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AFR Live

The Financial Review’s reputation for news-breaking, agenda-setting and authoritative analysis finds new expression in AFR Live, a series of premium, independent and hard-hitting business events.

Latest

Some business leaders say decisions made using AI could be hard to justify in an inquiry or court.

Why execs don’t trust AI with big decisions yet

A year after the launch of ChatGPT, businesses dabbling with generative AI aren’t convinced the technology would hold up under the intense scrutiny of a senate inquiry or lawsuit.

  • Tess Bennett
South32 CFO Sandy Sibenaler says industry needs to think about its own risk tolerance.

PwC scandal hangs over audit quality fight, but clients aren’t waiting

While the professional services sector awaits more detail on ASIC’s new audit quality review, clients are voting with their feet.

  • James Thomson
Brookfield’s Stewart Upson and EIG’s Blair Thomas.

Brookfield contemplates relisting Origin in as little as five years

The Canadian giant has told potential co-investors that it could bring the energy group back to the stock exchange in a shorter timeframe than most expected.

  • Anthony Macdonald

Register

  • 12 February 2024
  • Sydney
Amy Coleman - Workforce Summit headshot supplied

Workforce Summit

Presented by McKinsey & Company

  • 11 & 12 March 2024
  • Sydney
Jamie Dimon - Business Summit headshot supplied

Business Summit

Presented by BHP

  • 26 March 2024
  • Sydney
Ross McEwan - Banking Summit headshot supplied

Banking Summit

In association with Deloitte

Save the Date

  • 9 April 2024

Alpha Live

  • 7 May 2024

Mining Summit

  • 4 & 5 June 2024

ESG Summit

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November

CFO live

Proxy firms say executives need more ‘skin in the game’

The boards of locally listed companies can do better to align executives with bonus payments, they say, and boards must be more independent on remuneration.

  • Jonathan Shapiro
Greg Yanco says the threat of criminal sanctions will put auditors on notice.

ASIC hopes threat of criminal sanction enough to force good audits

The regulator this year slashed the number of audits it reviews in its annual quality inspection regime from 45 to 30, even amid wider scrutiny on the sector.

  • Hannah Wootton
BHP CFO David Lamont had war stories from the miner’s OZ Minerals acquisition and Queensland coal mine sales.

Energy transition penny drops on M&A, capital deals

Everything comes back to how to invest in and make money from the energy transition.

  • Anthony Macdonald
From left: BHP chief financial officer David Lamont, JPMorgan’s Julian Peck, and Nick Kemp, head of property and infrastructure at  AustralianSuper at CFO Live.

Dealmakers told to ‘give up weekends’ as M&A gets stuck

Bankers and company chiefs are encountering more shareholder activism, while interested buyers do not want to get stuck in bidding wars for assets.

  • Updated
  • Aaron Weinman
The Australian Financial Review’s CFO Live Summit.

Remote work, red tape and AI: Top CFOs name big risks

The country’s top financial officers believe corporate Australia is heading towards a likely economic slowdown in good shape. But there are risks ahead.

  • James Thomson
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Endeavour Group chief financial officer Kate Beattie told CFO Live that hybrid working could fray workplace connectivity.

Work from home frays workplace connections

Endeavour CFO Kate Beattie worries that remoteness may hinder collaboration as leading chief financial officers say bringing people together drives innovation.

  • Jemima Whyte
Jeremy Hirschhorn will address the CFO Live Summit on Tuesday.

ATO warns small business to stop using tax to ‘prop up’ cash flow

Operators are increasingly using unpaid tax and superannuation liabilities to support their cash flow, attracting growing scrutiny from the Tax Office.

  • Tom McIlroy
Whitehaven Coal’s CFO Kevin Ball was the top performer.

The 25 best-performing CFOs in Australia

Whitehaven Coal’s Kevin Ball has topped the ranks of the country’s best performing financial bosses, based on the increase in the miner’s market capitalisation.

  • Patrick Durkin
Super funds are hunting out opportunities to invest in the energy transition, but say options are limited onshore.

AusSuper to use ‘disproportionate’ footprint to block Origin deal

Several super funds have backed the giant’s stance that there are insufficient opportunities to deploy their capital in the energy transition locally.

  • Hannah Wootton
Origin Energy chief executive Frank Calabria will front shareholders at a scheme meeting on Thursday.

Origin Energy share price tells the proxy story

The bulk of the votes for Origin Energy’s scheme meeting are in, and while everyone claims to have not seen the “final” numbers, we can see where this is headed.

  • Anthony Macdonald

Banks stare down a turbulent economy

The sector has recorded growth in the face of persistent macroeconomic risks and fierce competition.

Transport Minister Catherine King said the decision to block more flights from Qatar was in the national interest.

King says decision to block Qatar flights wasn’t to protect Qantas

The Transport Minister says national interest a factor in deciding whether to boost capacity from international airlines into Australia.

  • Ayesha de Kretser and Mark Ludlow
Kevork Sahagian, managing director, OMERS Infrastructure.

The power behind the takeover battle for Origin

The battle for Origin demonstrates the power of Australia’s industry funds as well as the many questions hanging over the pace of the energy transition.

  • Jennifer Hewett
OMERS Infrastructure managing director Kevork Sahagian (right)  and Powerlink executive Jacqui Bridge at the Infrastructure Summit.

Canadian group highlights the trouble with Australia’s energy ambitions

OMERS Infrastructure is steering clear of the country’s renewable energy zones, and says the delays in planning and development make investments too risky.

  • Jenny Wiggins
Celia Perkins in the deputy secretary at the Defence Department. She was pictured after The Australian Financial Review Infrastructure Summit.

Defence welcomes infrastructure deal makers amid rising tensions

Defence might be a small player in the national infrastructure space, but it is an important one for the nation’s security.

  • Andrew Tillett
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Catherine King says expanding heavy rail is closely tied to building more housing.

Labor faces state revolt over infrastructure funding changes

NSW, Western Australia and Queensland say they are already out of pocket even before the federal government reduces the share of projects it will fund.

  • Ronald Mizen and Mark Ludlow
Adam Copp, CEO of Infrastructure Australia, right, in conversation with Brisbane bureau chief Mark Ludlow at The Australian Financial Review Infrastructure Summit on Monday.

Infrastructure policy lost touch with economic reality

It was hard to find shovel-ready projects during the GFC, and it won’t be easy to dial down an infrastructure boom that has not been put through sufficient scrutiny.

  • The AFR View
Infrastructure Minister Catherine King speaking at The Australian Financial Review Infrastructure Summit in 2022.

Labor to force states to pay more for infrastructure projects

The move, to be announced on Tuesday, follows a review which found some projects did “not demonstrate merit” and lacked strategic rationale.

  • Ronald Mizen
Cbus deputy CIO Alexandra Campbell.

The big problem with the $120b infrastructure pipeline

The super industry’s sitting on large construction portfolios. If there is another round of asset recycling projects, governments may have to look elsewhere.

  • Anthony Macdonald
Macquarie’s Ani Satchcroft (right) told James Thomson (left) that the Vocus Group bid for TPG Telecom’s assets was “very complex.”

Investors ‘taking a breather’ from infrastructure dealmaking

But investments with a “higher level of complexity” were still happening, Macquarie Asset Management’s Ani Satchcroft said.

  • Jenny Wiggins