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Closing Bell: ASX pushed lower by bank stock profit taking; WDS gas project rubber stamped

Closing Bell: ASX pushed lower by bank stock profit taking; WDS gas project rubber stamped

News.com.au28-05-2025
ASX falls as profit taking cuts banking stocks
Energy sector booms on WDS project green light
CPI comes in at 2.4pc vs expectations of 2.3pc
A trend of profit taking in the larger banking stocks has pushed the ASX lower by -0.13%, erasing gains made earlier this morning.
Sticky inflation slightly above expectations didn't help matters. CPI rose by 2.4% over the year to April, just above hopes of a small dip to 2.3%.
While still firmly in the RBA's target band, the inflation read has increased uncertainty around the RBA's July interest rate meeting.
The market is pricing a 25-basis point cut for July, with a probability of about 65%.
Nonetheless, rate-sensitive stocks were on the up today, with Info Tech and Real Estate sectors both adding more than 1% in trade.
Energy performed even better, adding more than 2% sector-wide despite a 1% fall in the oil price overnight.
A rubber stamp from the federal government for Woodside Energy's (ASX:WDS) North West Shelf gas project might've had something to do with it.
The green light has extended the life of Australia's largest oil and gas project to 2070 after a six-year period of deliberation.
More on that in a moment.
Back on the ASX, the All Tech index jumped 1.3% despite the dour market mood, while the ASX Small Ords posted a 0.34% lift.
Weebit Nano (ASX:WBT) climbed 4.11%, RPM Global (ASX:RUL) 6.32% and Eroad (ASX:ERD) soared 17.59%.
Woodside's North West Shelf gas project green lit
After six years in limbo, WDS stock jumped 3.22% on news the North West Shelf project had been rubber stamped.
"Following the consideration of rigorous scientific and other advice including submissions from a wide cross-section of the community, I have today made a proposed decision to approve this development, subject to strict conditions, particularly relating to the impact of air emissions levels from the operation of an expanded on-shore Karratha gas plant," Environmental minister Murray Watt said in a statement.
The government – both federal and state – has received a lot of pushback over this particular development, from a variety of environmental, indigenous and community groups.
In response, Prime Minister Albanese pointed out that there's a difference between net zero emissions and zero emissions whatsoever.
He argued the firming capacity of natural gas was vital to the renewable energy transition.
'We need to make sure that there is security of energy supply at the same time as we support the transition which reduces our emissions,' he said.
Climate and indigenous groups are already raising concerns, with former chair of the Murujuga Aboriginal Corp and co-founder of Save Our Songlines Raelene Cooper threatening legal action against the project approval.
'See you in court,' she said in response to the news.
The Climate Council argued that a 40-year extension would turn the North West Shelf project into 'the most polluting fossil fuel project green-lit by the Albanese government".
Their modelling predicts emissions from the project over its new life time will equal more than a decade's worth of annual emissions from Australia as a whole.
WA Premier Roger Cook said gas was a step in the decarbonisation journey, with an important role to play in transitioning from coal-based energy production.
"I'm not going to shackle Western Australia to legislation which damages our efforts to help the globe to decarbonise and reduce emissions," he said.
Western Australia remains the only state in Australia that has not committed to an emissions target for 2030.
ASX SMALL CAP LEADERS
Today's best performing small cap stocks:
Security Name Last % Change Volume Market Cap
SFG Seafarms Group Ltd 0.002 100% 2859739 $4,836,599
CTN Catalina Resources 0.0035 75% 34046776 $4,852,038
AYM Australia United Min 0.003 50% 9691768 $3,685,155
CZN Corazon Ltd 0.0015 50% 500000 $1,184,572
MOM Moab Minerals Ltd 0.0015 50% 500000 $1,733,666
PAB Patrys Limited 0.0015 50% 1750000 $2,057,447
SKN Skin Elements Ltd 0.003 50% 185172 $2,150,428
BMO Bastion Minerals 0.002 33% 500000 $1,355,441
CCO The Calmer Co Int 0.004 33% 35965065 $9,033,947
