
Thomas Wickenden
Articles
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Oct 29, 2024 |
dialnet.unirioja.es | Thomas Wickenden
Ayuda Buscar en la ayuda Buscar en la ayuda An Anglian Alliance: Place-Name Tracing the Iclingas and Wicingas Autores: Thomas Wickenden Localización: Mediaevistik: Internationale Zeitschrift für interdisziplinäre Mittelalterforschung, ISSN 0934-7453, Nº. 35, 1, 2022, págs.
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Oct 3, 2024 |
moneymag.com.au | Dale Gillham |Thomas Wickenden
Recently, the Materials sector has seen a significant influx of capital, climbing more than 15% since mid-September, driven by China's latest stimulus measures. Meanwhile, the Financials sector has come under pressure due to global rate cuts, with a domestic cut anticipated soon. As market capital shifts from Financials to Materials, the question arises: should you consider selling your financial stocks and pivot toward resources?
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Oct 2, 2024 |
moneymag.com.au | John Addis |Thomas Wickenden |Jun Liu
When Andrew Kelly was selling car radios in Sydney's bustling Paddy's Markets, he couldn't have expected to one day feature on the BRW Rich List, nor imagine the collapse of the business that put him there. Kelly rode the mobile phone revolution, first to success and then to disaster. And we followed his every step down. The origins of Strathfield Car Radios The first Intelligent Investor office was in the architectural wasteland of Bondi Junction in Sydney's east.
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Oct 2, 2024 |
moneymag.com.au | Jun Liu |Thomas Wickenden |John Addis
Zip Co Limited (ASX:ZIP) is the second-largest buy now, pay later (BNPL) provider in Australia and New Zealand, with 54,000 merchants and 2.2 million users. The company is also expanding in the US, where it serves 24,000 merchants and 3.8 million users. Under the new leadership of Cynthia Scott, Zip has made significant strides in profitability over the past year in Australia, and the US. We believe Cynthia will drive substantial profit growth, especially in the US market.
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Sep 27, 2024 |
moneymag.com.au | Dale Gillham |Thomas Wickenden |Jamie Williamson
Negative gearing has resurfaced in political discussions, with Prime Minister Anthony Albanese suggesting that the Treasury might be reconsidering this long-standing property tax incentive. However, Labor's bruising loss in the 2019 election still lingers, making it difficult to envision the government taking the gamble of upsetting property investors-particularly with the current housing crisis that we're in. Politically, it seems like an improbable move.
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