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Sunday, June 28, 2026 | Daily Newspaper published by GPPC Doha, Qatar.

Tag Results for "Australian" (41 articles)

Northern Ireland’s Rory McIlroy looks down the fairway during the Pro-Am ahead of the Australian Open at the Royal Melbourne Golf Club in Melbourne. (AFP)
Sport

McIlroy headlines as Australian Open goes back to basics at Royal Melbourne

Australian Open returns to traditional formatdropping mixed tournamentMcIlroy excited to compete at Royal Melbourne after format changeLocal and international players vie for Stonehaven Cup at prestigious event With five-times major champion Rory McIlroy leading the field and a return to Royal Melbourne for the first time since 1991, there is a genuine sense of excitement about the 108th playing of the Australian Open. Golf Australia earlier this year dumped the groundbreaking mixed men’s, women’s and all-abilities format that was introduced in 2022, leaving Australia’s oldest and most prestigious tournament once again the sole centre of attention. The tournament, which these days is co-sanctioned by the DP World Tour, counts golfing greats Greg Norman, Tom Watson, Jack Nicklaus and Gary Player among its former winners.Masters champion McIlroy already has his name etched on the Stonehaven Cup after beating Adam Scott in a playoff at Royal Sydney in 2013 and the Northern Irishman said he was excited to be back in Australia. “It hasn’t been a secret that I’ve wanted to come back... (and) the change in the format, going back to the traditional Australian Open has probably helped,” he told reporters on Wednesday, ahead of Thursday’s opening round. “It just feels like this country is starved of top level golf. Obviously, you’ve had Presidents Cups come down here and you’ve had a lot of good players still come through, but maybe just not on a consistent basis. “And I think a market like this, with amazing fans and the history that it does have, probably deserves more of a consistency of big players and big tournaments.” Major winners Cam Smith and Scott are expected to lead the home charge to get the Stonehaven Cup back into Australian hands for the first time since Matt Jones won his second title in 2019. Min Woo Lee and Karl Vilips, a PGA Tour winner in his rookie season, are other local contenders, while Britain’s former Masters champion Danny Willett and 2023 Australian Open winner Joaquin Niemann are among the international challengers. Former Masters champion Scott won the title in 2009 but said to win it at the world-renowned sandbelt course would be extra special. “I think winning the Aussie Open at Royal Melbourne has one of those asterisks next to it, where it’s just that little bit more meaningful,” the 45-year-old said. Former British Open champion Smith, who has endured a horror run of form in recent months, was one of the main critics of the mixed tournament, arguing that conditions had been made easier to help the women. “There was a lot of back-and-forth throughout the last couple of years, and I think everyone’s pretty happy with the result,” he said. “Everyone’s talking about the Aussie Open again, which is what we wanted.” 

Aprilia Racing team's Italian MotoGP rider Marco Bezzecchi takes a break during the second MotoGP practice session ahead of the MotoGP Australian Grand Prix on Philip Island on Friday. AFP
Sport

Bezzecchi shatters lap record to top Australian MotoGP practice

Marco Bezzecchi demolished the Australian MotoGP lap record in setting the standard during second practice on Friday, becoming the first rider ever to dip below 1:27 at Phillip Island.The Italian, who won the Indonesia sprint race a fortnight ago before slamming into world champion Marc Marquez during the grand prix, blazed round the waterfront circuit in 1:26.580 on his Aprilia.His time shattered the previous best of 1:27.246 set by Jorge Martin in 2023. Not content with that, he then bettered it with a sizzling 1:26.492.It left Bezzecchi 0.291sec clear of Raul Fernandez, also on an Aprilia, with Ducati-VR4 rider Fabio Di Giannantonio third and Yamaha's Fabio Quartararo fourth."An unbelievable lap, he hit the record two times, which means he has confidence with the bike," Aprilia team boss Paolo Bonora said of Bezzecchi."To be honest, our bike was good for the past year, but we didn't achieve many results."Ducati-Gresini's Alex Marquez came fifth, 0.453sec adrift, as he looks to seal the world championship runner-up spot behind brother Marc.Spain's Marquez has an 88-point lead over two-time world champion Francesco Bagnaia in the battle to clinch second in the standings with four rounds left of the 22-stop season.He can do so by finishing the weekend 111 points clear of his Italian Ducati rival, who failed to score a point in Indonesia just a week after winning the Japan MotoGP and sprint races.Bagnaia complained about his bike shaking in the opening session on Friday and again struggled early for pace. But he switched to the spare and steered it to ninth place.The top 10 times from second practice automatically qualified for Q2 on Saturday, and will be joined by the fastest two riders from Q1 to determine the first five rows of the grid both for the sprint race and Sunday's main event.Among those relegated to Q1 were Fermin Aldeguer, who won in Indonesia, and home hero Jack Miller, who topped the opening practice session.Marc Marquez, last year's Phillip Island winner, is not in Australia following shoulder surgery after being rammed by Bezzecchi in Indonesia.Bezzecchi must serve a double long lap penalty on Sunday for causing the incident, but is free to race as usual in Saturday's sprint showdown.He was quick all afternoon, owning the fastest lap of 1:27.516 for almost 15 minutes before Di Giannantonio went a fraction quicker.Teams tried a variety of tyre strategies in a bid to collect data in case of bad weather, and Bezzecchi on a hard front and soft rear then stunned the field with the new lap record.

