Jarden Brief: Facebook owner Meta soars with surprise ad money boom
Layoffs and gloom one day, soaring stocks the next: Tech giant's surprise payday.
Layoffs and gloom one day, soaring stocks the next: Tech giant's surprise payday.
Financial Times: Central banks are cautious, but investors see 'light at end of tunnel'.
Shell the latest oil company to report bumper profits, risks reigniting public anger.
Neither Chris Hipkins nor Christopher Luxon will make voters love them - and that's fine.
Tech company sees growth opportunities in the space industry.
But the test will be the first six months of 2023.
OPINION: Our editorial on a sodden Auckland and the 'broken window fallacy'.
More than 15,000 claims have already come in from the floods.
After impressive early growth, investing platform announces cuts.
New York Times: Writers are being paid for posts praising places they've never been.
Tairawhiti regional leaders, the Beehive and farmers decide to act together.
Tourism leaders' contributions to in-tray of new minister Peeni Henare.
"Probably looks worse than it is. We’re certainly a lot better off than other people."
Latest figures reveal a smartphone slowdown.
Reforming the Three Waters Reform will take more than a new(ish) ministerial face.
Right of Reply: Foodstuffs' Chris Quin responds to Ernie Newman column.
OPINION: This issue is a blight on our country. It must be fixed.
The New World Fresh Collective in Mt Albert was seriously damaged by the deluge.
Google has been cautious about who plays with its AI advances despite growing pressure.
The grim toll: Totalling the staff laid off by each tech giant.
Despite beating earnings expectations, PayPal cited broader problems for layoffs.
Cuts come after softer than expected employment data.
Asphalt can be seen hanging over the edge, above the sea.
The index has now risen more than 5 per cent so far this year.
Wilkinson wants to concentrate almost solely on retirement village assets.
First signs of a slowdown have emerged in labour market data, economists say.
Retail anti-crime strategy gets going, but Labour stuck in "la-la land", Mitchell says.
Financial Times: Has the time come to slow the monetary tightening or even reverse it?