
"The accumulation of these various... positive developments all helped to contribute to the buoyant market mood we're seeing."
European futures also gained, with EUROSTOXX 50 futures and DAX futures both up 0.6per cent, while FTSE futures advanced 0.16per cent.
US stock futures were little changed, though Wall Street had on Thursday closed near record highs, further supported by expectations of imminent Fed rate cuts.
Much of the focus for markets over the past two sessions has been on the prospect of an early change of guard at the Fed, after the Wall Street Journal reported that US President Donald Trump has toyed with the idea of selecting and announcing Fed Chair Jerome Powell's replacement by September or October.
That knocked an already battered dollar even lower as traders fretted about an erosion of Fed independence and as they moved to price in more US rate cuts this year.
The dollar languished near a 3-1/2-year low on Friday and was headed for a 1.4 per cent weekly loss, its largest decline in over a month.
For the year, the greenback is already down more than 10 per cent and if it stays that way in the next few days, that will mark its biggest first half-year fall since the start of the era of free-floating currencies in the early 1970s.
Against a weaker dollar, the euro was perched near its highest in over three years at $1.1688. Sterling rose 0.03per cent to $1.3730.
"Trump's desire to 'shadow' the Fed using a designated replacement for Chair Jay Powell isn't a good way to promote the perceptions of integrity and autonomy in US policymaking and, by extension, that of the reserve currency status of the US dollar," said Thierry Wizman, global FX and rates strategist at Macquarie Group.
Adding to the Fed cut bets has been a raft of weaker-than-expected US economic data, with attention now shifting to Friday's release of the core PCE price index, the US central bank's preferred measure of inflation.
US Treasury yields were steady in Asia after falling the previous session, with the two-year yield at 3.7418per cent and the benchmark 10-year yield last at 4.2554 per cent.
In commodities, oil prices were set for a weekly decline with the Iran-Israel ceasefire holding and easing concerns over Middle East supply risks.
Brent crude futures were up 0.41per cent at $68.01 a barrel while US crude rose 0.46per cent to $65.53 per barrel on Friday, but both were headed for a fall of more than 10per cent for the week.
Spot gold fell 0.23per cent to $3,320.25 an ounce.
Asian shares have hit their highest level in more than three years as they tracked a Wall Street rally, though the dollar struggled on concerns about the Federal Reserve's independence and expectations for early rate cuts.
Stock indexes worldwide look set to end the week on a positive note, with worries about tensions in the Middle East and uncertainty over tariffs and trade deals on the backburner for now.
MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan touched its strongest level since November 2021 early in the session. It last traded 0.2 per cent higher and is set to clock a 3 per cent gain for the week.
Japan's Nikkei jumped 1.5 per cent and surpassed the 40,000 mark for the first time in five months.
Reasons for the upbeat mood included news that Washington has reached an agreement with Beijing on how to expedite rare earth shipments to the United States.
US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent also said on Thursday that he has asked Republicans in Congress to scrap the Section 899 retaliatory tax proposal from their tax and spending bill after Washington reached an agreement with Group of Seven industrial countries.
"That was something that had been making some investors, especially foreign investors, nervous when that provision was passed by the House. So if that provision gets removed, then that allays one of the concerns from foreign investors," said Khoon Goh, head of Asia research at ANZ.
"The accumulation of these various... positive developments all helped to contribute to the buoyant market mood we're seeing."
European futures also gained, with EUROSTOXX 50 futures and DAX futures both up 0.6per cent, while FTSE futures advanced 0.16per cent.
US stock futures were little changed, though Wall Street had on Thursday closed near record highs, further supported by expectations of imminent Fed rate cuts.
Much of the focus for markets over the past two sessions has been on the prospect of an early change of guard at the Fed, after the Wall Street Journal reported that US President Donald Trump has toyed with the idea of selecting and announcing Fed Chair Jerome Powell's replacement by September or October.
That knocked an already battered dollar even lower as traders fretted about an erosion of Fed independence and as they moved to price in more US rate cuts this year.
The dollar languished near a 3-1/2-year low on Friday and was headed for a 1.4 per cent weekly loss, its largest decline in over a month.
For the year, the greenback is already down more than 10 per cent and if it stays that way in the next few days, that will mark its biggest first half-year fall since the start of the era of free-floating currencies in the early 1970s.
Against a weaker dollar, the euro was perched near its highest in over three years at $1.1688. Sterling rose 0.03per cent to $1.3730.
"Trump's desire to 'shadow' the Fed using a designated replacement for Chair Jay Powell isn't a good way to promote the perceptions of integrity and autonomy in US policymaking and, by extension, that of the reserve currency status of the US dollar," said Thierry Wizman, global FX and rates strategist at Macquarie Group.
Adding to the Fed cut bets has been a raft of weaker-than-expected US economic data, with attention now shifting to Friday's release of the core PCE price index, the US central bank's preferred measure of inflation.
US Treasury yields were steady in Asia after falling the previous session, with the two-year yield at 3.7418per cent and the benchmark 10-year yield last at 4.2554 per cent.
In commodities, oil prices were set for a weekly decline with the Iran-Israel ceasefire holding and easing concerns over Middle East supply risks.
Brent crude futures were up 0.41per cent at $68.01 a barrel while US crude rose 0.46per cent to $65.53 per barrel on Friday, but both were headed for a fall of more than 10per cent for the week.
Spot gold fell 0.23per cent to $3,320.25 an ounce.