Gulf Times
International

20 Injured in shooting incident in Sydney

Australian police announced that 20 people were injured in a shooting incident on a busy street in Sydney. Police said the suspect was shooting indiscriminately at passing vehicles, including police vehicles, before being arrested. Stephen Parry of the New South Wales Police said that there were between 50 and 100 shots fired, adding that police arrested a man in his 60s, the suspected shooter, and he was transferred to hospital for treatment of injuries he sustained during the arrest. Police reported that one of the injured was in critical condition, while 19 other people were treated for injuries caused by glass shards. Mass killings and random shootings are rare in Australia, where gun laws are extremely strict. In 1996, 35 people were killed in Port Arthur, Tasmania.

A street sign for Wall Street is seen outside the New York Stock Exchange. Moody’s Ratings stripped the US of its last-remaining top credit score in May, citing fears that the ballooning national debt and deficit will damage the country’s standing as the preeminent destination for global capital.
Business

Why long-dated bonds are falling out of favour

Long-dated bonds are facing renewed selling pressure, ramping up borrowing costs around the world and creating a headache for investors and policymakers.Yields on 30-year US Treasuries were around 5% in early September, a level last reached in July. Those on Japan’s 20-year notes climbed to their highest since 1999, while yields on 30-year UK gilts jumped to levels last recorded in 1998. French and Australian government bonds are among the others experiencing a selloff too.The rising yields signal investors are demanding extra compensation for holding government debt in the face of spiralling budget deficits and sticky inflation. The mounting worry is that politicians lack the ambition, or even the ability, to rein in their countries’ debt, while central banks may struggle to combat the mix of sustained price pressures and ebbing economic growth.What’s been happening with long-dated bonds?Traders usually buy and sell bonds based on the relative appeal of their fixed coupon payments. The longer there is until a bond “matures,” the more that can go wrong in the interim. Long-term bonds with a duration of between 10 and 100 years tend to offer higher interest rates than shorter-term treasury bills that are repaid in less than a year, to compensate buyers for the additional risk.When a country’s economic outlook worsens, bond yields typically fall. This is because a weaker economy encourages central banks to shift their focus from combating inflation to stimulating economic activity. That means a bias toward lowering benchmark interest rates, boosting the relative appeal of bonds versus cash in the bank.But lately, yields for long bonds have been rising. In the US, that’s in part because the economy has slowed, not collapsed, and inflation has remained stronger than forecast.Why are there concerns about debt and deficits?Governments across the world loaded up on cheap debt after the 2008 global financial crisis, then borrowed even more to cope with Covid-19 lockdowns and accompanying recessions. Global debt reached a record $324tn in the first quarter of 2025, driven by China, France and Germany, according to the Institute of International Finance.A surge in inflation since the pandemic made that scale of borrowing harder to sustain. Major central banks raised interest rates and wound down their bond-buying programs, known as quantitative easing, which were designed to lower borrowing costs. Some central banks are now even actively selling the debt they accumulated via quantitative easing back into the market, adding further upside pressure to yields.The concern is that if bond yields stay high and governments fail to get their fiscal houses in order, the cost of servicing some of that debt will just keep climbing.In the US, the cost of President Donald Trump’s sweeping tax-and-spending law is a further worry for bond investors. The One Big Beautiful Bill Act could add $3.4tn to the US deficit over the next decade not accounting for dynamic effects such as the potential growth impact according to the Congressional Budget Office, which provides nonpartisan analysis of US fiscal policy.Moody’s Ratings stripped the US of its last-remaining top credit score in May, citing fears that the ballooning national debt and deficit will damage the country’s standing as the preeminent destination for global capital.What’s been driving the recent bond selloff?As well as the lingering debt strains, politics have been a major factor.After criticising Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell for not cutting interest rates more quickly, Trump’s move to oust Fed Governor Lisa Cook has deepened concerns around the central bank’s independence. The worry is that Trump succeeds in replacing Cook and others with officials more inclined to lower borrowing costs regardless of inflation risks.A deluge of corporate debt sales isn’t helping either, as this can sometimes siphon demand from government bonds. Both companies and sovereign borrowers across the world sold at least $90bn in investment-grade debt in early September, as parts of global credit markets neared or toppled records in one of the busiest weeks this year.September is also a traditionally bad month for longer-dated bonds as traders return from their summer break and readjust their portfolios. Government debt globally with maturities of over 10 years posted a median loss of 2% in September, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.The mix of risks is pushing the so-called “term premia” what investors demand for the uncertainty of holding bonds for longer ever higher.Why is a spike in long bond yields a problem?Investors want the bond market to be safe and boring, as these assets are what many of them hold to ensure a rock-solid stream of income to balance out the volatility of higher-risk, higher-reward investments such as technology stocks.When longer-term yields jump, they feed into mortgages, auto loans, credit card rates and other forms of debt, squeezing households and companies, and thus broader economies.And if long bond yields stay high for longer, it will gradually affect how much it costs a government to borrow money. That, and any accompanying deterioration in economies, could mean a “doom loop” in which debt levels climb even higher no matter what governments do with tax and spending.At times, rebellions in markets can even lead to the fall of governments as seen in the UK in 2022 after then-Prime Minister Liz Truss’s mini-budget, which included billions in unfunded commitments, roiled the bond market and led investors to drive up borrowing costs. In the early 1990s, so-called bond vigilantes were said to be powerful enough to force President Bill Clinton to rein in US debt.Where could things go from here?It’s not clear what a prolonged period of higher borrowing costs would mean for the mountain of long-term debt that governments binged on during 15 years of ultra-low interest rates. The upward shift in yields is already leading to new phenomena with unpredictable consequences.One example: Japan’s government bonds used to have such low yields that they acted as a kind of anchor by adding downward pressure on yields the world over. But they’ve shot higher in recent months, adding to the volatility in global bond prices and attracting foreign investors to Japanese debt in significant numbers. This could mean fewer buyers for debt sold by other nations.In the UK, the pressure is mounting on Chancellor Rachel Reeves to show she’s on top of the nation’s finances in an upcoming budget.In the US, there’s still concern that post-pandemic inflation isn’t yet under control and that Trump’s tariffs could add further inflationary pressure that exacerbates the bond yield spike. On the other hand, his trade war may also dampen economic activity, leading the Fed and other central banks to cut interest rates.Or both could happen, whereby there’s a surge in prices accompanied by falling economic output or zero growth a situation known as stagflation. This would add to the uncertainty over monetary policy, forcing the Fed to choose between supporting growth or suppressing inflation.Is this a taste of the future for long bond yields?Jamie Rush, Tom Orlik and Stephanie Flanders of Bloomberg Economics argue that politics and structural forces could potentially make 10-year Treasury yields of 4.5% the new normal.That comes as decades of decline in the “natural” interest rate the real interest rate that would prevail if the economy were operating at full employment with stable inflation have already ended, and partially reversed.“In the years ahead, the natural rate is set to edge higher still,” Rush, Orlik and Flanders wrote in a book, The Price of Money, published in August 2025. “If risks from debt, climate, geopolitics, and technology crystallise, it could rise quite a lot.”

