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iSelect grows annual profit

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 29 Agustus 2013 | 16.57

INSURANCE comparer iSelect's full year profit has edged three per cent higher despite a recent shift towards lower priced health insurance.

The company made a net profit of $13.4 million in the 2012/13 financial year, up from $12.9 million the previous year.

Chief executive Matt McCann said the company had lifted sales volumes during the year, but received lower revenue per sale towards the end of the financial year due to a shift in demand towards lower priced products.

It is difficult to predict whether that trend will continue, but iSelect still expects to achieve earnings of $30 million in the 2013 calendar year, he said.

"With some early signs of a return to normal private health insurance market conditions, we remain cautious and will closely monitor the market with a view to maintaining our resilience over the next reporting season," Mr McCann said.


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Truss concerned over GrainCorp sale

The Nationals will keep up pressure over the proposed sale of Graincorp to an American company. Source: AAP

NATIONALS leader Warren Truss has "serious reservations" about GrainCorp being sold to an American company but accepts it's a decision for the treasurer after the election.

Grain giant Archer Daniels Midland (ADM) has launched a $3.4 billion proposed takeover of GrainCorp, one of Australia's largest listed agribusinesses.

The takeover still needs the approval of Australia's Foreign Investment Review Board, but the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission has approved the bid.

GrainCorp shareholders have been given until November 16 to decide whether to sell.

Mr Truss said he doubted whether the sale was in the national interest.

The deal would mean ADM, Cargill and Glencore would control almost 60 per cent of Australia's wheat shipments and put most of the nation's grain export infrastructure in foreign hands.

"That leads to where we will lose control over our own destiny and our capacity to expand our grain industry - those decisions would be made in board rooms in the US and other parts of the world," Mr Truss said.

He said the final decision would be in the hands of the next treasurer.

"I have certainly indicated to both sides of politics I have reservations about this matter but respect the fact the decision is ultimately the treasurer's," he said.

"I am confident a coalition treasurer will seriously and meaningfully address concerns."


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Abbott's parental leave unfair: Beattie

Labor's candidate for Forde, Peter Beattie, described the coalition's parental leave plan as unfair. Source: AAP

PETER Beattie has described the coalition's paid parental leave scheme as "gold-edged" and unfair during a campaign stop in Forde.

The former Queensland premier visited a childcare centre at Loganholme, south of Brisbane, on Thursday as part of his bid to win the marginal Liberal-held seat.

The star Labor candidate also signed a pledge to have workers in the female-dominated early childhood sector paid professional wages.

But he used his campaign appearance to attack the coalition's plan to give six months' leave on full pay to any women earning up to $150,000 a year.

"There is no doubt that the $5 billion they're going to spend on a gold-edged paid parental leave scheme, which looks after the wealthy, to the tune of $75,000 for six months, is frankly not only unfair," he told AAP.

"But that kind of money needs to be redirected into these (childcare) programs."

Mr Beattie said an investment in affordable childcare would do more to keep women working.

"You ask a mum, 'What do you want?'. You want affordable childcare, full stop," he said.

"I couldn't think of a better way to spend that sort of money than in early childcare."

Opposition Leader Tony Abbott's plan is based on making Australia's 3200 largest corporations pay an extra 1.5 per cent in company tax to fund his parental leave scheme from July 2015.

Mr Beattie also voiced support for increasing early childhood sector wages, but said budgetary constraints would delay increasing coverage from 40 per cent to 100 per cent of the sector.


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Abbott's surplus promise a bit more vague

For a party that talks about rebuilding trust, the coalition is asking voters to assume a lot. Source: AAP

FOR a party that continually talks about rebuilding trust in politics, the coalition is asking the voting public to assume a lot.

Whether it be stopping the boats or returning to a budget surplus, Opposition Leader Tony Abbott can often be heard saying the coalition has done it before and will do it again.

It is a bit like Ewen McKenzie saying the Wallabies have won the Bledisloe Cup before and can do it again, when the reality is that they haven't come within a cooee of the All Blacks for 11 years.

Times and circumstances change.

However, the pledge to return the budget to surplus has become more vague as the September 7 election draws closer.

At the official Liberal election campaign launch last Sunday, Abbott said the budget would be on track to a "believable" surplus by the end of its first three year term, suggesting it would be later that the $4 billion surplus projected by Labor in 2016/17.

Abbott also promised to deliver surpluses of one per cent of gross domestic product (GDP) within the next decade.

Treasurer Chris Bowen picked up on this apparent change of heart.

"He previously said he would provide a surplus in year one, and then it changed to sometime over the next four years and then it changed to 'before Labor'," Bowen says.

"Now it is apparently one per cent in 10 years' time with no further detail."