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PM urged to hedge bets by boosting defence spending
PM urged to hedge bets by boosting defence spending

The Advertiser

time12 minutes ago

  • The Advertiser

PM urged to hedge bets by boosting defence spending

Anthony Albanese is digging his heels in on lifting defence spending as the US heaps more pressure on its allies to increase their share. NATO members agreed to spend five per cent of their economic output on defence and security, after calls by US President Donald Trump. The boost has led to more pressure on Washington's Indo-Pacific allies to do the same, with White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt saying countries such as Australia should follow suit. "If our allies in Europe and our NATO allies can do that, I think our allies and our friends in the Asia-Pacific region can do it as well," she said. Analyst Andrew Carr said defence spending was a "hedge against a potential future" that could result in money being wasted or a nation harmed without the extra resources during wartime. "Given where we are now in the kind of worsening strategic environment, including in our region, there's probably a good reason for increasing spending faster even than it was proposed in 2023," the ANU Strategic and Defence Studies Centre senior lecturer said. The defence strategic review, released two years ago, found more funding will be required and must match the strategic circumstances Australia faces. Dr Carr said Australia had made a significant investment over the past 14 years in defence that amounted to a "near doubling" of spending in real terms. NATO nations will be expected to spend 3.5 per cent of their gross domestic product on core defence and a further 1.5 per cent on broader security. This includes adapting infrastructure for military use and protecting energy sources. Australia's defence spending is set to rise from two per cent of GDP now to 2.3 per cent by 2033/34. Appearing frustrated by repeated questions on whether Australia should increase its defence budget, the prime minster said the plan - which was taken to the federal election - will be followed through. "What we're doing is making sure that Australia has the capability that we need. That's what we're investing in," he told reporters in Sydney on Friday. "We've increased it by $57 billion over the medium term and by more than $10 billion in the short term as well." Spain objected to the spending pledge and flagged it did not intend to meet the five per cent target. Mr Trump warned the European nation its exports could be slapped with fresh tariffs by the US if it did no commit to the alliance's commitment on defence spending. Asked if he was concerned Australia could face a similar threat from the US president, Mr Albanese played down the prospect. "I'm not going to comment on things between Spain and the United States. What my job is is to look after Australia's national interest, that includes our defence and security interests," he said. Foreign Minister Penny Wong is preparing to fly to the US for talks with US Secretary of State Marco Rubio. The meeting with Mr Rubio will be part of discussions between the foreign ministers of Quad alliance nations, which includes Japan and India. Quad foreign ministers previously met in January, with the alliance focusing on issues in the Indo-Pacific. Opposition defence spokesman Angus Taylor said boosting spending levels was not about doing what the US wanted. "This is not about being bullied," he said. "This is about being doing the right thing for our great country, and that's what we want to see." Anthony Albanese is digging his heels in on lifting defence spending as the US heaps more pressure on its allies to increase their share. NATO members agreed to spend five per cent of their economic output on defence and security, after calls by US President Donald Trump. The boost has led to more pressure on Washington's Indo-Pacific allies to do the same, with White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt saying countries such as Australia should follow suit. "If our allies in Europe and our NATO allies can do that, I think our allies and our friends in the Asia-Pacific region can do it as well," she said. Analyst Andrew Carr said defence spending was a "hedge against a potential future" that could result in money being wasted or a nation harmed without the extra resources during wartime. "Given where we are now in the kind of worsening strategic environment, including in our region, there's probably a good reason for