Team UAE’s Australian rider Jay Vine celebrates winning the 10th stage of the Vuelta a Espana, a 175.3km race between Sendaviva Natural Park in Arguedas and El Ferial Larra Belagua in Isaba, Tuesday. (AFP)
Sport

Impressive Vine climbs to victory on Vuelta stage 10

Australian Jay Vine (UAE Team Emirates-XRG) went for broke five kilometres from the summit finish to win stage 10 of the Vuelta a Espana Tuesday, repeating his stage six victory, while race favourite Jonas Vingegaard reclaimed the leader’s red jersey.Vine caught and overtook Spain’s Pablo Castrillo (Movistar) on the climb to the finish of the 175.3km ride from Parque de la Naturaleza Sendaviva to El Ferial Larra Belagua, raising two fingers as he crossed the line after his second individual stage win of this year’s race.The 29-year-old – mountains classification winner last year and this year’s leader of the category – also won two stages in 2022.“Winning is so, so hard, and it’s such an incredible feeling when it happens,” Vine said.“I don’t think I’ll ever get used to winning, because it’s just unbelievably hard.”Castrillo held on to take second spot, 35 seconds behind Vine, with the Spaniard’s compatriot and teammate Javier Romo finishing third.Vingegaard (Visma-Lease a Bike) had lost the red jersey to Norway’s Torstein Traeen (Bahrain Victorious) after stage six, but having begun Tuesday’s stage 37 seconds off the lead, he opened a gap to Traeen on the final climb to move 26 seconds ahead in the general classification.Following Monday’s rest day, Tuesday’s stage was a mostly flat ride, with one category three climb along the way before the category one finish, and any early breaks had all been quashed by the peloton.A group, which eventually included 30 riders, made the decisive break 72km from the end, and they were allowed to get away, though the leading group was whittled down as the race wore on.There were attacks from the breakaway, with Romo trying to get away, but when Castrillo made his move with seven kilometres remaining, the Spaniard looked set for victory, but Vine reacted and powered past the leader for another stage win.The riders in the strung out peloton were never going to contest the stage win, but the GC battle commenced on the final climb and Vingegaard, who had already closed the gap to Traeen by winning the previous stage, returned to where everyone expected the Dane to be.Vingegaard was part of a small group which began passing some of the breakaway riders towards the finish, and his 11th-place finish on the stage brings an end to Traeen’s time in the red jersey.