But Abbott says it would be "foolish" to give an absolute guarantee on the timing of a surplus given the rapid deterioration in the budget between May and Labor's economic statement - about $3 billion a week over the four-year estimates.

"We will deliver a surplus as soon as we humanly can and we will deliver a surplus quicker and more reliable than the Labor Party," Abbott says.

Of course, part of that comment would be impossible to measure as Labor would be in opposition.

That said, Labor has hardly covered itself in glory, promising at the last election to return the budget to surplus in 2012/13 and persistently sticking to that call until last December.

It was then forced to push any move back to the black by a further four years.

"It's right we return to surplus over time, not tomorrow because it would be a hammer blow to the economy," Bowen says.

Abbott points to the enormous risks to the outlook that are indicated in the Pre-election Economic and Fiscal Outlook (PEFO) - the independent budget analysis by Treasury and Finance.

"The existing forecasts and projections were their best guess at this time," he says.

"Until we know what the starting point is, it's very hard for us to say precisely when things are going to happen."

Which is fair enough given the uncertainty in the global economy and as the Australian economy transitions from the mining investment boom to broader-based economic growth.

But then that contradicts another Abbott line.

"What I say is the economy will always be stronger under a coalition government."

Always?

What about those risks in PEFO?

PEFO says the net contribution of the resources sector to economic growth will fall, while the transition to non-mining sectors may not occur smoothly.

It says the global economy remains challenging, posing a risk to Australia's terms of trade and growth forecast, while the anticipated fall in resources investment peak could be sharper than expected.

At the same time, there is also moderating growth in emerging economies, including China and India, two of Australia's top trading partners.

The June quarter national accounts next Wednesday will be a talking point for the final week of the election campaign.

The Reserve Bank of Australia expects the report will show annual growth will be 2.5 per cent in the year to June.

However, Commonwealth Securities chief economist Craig James at this stage expects it to be slightly less at 2.4 per cent, although further data to supplement the growth result will be released over the next few days.

"Uncertainty about the election result has robbed momentum from the economy, keeping annual economic growth closer to 2.5 per cent, rather than the more 'normal' rate of 3.00-3.50 per cent," he says in a note to clients.

It will be interesting to see how "normal" life is beyond September 7.


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65 onboard latest asylum seeker boat

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 25 Agustus 2013 | 16.57

AN Australian naval vessel has come to the rescue of a boat carrying 65 people northeast of Christmas Island.

HMAS Parramatta, operating under the direction of the Australian Maritime Safety Authority's Rescue Coordination Centre, went to help the suspected irregular entry vessel on Saturday afternoon.

Initial reports indicate there are 63 passengers and two crew onboard.

Those on board are being taken to Christmas Island for the usual checks.


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Feds and Qld at odds over school land sale

A FEDERAL Nationals MP has urged the Queensland government to stop selling school land in his electorate.

Earlier this year, Queensland scrapped plans for a high school in Calliope, instead spending almost $7 million on infrastructure at Gladstone State High to absorb future student numbers.

The move was part of a statewide sale of school land - including ovals and teacher accommodation - which netted $38 million last financial year.

Calliope teenagers commute for over one and a half hours each day to Gladstone and locals are angry the government isn't investing in its community.

Nationals MP for Flynn Ken O'Dowd took a handful of teachers and parents to meet Queensland Education Minister John-Paul Langbroek at a community cabinet meeting in Gladstone.

Mr O'Dowd says the region is growing, and it's shortsighted to sell the land.

"My message is keep the land if you can, it's an asset worth about a million and a half, he told AAP.

"The future of Gladstone is assured with the gas industry and there are several more projects proposed.

"They've got to weigh it all up, they've got to decide whether they need another high school in Gladstone, or where do we put that high school?

"At the moment, Calliope seems like a pretty good idea to me."

A Queensland government spokesman told AAP it would take decades for Calliope to have the numbers to support a high school but he says the government has taken onboard the concerns of Mr O'Dowd and locals.


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Lance Armstrong settles with Sunday Times

DISGRACED cyclist Lance Armstrong has reached a settlement with The Sunday Times who he sued for a STG1 million ($A1.74 million) over an article suggesting he was using performance enhancing drugs before his confession.

The multiple winner of the Tour de France admitted last year to doping during his career, revealing his repeated denials were "one big lie".

The American sued the newspaper nine years ago for libel following the article, seeking damages from the chief sports writer David Walsh and deputy sports editor at the time Alan English.

The Sunday Times was forced to settle the claim in 2006 and agreed to pay Armstrong STG300,000, the newspaper reported.

But after his sensational confession the paper launched a British High Court bid to return the money, plus STG720,000 in costs, and have now reached a confidential settlement, the newspaper said.