increasing spending faster even than it was proposed in 2023," the ANU Strategic and Defence Studies Centre senior lecturer said. The defence strategic review, released two years ago, found more funding will be required and must match the strategic circumstances Australia faces. Dr Carr said Australia had made a significant investment over the past 14 years in defence that amounted to a "near doubling" of spending in real terms. NATO nations will be expected to spend 3.5 per cent of their gross domestic product on core defence and a further 1.5 per cent on broader security. This includes adapting infrastructure for military use and protecting energy sources. Australia's defence spending is set to rise from two per cent of GDP now to 2.3 per cent by 2033/34. Appearing frustrated by repeated questions on whether Australia should increase its defence budget, the prime minster said the plan - which was taken to the federal election - will be followed through. "What we're doing is making sure that Australia has the capability that we need. That's what we're investing in," he told reporters in Sydney on Friday. "We've increased it by $57 billion over the medium term and by more than $10 billion in the short term as well." Spain objected to the spending pledge and flagged it did not intend to meet the five per cent target. Mr Trump warned the European nation its exports could be slapped with fresh tariffs by the US if it did no commit to the alliance's commitment on defence spending. Asked if he was concerned Australia could face a similar threat from the US president, Mr Albanese played down the prospect. "I'm not going to comment on things between Spain and the United States. What my job is is to look after Australia's national interest, that includes our defence and security interests," he said. Foreign Minister Penny Wong is preparing to fly to the US for talks with US Secretary of State Marco Rubio. The meeting with Mr Rubio will be part of discussions between the foreign ministers of Quad alliance nations, which includes Japan and India. Quad foreign ministers previously met in January, with the alliance focusing on issues in the Indo-Pacific. Opposition defence spokesman Angus Taylor said boosting spending levels was not about doing what the US wanted. "This is not about being bullied," he said. "This is about being doing the right thing for our great country, and that's what we want to see." Anthony Albanese is digging his heels in on lifting defence spending as the US heaps more pressure on its allies to increase their share. NATO members agreed to spend five per cent of their economic output on defence and security, after calls by US President Donald Trump. The boost has led to more pressure on Washington's Indo-Pacific allies to do the same, with White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt saying countries such as Australia should follow suit. "If our allies in Europe and our NATO allies can do that, I think our allies and our friends in the Asia-Pacific region can do it as well," she said. Analyst Andrew Carr said defence spending was a "hedge against a potential future" that could result in money being wasted or a nation harmed without the extra resources during wartime. "Given where we are now in the kind of worsening strategic environment, including in our region, there's probably a good reason for increasing spending faster even than it was proposed in 2023," the ANU Strategic and Defence Studies Centre senior lecturer said. The defence strategic review, released two years ago, found more funding will be required and must match the strategic circumstances Australia faces. Dr Carr said Australia had made a significant investment over the past 14 years in defence that amounted to a "near doubling" of spending in real terms. NATO nations will be expected to spend 3.5 per cent of their gross domestic product on core defence and a further 1.5 per cent on broader security. This includes adapting infrastructure for military use and protecting energy sources. Australia's defence spending is set to rise from two per cent of GDP now to 2.3 per cent by 2033/34. Appearing frustrated by repeated questions on whether Australia should increase its defence budget, the prime minster said the plan - which was taken to the federal election - will be followed through. "What we're doing is making sure that Australia has the capability that we need. That's what we're investing in," he told reporters in Sydney on Friday. "We've increased it by $57 billion over the medium term and by more than $10 billion in the short