Australia Briefing
Good morning, it’s Angus here in Sydney. Here’s what you need to know as we head toward another long holiday weekend in Australia. Today’s m
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Good morning, it’s Angus here in Sydney. Here’s what you need to know as we head toward another long holiday weekend in Australia.

Today’s must-reads:
• BHP to look for new CEO 
• Dutton promises defense spending hike
• Albanese pledges critical minerals reserve

What's happening now

BHP Group is preparing to begin looking for a new chief executive officer in the coming months, my colleague Paul-Alain Hunt reveals in this Bloomberg exclusive. Key lieutenants are already jostling to succeed Mike Henry at the top of the world’s biggest miner, say company insiders, who emphasized that no decision has been made. 

Opposition leader Peter Dutton has pledged to boost defense spending by A$21 billion over five years if his Liberal-National Coalition wins the May 3 election. In a reflection of growing uncertainty in the international arena, Dutton said he’d raise the military budget to 2.5% of gross domestic product by 2030.

Peter Dutton, Australia's opposition leader, speaks during the Liberal National Coalition federal election campaign launch in Sydney, Australia, on Sunday, April 13, 2025.  Photographer: Brendon Thorne/Bloomberg

Meanwhile, Labor revealed plans to create a critical minerals reserve if it wins the upcoming election as global trade headwinds grow. A reelected Labor government will make an initial investment of A$1.2 billion in the reserve, which is expected to be operational in the second half of next year. 

Billionaire Clive Palmer’s Mineralogy agreed to an expansion of one of the country’s biggest Chinese-run iron ore projects, the latest step in a decades-long spat with owners Citic. Mineralogy, which owns the legal permits where the Sino Iron project is located, and Citic have been embroiled in a legal dispute.

Inflation pioneer New Zealand is under siege, writes Bloomberg Opinion columnist Daniel Moss. New Zealand was the first country to hand its central bank a formal inflation target -- and the independence to pursue it. But now fraying ties between the government and the Reserve Bank likely have broad lessons, Moss writes.

What happened overnight

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

Gains in US stocks and the dollar tempered after Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said President Donald Trump hasn’t unilaterally offered to take down the levies on Chinese imports. Adding to the confusion was an earlier report that the US is considering cutting the tariffs to between 50% and 65%, while a more recent one sees Trump granting an exemption for China auto-part imports. Traders are more likely eying the Anzac long weekend than their charts, and in the absence of any major local data.

India will suspend a decades old World Bank-negotiated water sharing treaty and downgrade diplomatic ties with Pakistan in retaliation for one of the deadliest attacks on civilians in years. Pakistan’s National Security Committee will meet on Thursday to respond to India’s decisions, Deputy Prime Minister Ishaq Dar said in a post on X.

Nintendo Co. said it is seeing overwhelming demand for its upcoming game console Switch 2 in Japan, in a sign the gadget could be on track for the biggest hardware launch in the video game industry’s history. The Switch 2 will sell for 49,980 yen ($350) in its home market in a console edition that is exclusively Japanese-language.

Apple Inc. and Meta Platforms Inc. were hit by relatively modest European Union fines totaling €700 million ($798 million) for violating tough new antitrust rules for Big Tech, following warnings of harsh retaliation from US President Donald Trump. The punishments are far lower than previous penalties under traditional EU competition law, and are likely to be seen as an attempt to avoid provoking Trump.

What to watch

• Nationals leader David Littleproud gives lunchtime address to National Press Club.

One more thing...

Don’t throw away your dustpan and broom just yet. Production of Optimus, the Tesla robot designed to take over household chores, has been disrupted by China’s curbs on rare earth exports as a trade war with the US escalates.

Tesla's humanoid robot Optimus at the World Artificial Intelligence Conference in Shanghai last year. Photographer: STR/AFP
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