It said Walsh and English had "reached a mutually acceptable final resolution to all claims against Lance Armstrong related to the 2012 High Court proceedings and are entirely happy with the agreed settlement, the terms of the which remain confidential."


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Rudd calls for Syria chemical attack probe

Prime Minister Kevin Rudd says any response to the Syrian crisis must be calm and measured. Source: AAP

AUSTRALIA is urging Syria to allow United Nations weapons inspectors access to a Damascus site where a deadly chemical attack is alleged to have occurred.

Prime Minister Kevin Rudd flew back to Canberra on Saturday to receive an intelligence briefing on the escalating Syrian crisis, after reports the United States was weighing up a possible military strike against the Assad regime.

The world is calling for answers amid claims Bashar al-Assad's regime used chemical weapons in an attack on the outskirts of Damascus last week.

"For me it is gut wrenching to see this unfolding," Mr Rudd told reporters in Canberra on Sunday.

"The thought that these sorts of attacks could occur against unarmed civilians ... is like a medieval barbaric scene, rather than something we'd expect on our television sets in the year 2013."

Australia will use its presidency of the UN security council, which it will assume next week, to call for "full and unfettered" access for investigators to the site where the attack occurred.

UN weapons inspectors are in Syria but have not been given permission to investigate the latest claim.

"The burden of proof now lies with the Syrian regime to establish their culpability or absence of culpability on this matter," Mr Rudd said.

He said he had sought information about Australian troops attached to UN missions in the Golan Heights, both on the Syrian and Israeli sides of the border, and troops active on the Lebanese border.

He will also seek reports on other military personnel serving in the region.

"Our concern is of course for their well being," Mr Rudd said.

Defence chiefs have said Australian personnel were trained in handling chemical weapons attacks and were equipped appropriately to handle an attack should there be "any proliferation" of the Damascus incident.

Asked if he had an open mind on any military involvement, Mr Rudd said: "I think it's unproductive and I think it is unwise to begin to speculate on any form of action and what shape that may take."

"The business of responding to an international crisis, as this is emerging as one, is to take it calmly and methodically, step by step."

The prime minister also refused to comment on the appropriateness of US cruise missile strikes against the regime.

"I won't go to the question of military strategy or military tactics," he said.

Opposition Leader Tony Abbott also stopped short of backing military action after receiving a "confidential" briefing on the Syrian situation later on Sunday.

"The important thing is to get to the bottom of what's happened and the best way for that to happen is to allow UN inspectors on the ground to make an assessment," Mr Abbott told ABC TV.


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Billabong considering new deal

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 23 Agustus 2013 | 16.57

THE board of troubled clothing retailer Billabong is considering a rival refinancing proposal to the deal it recently reached with a US private equity firm.

The company plans to take a loan of $US300 million from a consortium led by Altamont to help stabilise its business, overhaul its cost structure and pursue a profitable growth strategy.

Altamont will in turn take a large stake in Billabong, which made a loss of more than $500 million in the first half of the 2012/13 financial year.

The value of the company has also plunged by about 90 per cent in the past few years.

But two US hedge funds, Centerbridge and Oaktree, have approached Billabong's board with their own recapitalisation plan, which they say provides Billabong with greater flexibility to address its financial problems.

Centerbridge and Oaktree have offered to pay more than Altamont for a stake in Billabong, and say they will charge a lower interest rate on its loan to the retailer.

"Billabong confirms that the board is considering the proposal and as part of its consideration the board met with the Centerbridge/Oaktree consortium," the retailer said on Friday.

The company wants to finalise a financing package as soon as practical, it said.

Billabong shares gained 3.75 cents, or 6.8 per cent, to 58.75 cents.


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Rudd offers UN Australian support on Syria

PRIME Minister Kevin Rudd says the United Nations has Australia's support for an immediate investigation into the use of chemical weapons in Syria.

During a phone call to UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon on Friday Mr Rudd expressed Australia's grave concern about the deteriorating situation in Syria.

They also discussed what next steps the international community should consider.

The world is calling for answers amid claims Bashar al-Assad's regime used chemical weapons to massacre up to 1300 people on the outskirts of Damascus this week.

UN weapons inspectors are in Syria but have not been given permission to investigate the latest claim.

Mr Rudd offered the UN chief Australia's support for an immediate and thorough investigation.

"Australia calls on the Syrian government to respond positively to the Secretary-General's call for co-operation and that it provide full and unfettered access to UN inspectors currently in Damascus," he said in a statement on Friday.

He said the events were "a tragedy of unspeakable proportions".

Asked earlier whether Australia would consider committing troops to a possible international intervention in Syria, the prime minister said he is taking a "calm and measured approach".

"I take this step-by-step. I'm not in the business of making chest-beating announcements," he said.


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