PVT Pivotal Metals Ltd 0.008 33% 8902191 $5,443,355
TFL Tasfoods Ltd 0.004 33% 123592 $1,311,287
YAR Yari Minerals Ltd 0.008 33% 2840445 $3,328,269
NWM Norwest Minerals 0.012 33% 4676283 $7,464,168
CDE Codeifai Limited 0.007 27% 5750 $1,793,175
ODE Odessa Minerals Ltd 0.007 27% 7038366 $8,797,429
BYH Bryah Resources Ltd 0.005 25% 3275000 $3,479,814
CR9 Corellares 0.0025 25% 106667 $2,011,213
EVR Ev Resources Ltd 0.005 25% 4621189 $7,943,347
JAV Javelin Minerals Ltd 0.0025 25% 2360775 $12,092,298
OLI Oliver'S Real Food 0.005 25% 4168 $2,162,928
PRX Prodigy Gold NL 0.0025 25% 1200000 $6,350,111
SHP South Harz Potash 0.005 25% 207400 $4,410,915
LKY Locksleyresources 0.061 24% 90149790 $7,186,667
T92 Terrauraniumlimited 0.037 23% 1005654 $3,057,462
CCM Cadoux Limited 0.039 22% 66708 $11,869,363
Pivotal Metals (ASX:PVT) said it has uncovered bonanza-grade gold at its Lorraine prospect in Quebec, with one historical channel sample hitting 28 metres at 45.2g/t gold. A deeper drill hole pulled 0.97m at 56.2g/t, including a spicy 0.15m at 233.9g/t.
The gold sits in a 600-metre corridor of copper-gold quartz veins, just 12km from the historic Belleterre mine. It's largely untouched ground for gold, with previous efforts focused on copper and nickel.
Pivotal's now launching a full-blown field program to line up fresh drill targets. It reckons this could be the next big hit in its BAGB project, already home to high-grade copper and nickel.
Locksley Resources (ASX:LKY) has locked in $1.47 million through a well-supported placement at 4 cents a share to fund drilling at its Mojave Project in California.
The cash will go straight into boots-on-ground exploration, with the team already mobilising. Drilling's planned for the September quarter, targeting rare earths at El Campo (up to 12.1% TREO) and high-grade antimony at the Desert Antimony Mine (up to 46% Sb), pending final permits.
ASX SMALL CAP LAGGARDS
Today's worse performing small cap stocks:
Security Name Last % Change Volume Market Cap
VPR Voltgroupltd 0.001 -50% 5234322 $21,432,416
UCM Uscom Limited 0.012 -37% 538265 $4,759,063
RDS Redstone Resources 0.0045 -36% 8842279 $6,477,649
1AD Adalta Limited 0.002 -33% 190000 $1,929,668
OVT Ovanti Limited 0.002 -33% 38030791 $8,380,545
ADD Adavale Resource Ltd 0.0015 -25% 3479942 $4,574,558
IFG Infocusgroup Hldltd 0.006 -25% 19387535 $2,099,415
HCF Hghighconviction 0.026 -21% 74706 $640,414
ADY Admiralty Resources. 0.004 -20% 111653 $13,147,397
ERL Empire Resources 0.004 -20% 360334 $7,419,566
MEL Metgasco Ltd 0.002 -20% 165112 $3,643,967
POD Podium Minerals 0.03 -19% 3477618 $25,212,193
KGD Kula Gold Limited 0.0065 -19% 1053433 $7,370,029
PIL Peppermint Inv Ltd 0.0025 -17% 500000 $6,712,918
RFA Rare Foods Australia 0.005 -17% 524700 $1,631,899
TON Triton Min Ltd 0.005 -17% 2758518 $9,410,332
DES Desoto Resources 0.14 -15% 2465481 $30,727,035
TOU Tlou Energy Ltd 0.017 -15% 164917 $25,971,686
RLF Rlfagtechltd 0.041 -15% 407495 $17,851,431
AQI Alicanto Min Ltd 0.024 -14% 850634 $23,748,003
GBE Globe Metals &Mining 0.03 -14% 153955 $24,312,855
CR1 Constellation Res 0.11 -14% 4500 $8,037,753
THB Thunderbird Resource 0.013 -13% 2875045 $5,846,121
MGL Magontec Limited 0.17 -13% 115882 $11,107,556
AJX Alexium Int Group 0.007 -13% 85299 $12,691,429
IN CASE YOU MISSED IT
Titanium Sands (ASX:TSL) has been awarded one-year retention licences for the company's Sri Lankan heavy mineral sands project, allowing the progression to environmental studies.
Bubalus Resources (ASX:BUS) is looking to sharpen up targets at the Crosbie North gold-antimony prospect ahead of a drilling campaign slated for Q3.
Victory Metals (ASX:VTM) has raised $4 million to accelerate a Pre-Feasibility Study and development of its flagship North Stanmore rare earths project, the largest clay-hosted Heavy Rare Earth deposit in Australia.
Trading halts
At Stockhead, we tell it like it is. While Titanium Sands, Bubalus Resources, Locksley Resources and Victory Metals are Stockhead advertisers, they did not sponsor this article.
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New Victorian police chief Mike Bush says people should be free to protest without permits
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New Victorian police chief Mike Bush says people should be free to protest without permits

