Alan Kohler is one of Australia’s most experienced commentators and journalists. Alan is the founder of Eureka Report, Australia’s most successful investment newsletter, and Business Spectator, a 24-hour free business news and commentary website. He also hosts Inside Business, a half-hour Sunday programme on the ABC, is the finance presenter on the ABC News - and producer of the nightly graph (or two).

As global businesses lose confidence in Europe, the ripples are shifting requirements for Australian growth and even overhauling traditional management models.

Global stocks rallied after Fed leaders indicated US easing won't be tapered anytime soon, while commodities trended down.

Myer's sales have inched up but many analysts, although expecting a soft result, were disappointed with the numbers.

Analysts say weakness in mining services stocks could spread to other sectors, potentially causing the market to fall.

Lack of federal budget transparency has allowed profligacy on both sides of politics, and while the Coalition has a plan for reform its hopes for a revenue jump are shaky.

The Gonski education reforms are being tossed in the political wash, along with the premiers, as the Coalition seeks to unseat Labor's plan by focusing on the frugal front-end.

Microsoft's next generation gaming console feels like a carbon copy of its predecessor. But its features also reveal Microsoft’s new intent, the Xbox One aspires to be something far more important.

As the dust settles on Bitcoin’s flurry of rallies and crashes there is mounting speculation about its potential longevity. But whichever way you look at it, the virtual currency is being taken more seriously than ever.

Senator Xenophon is likely to hold the keys to repeal the carbon price. But in repealing it he could readily reconfigure Direct Action into an emissions trading scheme by stealth.

As its nuclear sector takes another blow, Japan's solar commitment could see it become the world's biggest solar market this year.

CEOs outline changing views on corporate spending and profits, their economic expectations and political dissatisfaction, including advice for Julia Gillard and Tony Abbott.

UK-based Zeebox wants to be the intermediary for all social media-television interactions. It will not only have to lure viewers, but the networks themselves.
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Comments on this article
Comments PolicyIf only the world was as complicated as some people try to make it out to be (Blame it on bad weathermen, January 14).
Thanks Steve. This confirms my decision to have the children study one of three disciplines:
Economics, meteorology or climatology. They can never be wrong and if they are there are always variables outside of their modelling. I'll just discourage them from working in Italy! (Blame it on bad weathermen, January 14).
Hope the twits in Treasury and the Government read this....more importantly understand it! (Blame it on bad weathermen, January 14).
Soooo... the big question is... What's your forecast for 2013 ???
I'd love to know! (Blame it on bad weathermen, January 14.)
Nice to see the advances in the science of meteorology acknowledged. Just a couple of points from a 45+ year career in meteorology (Blame it on bad weathermen, January 14):
1. You didn't need to look overseas to cyclone Sandy; the Australian Bureau of Meteorology's performance for Yasi was just as spectacularly accurate: the Bureau was warning of very dire effects about a week before. (And not long before, the predictions for Victoria's Black Saturday fires was incredibly good).
2 The mathematician turned meteorologist Edward Lorenz. Ed was a dear friend. And he was first, foremost and always a meteorologist. He served with the USAF weather service during WWII and then went on to an academic career in meteorology for the rest of his life.
Once again, I'm delighted to see him being recognized as the father of chaos theory, rather than the usual attribution to Mandelbrot.
Thank you for a good read
Hmm, a mass of charts (Blame it on bad weathermen, January 14).
Hey man keen how about it if like the climate dudes most of the data you are use is not a true mirror of reality.
Like the normal distribution a black swan will trifuc the pollies Wayne baby and even cool keens.
Common sense tells me go for the hard assets and don't play the stupid games of the political and financial class.
As someone said we longer have markets only interferences and distort ions.
Thanks Doctor, a very interesting analogy. Lets not forget satelite imaging. Or energy production (Blame it on bad weathermen, January 14).
Perhaps we should just adopt the Chinese model, that allows GDP and energy production to be correlated.
Now that is actualy the model that is the closest to pure science. You know, the one that Einstein used, to blow the (science) world apart by stating, that energy and mass are the same (they just interchange). Bosons, for those who are interested in duality.
I find that "a body at rest, will remain at rest, unless acted on by an outside force", helps me to get the numbers right.
A wonderful article!! (Blame it on bad weathermen, January 14.)
Modelling based on additivity is much like Keating's description of Malcolm Fraser.
Have downloaded Minsky and am ready to use.