The persimmon season has just started in the United States, with harvest of the early season varieties underway.
The Tax Working Group (TWG)'s "Future of Tax" interim report is 188 pages long. There have been (and there will be) many hundreds more pages written about the findings. (Newsroom has written a few.) And that's even before the full report comes out in February next year.
Construction is due to begin at Scott Technology's Kaikorai Valley headquarters in Dunedin, in a $4million project which will double its space writes Simon Hartley in todays Otago Daily Times.
The Tiwai Point smelter will soon begin energising the site’s fourth potline after a six-year break
Gross Domestic Product statistics out today are further evidence that business commentators’ attempts to darken economic and political confidence are out of step with reality, Council of Trade Unions President Richard Wagstaff says.
The rigorous process to look at the risks around the three re-entry options being considered for the Pike River Mine has turned up no “showstoppers”, Pike River Recovery Agency Chief Executive Dave Gawn says.
E tū says its support for NZ Steel’s complaint of steel-dumping by China has been vindicated by a High Court ruling directing MBIE to reinvestigate.
They come from around New Zealand and represent an array of sectors, demonstrating the nation’s business diversity and innovation.
Amazon dipping its toes into the insurance market in India may likely have ripples effects for New Zealand, which is seen as a test bed for large organisations looking to try something new. FintechNZ general manager James Brown says insurers in New Zealand hold over $20 billion in assets and over $15 billion in liabilities which are not insignificant amounts. “What this clearly demonstrates is that we are ripe for new emerging technologies. “This decision by Amazon is a serious move by one of the biggest global tech firms and is an indication that they are going after large markets with an insurance licence application already in. “They have been in India for a while with the Amazon pay app, so they are clearly using this as a test bed. “Insurance has, in the past, been slower to react than the banking world however, it looks like it will need to get its running shoes on with this announcement. “Amazon’s Indian decision is expected to be worth $US280 billion by the year 2020,” Brown says. The e-commerce giant is starting in India with life, health and general insurance products. The Seattle-based retail and technology company giant is aware there is a lot of room to expand in Indian market’s current financial climate, Brown says. “Other tech businesses are also targeting the world’s second-most populated country. Walmart-backed Flipkart has applied for a licence to sell life and general insurance, while Paytm, which is backed by Asian giants Alibaba and Softbank, already has a corporate agency licence. “We are certain Amazon’s move will be a point of discussion at the annual New Zealand fintech summit on November 29. “As the New Zealand reputation for innovations in fintech and insurtech continues to grow, we expect international investors to attend the summit in November to discover and connect with our own fintech innovators. The UK is looking to a services-based free trade agreement post-Brexit which could add up to 20 percent to New Zealand’s GDP, based on Treasury statistics,” Brown says.
Favourable hydro and wind conditions in the second quarter of 2018 led to the highest proportion of renewable electricity generation for the quarter since 1981, according to the New Zealand Energy Quarterly released today by the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment.

Palace of the Alhambra, Spain
By: Charles Nathaniel Worsley (1862-1923)
From the collection of Sir Heaton Rhodes
Oil on canvas - 118cm x 162cm
Valued $12,000 - $18,000
Offers invited over $9,000
Contact: Henry Newrick – (+64 ) 27 471 2242

Mount Egmont with Lake
By: John Philemon Backhouse (1845-1908)
Oil on Sea Shell - 13cm x 14cm
Valued $2,000-$3,000
Offers invited over $1,500
Contact: Henry Newrick – (+64 ) 27 471 2242