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Labor and Liberals facing internal fault lines over Gaza, net zero, and Welcomes to Country
Labor and Liberals facing internal fault lines over Gaza, net zero, and Welcomes to Country

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Labor and Liberals facing internal fault lines over Gaza, net zero, and Welcomes to Country

It's one of the most enduring political rules — never fight the last election at the next one. But the Liberals are already showing signs of missing this important memo in the new political term. Over the weekend, the WA Liberal Party supported a motion to abandon a target of net zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050, heaping more pressure on federal Opposition Leader Sussan Ley to dump the policy. Delegates at the WA Liberal State Council also approved a motion to get rid of the Indigenous and Torres Strait Islands flags behind the prime minister at press conferences and cut back on Welcome to Country ceremonies. It is understood that both motions were carried with an overwhelming show of support when they were read out and without needing to go to a ballot. 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The ATO learned it was being scammed, then paid out millions more to fraudsters
The ATO learned it was being scammed, then paid out millions more to fraudsters

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The ATO learned it was being scammed, then paid out millions more to fraudsters

It was a scam so simple it took just minutes on your phone, where you could tell the tax office how much money to pay you, and it came through within days. The ATO loophole was so vast, tens of thousands of Australians stole a total of $2 billion. It was Australia's largest GST fraud. But it did not need to be this way. New details uncovered by Four Corners show the ATO was warned its systems were badly lacking, but even when it eventually discovered the fraud, it continued to pay out hundreds of millions of dollars. The ATO maintains it cracked down hard on the scam, moving quickly to shut down the perpetrators and cut off the money. The case of Linden Phillips would suggest otherwise. It showcases in granular detail the ATO's failures and how, while some loopholes are closed, others are being exploited on a far larger scale. Linden Phillips was no criminal mastermind, but from his home in the Victorian river town of Mildura, he easily exploited giant flaws in the ATO's GST refund system. It was August 2021, and Phillips had just been released from jail. According to court filings, a week after his release, he "opened several bank accounts" in his own name and registered a previously created ABN for GST. That was step one. Next was proof of concept. This could have taken just two minutes and involved putting just three numbers into the ATO's systems. Phillips did this by logging into his myGov account — available on your phone — and going to the ATO's GST page. Here, he said his fictitious earth-moving business had recorded minimal sales for the month. Phillips then said he was entitled to $13,158 as a GST refund. Amazingly, he did not have to specify why this was. At this stage, no one was required to check the veracity of his Business Activity Statement before paying. 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Somehow, this was not a red flag when the ATO was paying out the money. Just weeks after Phillips made his second claim, someone at the ATO twigged that his enterprise may not be legitimate. Finally, there was a human in the loop. An ATO officer rang Phillips and was told the statements had been prepared by his accountant, for which he provided a name and number. "The number was in fact registered to a different person … not an accountant but a painter," according to the court documents. The ATO followed up with a letter to Phillips, which he ignored. As he did to further calls and emails from the ATO. Despite the suspicious behaviour, the ATO did nothing. In the meantime, Phillips bought himself a Porsche and his mother a house. The ATO would sit on its hands for the next four months, giving pause to its claim to have cracked down hard and quickly brought the scam under control. When Phillips was caught, it had nothing to do with the ATO. He was arrested in April 2022 by Mildura detective Vanessa Power, who was searching his home looking for drugs and guns. She checked Phillips's phone and "identified a series of fraudulent ATO claims," according to Victoria Police. That led police to a further 63 other offenders in the Mildura area. It was around this time that the ATO began to take the threat seriously. Four months after it first identified a problem with Phillips's GST refunds, the ATO launched Operation Protego, led by its Serious Financial Crimes taskforce. By this time, the ATO estimates $850 million had been stolen from the tax system. While Protego was operating, then-federal assistant treasurer Stephen Jones said it was "pretty easy to work out whether" some had lodged a "legitimate" GST claim or not. "There's lots of analytics that the ATO can do to work out whether this is a legitimate business or not," he said. That may have been true, but the ATO was not identifying many of these false claims until after the money had been paid. It would take the tax office 18 months to get the scam under control, and by this time, $2 billion had been stolen from the tax system. The ATO said when it launched Operation Protego that it assigned 470 extra staff to verify