term as well." Spain objected to the spending pledge and flagged it did not intend to meet the five per cent target. Mr Trump warned the European nation its exports could be slapped with fresh tariffs by the US if it did no commit to the alliance's commitment on defence spending. Asked if he was concerned Australia could face a similar threat from the US president, Mr Albanese played down the prospect. "I'm not going to comment on things between Spain and the United States. What my job is is to look after Australia's national interest, that includes our defence and security interests," he said. Foreign Minister Penny Wong is preparing to fly to the US for talks with US Secretary of State Marco Rubio. The meeting with Mr Rubio will be part of discussions between the foreign ministers of Quad alliance nations, which includes Japan and India. Quad foreign ministers previously met in January, with the alliance focusing on issues in the Indo-Pacific. Opposition defence spokesman Angus Taylor said boosting spending levels was not about doing what the US wanted. "This is not about being bullied," he said. "This is about being doing the right thing for our great country, and that's what we want to see." Anthony Albanese is digging his heels in on lifting defence spending as the US heaps more pressure on its allies to increase their share. NATO members agreed to spend five per cent of their economic output on defence and security, after calls by US President Donald Trump. The boost has led to more pressure on Washington's Indo-Pacific allies to do the same, with White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt saying countries such as Australia should follow suit. "If our allies in Europe and our NATO allies can do that, I think our allies and our friends in the Asia-Pacific region can do it as well," she said. Analyst Andrew Carr said defence spending was a "hedge against a potential future" that could result in money being wasted or a nation harmed without the extra resources during wartime. "Given where we are now in the kind of worsening strategic environment, including in our region, there's probably a good reason for increasing spending faster even than it was proposed in 2023," the ANU Strategic and Defence Studies Centre senior lecturer said. The defence strategic review, released two years ago, found more funding will be required and must match the strategic circumstances Australia faces. Dr Carr said Australia had made a significant investment over the past 14 years in defence that amounted to a "near doubling" of spending in real terms. NATO nations will be expected to spend 3.5 per cent of their gross domestic product on core defence and a further 1.5 per cent on broader security. This includes adapting infrastructure for military use and protecting energy sources. Australia's defence spending is set to rise from two per cent of GDP now to 2.3 per cent by 2033/34. Appearing frustrated by repeated questions on whether Australia should increase its defence budget, the prime minster said the plan - which was taken to the federal election - will be followed through. "What we're doing is making sure that Australia has the capability that we need. That's what we're investing in," he told reporters in Sydney on Friday. "We've increased it by $57 billion over the medium term and by more than $10 billion in the short term as well." Spain objected to the spending pledge and flagged it did not intend to meet the five per cent target. Mr Trump warned the European nation its exports could be slapped with fresh tariffs by the US if it did no commit to the alliance's commitment on defence spending. Asked if he was concerned Australia could face a similar threat from the US president, Mr Albanese played down the prospect. "I'm not going to comment on things between Spain and the United States. What my job is is to look after Australia's national interest, that includes our defence and security interests," he said. Foreign Minister Penny Wong is preparing to fly to the US for talks with US Secretary of State Marco Rubio. The meeting with Mr Rubio will be part of discussions between the foreign ministers of Quad alliance nations, which includes Japan and India. Quad foreign ministers previously met in January, with the alliance focusing on issues in the Indo-Pacific. Opposition defence spokesman Angus Taylor said boosting spending levels was not about doing what the US wanted. "This is not about being bullied," he said. "This is about being doing the right thing for our great country, and that's what we want to see."

