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  • ANZ Scraps Buyback to Invest in Mortgage, Commercial Bankers

    ANZ Scraps Buyback to Invest in Mortgage, Commercial Bankers

    By Stuart Condie

    SYDNEY--Australia's ANZ Group scrapped its share buyback and plans to invest in mortgage and commercial bankers as its new CEO tries to boost productivity and returns.

    ANZ on Monday said it would halt its ongoing share buyback, which has about 800 million Australian dollars, or US$518 million, remaining. This will allow it to return about A$1 billion in surplus capital to the bank, it said.

    ANZ, which is Australia's fourth-largest bank by market capitalization, will invest heavily in its in-house mortgage sales force with the aim of increasing the number of lenders in its branches by up to 50%.

    It also wants to increase the number of commercial bankers servicing its business and private customers by up to 50%. It plans to develop its own pipeline of bankers in a new Commercial Bankers Academy.

    "Our people will deliver our strategy, and we must focus on a culture of customers, performance and talent," said Chief Executive Nuno Matos, who took charge this year.

    Write to Stuart Condie at stuart.condie@wsj.com

    (END) Dow Jones Newswires

    October 12, 2025 19:08 ET (23:08 GMT)

    Copyright (c) 2025 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.

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  • Solar tornadoes: New findings reveal hidden twists in solar storms that threaten Earth

    Solar tornadoes: New findings reveal hidden twists in solar storms that threaten Earth

    A new University of Michigan study offers one of the most detailed pictures so far of how violent sun storms spread across space — and occasionally, straight to our planet. With the help of supercomputer simulations, researchers traced the…

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  • PlayStation 5 Digital with reduced storage lands in the US for $499, but Amazon still has the 1TB for the same price

    PlayStation 5 Digital with reduced storage lands in the US for $499, but Amazon still has the 1TB for the same price

    The PS5 Digital Edition with 825GB is now sold in the US, too. (Image source: PlayStation)

    The PlayStation 5 Digital Edition with model number CFI-2000 and 825GB of storage is now available in more regions. While Sony hasn’t reduced the price…

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  • Cathay Pacific’s cargo hub at Hong Kong International Airport is a telling insight into the state of the global economy  

    Cathay Pacific’s cargo hub at Hong Kong International Airport is a telling insight into the state of the global economy  

    If you want to take a real-time sample of the global economy in action at any one moment, then the Cathay Cargo Hub at Hong Kong International Airport (HKG) is a particularly fascinating node. 
     
    HKG is the world’s busiest air-cargo hub and no airline moves more freight through it – more than 1.7 million tonnes annually – than Cathay Pacific. Founded in 1946 as a cargo operator between Australia and China, Cathay now manages a sprawling 246,000 sq m hub and the constant hum of palletised and shrink-wrapped goods. In just one section of the warehouse, the inventory ranges from huge cases of Château d’Arche wine to Golden Lily mangoes from the Philippines, alongside priceless artworks packed in Cadogan Tate crates – all destined for the holds of windowless cargo freighters.
     
    Air cargo accounts for less than one per cent of all goods shipped by tonnage globally but it makes up some 35 per cent of the total value. It carries all the things the world needs or wants in a hurry, from the latest iPhone and cold-chain pharma to Italian supercars and oil-drilling machinery. This urgency is just one of the reasons why air cargo is worth paying attention to: when people stop buying the things they need, it’s often a reliable signal that a recession might be on the horizon.

    In for the long haul: A Cathay Cargo freighter

    On a recent weekday morning, the warehouse was particularly active, catching up from the two-day stoppage enforced by Super Typhoon Ragasa, a level-10 storm that sideswiped Hong Kong. But the air-cargo world faces headwinds beyond the weather, including the unpredictable currents of geopolitics. 

    Not long ago, air cargo prices were being driven upwards as a result of “fast fashion” purchases and other inexpensive goods from Chinese companies such as Shein and Temu. But after the Trump administration eliminated de minimis exemptions on goods worth less than $800 (€688) – precisely what Shein and Temu had exploited – US-bound air cargo from China – a key, typically one-way route – fell by at least 25 per cent.

    “Supply chains don’t change overnight,” says Tom Owen, cargo director at Cathay Cargo. “But there has been a recalibration.” One benefit for air-cargo companies such as Cathay is that they don’t own factories – they own planes. This agility can work in their favour, as Cathay Group CEO Ronald Lam noted at the Routes World conference in Hong Kong, the day after the typhoon blew through. The uncertainty of tariffs, he said, created a “rush” to place orders. Air cargo, with its far shorter lead times compared with ocean shipping, “is really well positioned to capture that rush.” Hong Kong’s position as a global hub means that Cathay Group can adjust its routes swiftly. “We are getting more cargo from India and Southeast Asia, routed via Hong Kong to the US, to replenish the slowdown on US-bound cargo from China.”

    During a week when the Trump administration threatened yet again to escalate the trade war that it began, air-cargo companies such as Cathay find themselves in the eye of the storm. But this is an industry in which agility and flexibility are key. During the coronavirus pandemic, cargo kept many airlines afloat as they quickly converted their passenger fleet into impromptu freighters, loading cargo where passengers normally sat. The latest disruptions present a new challenge but also a lesson. While long-term planning is crucial to success in business, the best strategies leave room to adapt. Take it from Cathay, which has dealt with its fair share of turbulence: be ready to change course quickly, even while mid-air.

    Tom Vanderbilt is a regular Monocle contributor. For more opinion, analysis and insight, subscribe to Monocle today.

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  • Ravens lose again but hope for Lamar Jackson’s return after bye

    Ravens lose again but hope for Lamar Jackson’s return after bye

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  • The first supermoon of the year approaches – Borneo Bulletin

    1. The first supermoon of the year approaches  Borneo Bulletin
    2. Supermoons in the U.S.  vocal.media
    3. Photos of October’s supermoon: A stunning start to a trio of celestial events  Chronicle-Tribune
    4. Spectacular sight for harvest supermoon hunters in South…

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  • Woman, 53, becomes UK’s longest survivor of heart and lung transplant | NHS

    Woman, 53, becomes UK’s longest survivor of heart and lung transplant | NHS

    At the age of 15, medics feared Katie Mitchell was coming to the end of her life after suffering irreversible lung damage and heart failure from a rare congenital disease.

    But she defied the odds thanks to a heart and lung transplant, and at the…

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  • Hit Brit Comedy Set for Return

    Hit Brit Comedy Set for Return

    “The Inbetweeners,” the hit British teen comedy series that gave the world a foul-mouthed library of hilariously puerile quotes not to mention two hugely successful spin-off movies, looks set to make a comeback.

    Banijay UK and Fudge…

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  • Hackaday Links: October 12, 2025

    Hackaday Links: October 12, 2025

    We’ve probably all seen some old newsreel or documentary from The Before Times where the narrator, using his best Mid-Atlantic accent, described those newfangled computers as “thinking machines,” or better yet, “electronic…

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  • Just a moment…

    Just a moment…

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