GST claims, and that by May 2022, "almost all fraud attempts were being stopped". All up, the ATO estimated 57,000 people were involved in the scam. Of these, just 122 have been convicted, while the ATO has only recovered $96 million — just 5 per cent of the money stolen from the tax system. The banks have helped recover another $64 million by freezing accounts. In the years leading up to the scam, the ATO's analysis showed its fraud detection systems, which should have prevented the scam, were not up to scratch. A 2018 report unearthed by Four Corners outlined how the systems were lacking. The report's author, Ali Noroozi, spent 10 years as the inspector general of taxation. Citing the ATO's internal data, he found that its so-called risk assessment systems were only marginally better than random selection. "They have certainly been on notice that their risk assessment tools could do better," Mr Noroozi told Four Corners. The tax office was slow to heed this warning, and then it also downgraded its assessment of external fraud risks from "severe" to "low" two months before the scam took off in mid-2021. It said the likelihood of risk had gone from "almost certain" to "rare". The tax office said it began building and updating new fraud detection systems even before the critical 2018 inspector general report. But the auditor general noted one of the ATO's new fraud detection systems ran a year late and was therefore not fully switched on until January 2022. At this point, it successfully detected the massive fraud, but it still took the tax office a further three months to launch Operation Protego. The auditor general found "the ATO did not have a procedure to respond to a large-scale external fraud event" like the GST scams. Watch as Four Corners investigates one of the most powerful and secretive institutions in the country, tonight on ABC TV and ABC iview. Tax experts said these processes need humans in the loop. "Before money goes out the door, particularly if there's been large changes in a taxpayer's details or accounts, that should be verified," said Karen Payne, who stepped down last year as inspector general of taxation. "Once upon a time, there was a desk audit when you first lodged your GST return to make sure you are carrying on a business that you can verify and these amounts that you're claiming are legitimate." As the Abbott government swept to power in 2013, the ATO was moving away from this model of human verification to an automated system. That would eventually see around 1,000 staff — or half the people in the division responsible for the GST — lose their jobs. "I'm not sure the ATO has ever recovered from that sort of drain of knowledge and drain of skill sets," said Stephen Hathway, a liquidator currently investigating a large-scale GST fraud. "The people [at the ATO] work really hard and diligently, but there just needs to be more of them. And there needs to be more regard to getting out there in the field and making those inquiries." While the ATO has claimed to have contained smaller-scale GST frauds as part of Operation Protego, it has struggled to stop loopholes being exploited by larger-scale scams. Stephen Hathway has seen this up close. He is currently chasing Nahi Gazal, who claims to be a wealthy Sydney property developer, but has been accused of masterminding a giant GST fraud. Gazal and his associates managed to squeeze more than $21 million out of the tax office in GST refunds. They allegedly used fake invoices to claim GST refunds for building projects that either did not exist or had been completed by other developers. Once again, the ATO did not bother to do even the most basic of checks. "It never had any legitimacy," Mr Hathway said. "There's nothing in it that ever demonstrates any act of commerce or enterprise. The whole set of transactions were completely and utterly made up, fraudulent, had no basis." By September 2023, the ATO had issued Gazal with a $44 million tax bill, including penalty interest. Four Corners can reveal that while the ATO was chasing Gazal for that money, it failed to detect that he was using a new string of companies to continue scamming the tax office. Mr Hathway has been funded by the ATO to pursue Gazal over this latest scheme, and has connected him to an additional 22 companies, which Mr Hathway said have fraudulently claimed another $25 million in GST refunds. Once again, Gazal claimed to be a property developer. "Not one bag of nails was bought from Bunnings," Mr Hathway said. But once again, the ATO did not check before paying out the GST refunds to Gazal's companies. Mr Hathway said the ATO never asked basic questions, like the address of the properties being developed, whether a development application had been approved, or to even look at a building contract. "I'm the liquidator after the event. And then when we're looking into the file, we find nothing," Mr Hathway said. Mr Hathway was not hopeful the ATO would be able to recover much of the money, and said there was nothing to stop someone else from doing the same thing. Karen Payne said the tax office needed to do better, as these frauds resulted in less money for essential services. "We should all care because it raises revenues that allow the government … to fund the services that we all benefit from … health, defence, security, infrastructure … it's pretty key part of our democracy." Watch Four Corners' full investigation into the tax system, No Return, tonight from 8:30pm on ABC TV and ABC iview.

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