Aussie Super sector breathes sigh of relief after Trump administration axes ‘revenge' tax
Aussie Super sector breathes sigh of relief after Trump administration axes ‘revenge' tax

News.com.au

time3 hours ago

  • News.com.au

Aussie Super sector breathes sigh of relief after Trump administration axes ‘revenge' tax

Australia's Super sector has breathed a sigh of relief after the Trump administration walked back a proposed 'revenge' tax for foreign investors, which would have wiped billions of dollars. US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent confirmed overnight he struck a deal with countries tightening taxes on multinationals 'that defends American interests'. Under the international taxation rules agreed by 140 governments, including the former Biden administration, multinational companies would pay a minimum 15 per cent tax regardless of where their global headquarters are. On his first day as president, Donald Trump withdrew the US from the agreement and threatened retaliatory duties on any country that imposed the minimum multinational tax. 'After months of productive dialogue with other countries on the (Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development) Global Tax Deal, we will announce a joint understanding among G7 countries that defends American interests,' Mr Bessent posted on social media. 'OECD Pillar 2 taxes will not apply to U.S. companies, and we will work cooperatively to implement this agreement across the OECD-G20 Inclusive Framework in coming weeks and months.' He added that he 'asked the Senate and House to remove the Section 899 protective measure from consideration in the One, Big, Beautiful Bill'. Had a deal not been reached, nearly half a trillion US dollars in Australian super investments could have been impacted. After months of productive dialogue with other countries on the OECD Global Tax Deal, we will announce a joint understanding among G7 countries that defends American interests. President Trump paved the way for this historic achievement. On January 20, the President issued two… — Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent (@SecScottBessent) June 26, 2025 The Association of Superannuation Funds of Australia (ASFA) said on Friday it was 'a really welcome step from the US Treasury Secretary'. 'There's still a way to go – the amendments need to be made by lawmakers,' chief policy officer James Koval said. 'There are a number of other amendments under consideration. 'This section of the legislation would have changed the risk return profile of investment in the US, which would have been a poor outcome for all involved. 'The superannuation sector has around USD$450 billion invested in the United States, the single largest market outside of Australia. 'This is money invested in US infrastructure, equities, bonds, and other areas.' Anthony Albanese earlier also welcomed the update, saying he raised Australia's concerns with Mr Bessent on the sidelines of the G7 Summit in Canada last week. 'This would adversely impacted on Australian investment if it had have been implemented, particularly on investment from superannuation companies,' the Prime Minister told reporters. 'And one of the things that we held earlier this year in Washington DC was a round table of Australian investment funds who are willing and keen to invest in the United States – just one way in which the Australia US economic relationship is an important one.'

US states redefine gas as green energy
US states redefine gas as green energy

West Australian

time7 hours ago

  • West Australian

US states redefine gas as green energy

Louisiana is the latest US state to redefine natural gas as green energy under a new law - even though it's a fossil fuel that emits planet-warming greenhouse gases. Three other states led by Republicans— Indiana, Ohio and Tennessee— have passed similar legislation. In some Democratic-led states, there have been efforts to phase out natural gas. Cities in New York and California have moved to ban natural gas hook-ups in new buildings, though some of these policies have been successfully challenged in court. President Donald Trump has signed a spate of executive orders promoting oil, gas and coal, which all warm the planet when burned to produce electricity. Louisiana Governor Jeff Landry, a major booster of the state's petrochemical industry, says the new law "sets the tone for the future" and will help the state "pursue energy independence and dominance." Environmental groups say these new laws are part of a broader push by petrochemical industry-backed groups to rebrand fossil fuel as climate friendly and head off efforts to shift electric grids to renewables, such as solar and wind. It's "pure Orwellian greenwashing," said Tim Donaghy, research director of Greenpeace USA. Globally, the term green energy is used to refer to energy derived from natural sources that do not pollute — solar, wind, hydropower and geothermal energy. Louisiana's law could enable funds slated for state clean energy initiatives to be used to support natural gas. Natural gas has been the top source of electricity generation in the United States for about a decade, since surpassing coal. Apart from coal, everything else is better than gas for the planet, said Rob Jackson, a Stanford University climate scientist. Building new gas plants locks in fossil fuel emissions for decades, he added. The law's author, Republican Jacob Landry, runs an oil and gas industry consulting firm. "I don't think it's anything crippling to wind or solar, but you got to realise the wind don't blow all the time and the sun don't shine every day," Landry said. The legislation "is saying we need to prioritise what keeps the grid energised," he added. According to Dave Anderson, policy and communications manager for the Energy and Policy Institute, these laws are part of a long-running disinformation campaign by the gas industry to cast their product as clean to protect their businesses and prevent a shift to renewable energy sources that will address the climate crisis. "The goal is to elbow out competition from renewables from wind and solar, and in some cases preempt localities' ability to choose to pursue 100 per cent truly clean energy," Anderson said. The European Union has previously designated natural gas and nuclear as sustainable, a move that Greenpeace and the Austrian government are suing over.

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