Greensill companies pitted against each other in claims war – The Australian Financial Review

The Australian parent company, which is controlled by Greensill founder and chief executive Lex Greensill, is a creditor in the UK administration process and is understood to be owed hundreds of millions of dollars. Mr Greensill is also a director of Greensill Capital UK. Grant Thornton has told the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC)…

Credit Suisse shaken by aftershocks of Greensill insolvency – Sydney Morning Herald

Japanese insurer Tokio Marine, which provided $US4.6 billion of coverage to Greensill credit notes, said that it was investigating the validity of those policies which it inherited when it bought Insurance Australia Group in 2019. A source familiar with the situation said the policies were directly linked to the $US10 billion Credit Suisse funds. The…

Hard bump ahead? Drop in insolvencies and bankruptcies is a ticking time bomb – The Conversation AU

The vast arsenal of fiscal, monetary and legal measures used by Australian governments to offset the COVID-induced economic crisis have worked well. They did not prevent a recession (popularly defined as two quarters of negative GDP growth) but things could have been much worse. What is particularly interesting is that the expected consequences have not…

Comedian Paul McDermott resolves historical ‘family feud’ with former foreign minister Alexander Downer – ABC News

Performer Paul McDermott and former foreign affairs minister Alexander Downer have made a “gentlemen’s pact” to end a dispute between their ancestors that dates back more than 150 years. Key points: Alexander Downer’s grandfather took Paul McDermott’s great-great-grandfather to court in the 1860s Mr Downer attended McDermott’s recent Adelaide Fringe show Mr Downer, who did…

Hard bump ahead? Decline in insolvencies and bankruptcies is a ticking time bomb – The Conversation AU

The vast arsenal of fiscal, monetary and legal measures used by Australian governments to offset the COVID-induced economic crisis have worked well. They did not prevent a recession (popularly defined as two quarters of negative GDP growth) but things could have been much worse. What is particularly interesting is that the expected consequences have not…