Australia Briefing
Welcome back! It’s Keira here in Sydney. Here’s what happened over the Easter break... Today’s must-reads: • Macquarie agrees to sell units
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Welcome back! It’s Keira here in Sydney. Here’s what happened over the Easter break...

Today’s must-reads:
Macquarie agrees to sell units to Nomura
Australians start early voting
Economy struggles Down Under

What's happening now

Macquarie Asset Management has agreed to sell its North American and European public investments business to Nomura for A$2.8 billion ($1.8 billion). The business comprises equities, fixed income and multi-asset strategies, with approximately A$285 billion of assets under management.

Australians started early voting ahead of an election on May 3, with polls showing the center-left Labor government holding a narrow lead over the opposition. The death of Pope Francis has impacted the campaign, with the prime minister changing his schedule this morning in order to pay his respects at St Patrick's cathedral.

Despite avoiding recession for three decades, Australia's economy is now struggling, with elevated inflation, stagnant wages, lagging productivity growth and a strained housing market.

Australia’s opposition, the Liberal-National Coalition, pledged to repeal a ban on live sheep exports to overseas markets if it takes power in the upcoming federal election.

Two run-down boarding houses in Sydney's affluent Paddington are slated for demolition to make way for four luxury homes, threatening the housing of 28 elderly, low-income men. It marks a larger struggle to stem the loss of affordable housing in Sydney and globally.

Billionaire Gautam Adani will transfer ownership of an Australian terminal to his listed company at an enterprise value of about $2.5 billion USD as India’s largest port operator seeks to expand its global footprint.

What happened overnight

Here’s what my colleague, market strategist Mike “Willo” Wilson says happened while we were sleeping…

So much for Easter after US stocks, dollar and bonds were sold as investors responded to the scenario of a non-independent Federal Reserve, should President Donald Trump get his way. Aussie and kiwi followed euro and yen higher amid broad greenback weakness. The Treasury yield curve steepened as markets saw short-term economic weakness being replaced by long-term inflation; hence gold hit another record high. Cues today may come from China which has adopted the US’s ‘pick-a-side’ mentality toward its trade partners, leaving New Zealand and Australia in a very awkward spot.

Two months into Trump’s second term, the US's financial dominance is being challenged, with the dollar and Treasury bonds losing appeal. Meanwhile, the president warned the US economy may slow if the Federal Reserve does not move to immediately reduce interest rates.

US Vice President JD Vance held trade talks with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Monday as New Delhi looks to strike an early deal that spares it from Trump’s additional tariff hikes. The meeting came as world economic and finance leaders met in Washington to address the global trade crisis, with China warning countries against striking deals with the US that could hurt Beijing’s interests.

The US set new duties on solar imports from four Southeast Asian nations that together provide the country with the bulk of its panels after a yearlong trade probe found solar manufacturers in the region are selling their exports to the US at rates lower than the cost of production.

Bank of Japan officials see no need to change their stance on gradually raising interest rates despite US tariffs as they wait for more data to analyze the impact, according to people familiar with the matter.

The US government has awarded fast-track status to a long-delayed copper mining project in Arizona owned by the world’s two biggest mining companies, Rio Tinto and BHP.

Without noticing it, humanity has passed a remarkable milestone: Alcohol consumption has gone into possibly permanent decline, writes Bloomberg Opinion’s David Fickling. The change is attributed to a generational shift and increased availability of non-alcoholic alternatives, he said.

What to watch

• New Zealand March import, exports and trade balance at 8:45 a.m. in Sydney

One more thing...

Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem's Gucci purse was stolen while she was dining at a Washington, DC restaurant over the weekend. The purse contained $3000 in cash, her credit and bank cards, passport, blank checks, prescription medication, driver’s license and a Louis Vuitton Clemence wallet, said a person familiar with the incident.

Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, Washington DC. Photographer: Ken Cedeno/UPI.
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