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Superannuation
03 September 2025 by Maja Garaca Djurdjevic

AustralianSuper bets $40bn at home, calls on government to deliver investable projects

Facing a looming retirement “tsunami”, AustralianSuper will channel $40 billion into Australian projects over the next five years, CEO Paul Schroder ...
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Gold’s surge draws caution on miner exposure

VanEck has highlighted that while gold mining stocks can amplify returns, they carry greater risk when gold prices fall

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RBA faces tougher path as GDP beats forecasts

With the latest print of GDP figures overshooting economist expectations, analysts have warned that the Reserve Bank of ...

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Morningstar says Platinum-L1 merger is a lifeline for fund under pressure

Platinum’s proposed merger with L1 Capital isn’t going to wow the market, it’s a practical move for a business that’s ...

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iShares ETFs soar past US$5tn amid internal product suite review

BlackRock has announced its global assets under management in ETFs have exceeded US$5 trillion worldwide and $50 billion ...

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Households and government lift GDP, defying forecasts

Economic activity has picked up pace in the June quarter, exceeding expectations, as stronger household and government ...

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Markets continue to retreat

  •  
By Stephen Blaxhall
  •  
4 minute read

The financial sector took another beating as investment banks bore the brunt of investor nervousness.

The Australian market took another pounding yesterday following more pain in US markets last Friday. 

The All Ordinaries dropped 106.4 points (1.76 per cent) to 5,949.5 while the S&P/ASX 200 retreated 100.8 points (1.67 per cent) to 5,920.2. 

The banks and financial sector fell 1.6 per cent. Macquarie shares sunk a further 6.6 per cent, taking its drop to 15 per cent since Macquarie notified the market of its exposure to the US sub-prime mortgage sector.  

Macquarie advised investors yesterday that it had realised US$6 million in losses, or around 5 per cent of the aggregate value of Macquarie Fortress Notes. 

 
 

Macquarie Fortress's manager, Four Corners Capital management, has reduced some of the leverage in its portfolio by selling off US$133.4 million in senior secured loans since June 30. Senior loans fell 4 per cent in July; double the previous worse result in September 2001. 

As of August 3 the senior loans portfolio had a face value of US$655.6 million. 

A Macquarie note to investors said that the manager had no concerns that the loans in the portfolio would not continue to pay periodic interest and repay the principal outstanding at par. 

The fund also advised that, as yet, it had not been subject to margin call. 

Fellow diversified financials MFS and Babcock & Brown dropped 4.6 per cent and 4.1 per cent respectively, while Challenger slumped 5.7 per cent.