
Annual inflation up to 2.5%
New CPI data shows rents drove an increase in inflation.
New CPI data shows rents drove an increase in inflation.
Nasdaq slides 4.5% after Powell's warning.
Global tariff turmoil is making the inflation outlook more uncertain.
All 1397 public submissions are out: 91% or 1277 opposed, 108 supporting, 12 are neutral.
Many NZ firms see marginal gains from AI despite heavy investment.
GDP growth will be weaker as confidence weakens, ANZ economists say.
Te Pāti Māori's policy could cost nearly $4 billion.
Liam Dann takes a deeper dive into the week's economic news
Trump accuses Beijing of reneging on a deal with US aviation giant.
Paul Conway says the Reserve Bank won't overreact.
Grocery prices increased 0.9%, with chocolate and yoghurt leading the rise.
Prices either static or falling throughout NZ, only six areas had price rises lately.
Tesla, other automaker stocks rise after White House comments.
'Our hope remains that this civil dispute is resolved as quickly as possible' - McCormick
More than 80 business leaders met at Waitangi to discuss workplace inclusion.
A worse-case scenario could see NZ plunged into recession and a return to money printing.
Aggressive tariffs threaten to undermine Silicon Valley’s work on the crucial technology.
New York Times: Tap turned off on rare minerals and magnets used in EVs, chips, aerospace.
Xi said China is 'not afraid' and urged the EU to resist the US practices.
Good news for iPhone maker Apple and others who make tech products in China for the US.
OPINION: Term deposit rates have fallen from 6% last year to about 4.3% now.
OPINION: Is tariff panic premature for NZ?
Four times faster than the humans.
The agency still can't pinpoint the benefits of the Covid-era $55 billion LSAP programme.
'Targeted and called repetitively by young Pasifika people who got my trust.' - Keil-Hall
Monetary policy is poised to do much of the heavy lifting spurring economic growth.
Kiwi dollar jumps after pause announcement.
A new, unsettling red flag.
Project completed in January 2022 but developer blames Covid and the downturn for debts.
Judge: Xinchen Liu was “somewhat cavalier with the health of her staff and the public”.