The Reserve Bank has cut interest rates for the first time in more than two and a half years, bringing relief to households and corporate borrowers.
As widely tipped by economists, the central bank today lowered its key cash rate by 25 basis points to 4.5 per cent. The move reversed the increased imposed on Melbourne Cup Day last year, the most recent time the RBA has shifted rates.
Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/business/westpac- ... z1cQFlWEQR
stimulus vs no stimulus
Re: stimulus vs no stimulus
Cut! 
“If you trust in yourself, and believe in your dreams, and follow your star. . . you'll still get beaten by people who spent their time working hard and learning things and weren't so lazy.”
Re: stimulus vs no stimulus
Excellent! Now let's hope that the banks are kind enough to pass this on to us...
Why is it that when Miley Cyrus gets naked and licks a hammer it's 'art' and 'edgy' but when I do it I'm 'drunk' and 'banned from the hardware store'?
Re: stimulus vs no stimulus
Plenty of US stimulus in Australia!
"Big US investors are starting to look outside their own borders more than ever before, and they're regularly visiting Australia," said Barrie, who was BRW's Entrepreneur of the Year for 2011 and has been selected as a featured speaker at the big SXSW 2012 event in Texas.
"Because valuations in the US are quite high right now, US investors are looking abroad, and that's great for Australia because we're high on the list."
Accel is one big US venture capital firm that has made significant investments in Australia. It was the source of the investments in Atlassian, OzForex and 99designs.
Another big US VC firm, Sequoia, had "actively been visiting" Australia, Barrie said.
"Certainly this year I received about 60 or so cold calls from the late stage [investor] guys who, when I say we're not raising money right now, rattle off a list of their favourite ten Australian tech companies wanting an opinion," Barrie said.
Barrie runs a Technology Venture Creation class at the University of Sydney and they held their "2011 pitch day" last Friday, with eight teams pitching their startup ideas to a panel of real investors and entrepreneurs.
He said the ideas included Groupon 2.0, online multiplayer game hosting platforms, car pooling platforms, educational games and location-based games.
Barrie said one startup he was advising just got an interview with YCombinator, the "Harvard of startup incubators in the US", while another got into StartupChile. Two other groups of entrepreneurs had also come to him with term sheets from early stage US investors.
In Australia, those with startup ideas are being encouraged to apply to the local incubator, Startmate, which is accepting applications up until November 30.
Startmate, which helped launch five companies last year, is a mentor-driven seed fund that invests $25,000 in the companies it selects and pays for their legal bills, travel to the US and office space.
"The rise of web and mobile startups with low-priced monthly subscriptions or in-app purchases mean that companies can be based in Australia while winning their first customers all around the world because they don't need to hire expensive sales people and setup overseas offices," said Startmate co-founder Niki Scevak.
"The world's top venture capital firms and investors are increasingly comfortable investing in growth rounds of Australian companies and we are also starting to see that interest move downstream to earlier and earlier stages.
"Dave McClure, of 500 Startups, for instance, invested in three of the five Startmate companies in the last batch."
Australian entrepreneurs are using the investment dollars to create significant, viable companies that are often acquired by bigger fish.
Australian iOS game developer Firemint sold to Electronic Arts in May for an estimated $20-40 million. Tapulous, founded by an Australian, sold to Disney in July last year, while RetailMeNot was acquired by US company WhaleShark Media for $90 million in December.
Furthermore, the technology kings dominated the recent BRW Young Rich List, while a quarter of the BRW Fast 100 list of fastest growing Australian companies are technology-related.
David McKinney of Discovr said he was proud to be able to run his startup from Australia and would use the $1.1 million investment to expand his team and grow faster.
"We've seen an incredible startup culture emerge in the local scene that has been fostered by people like Pollenizer, Atlassiaan, the Startmate progam, and local angel and VC community," he said.
Lynch, who studied programming and IT at UTS in Sydney and won the university medal, started DesignCrowd in 2008.
Before that he had started another company, which failed, and was working in strategy consulting for Booz and co.
"I took a leave of absence for a year and took $10,000 in capital, moved back home, setup at the family kitchen room table – didn't have a garage suitable – and launched the business from home," he said.
He got the idea after for a crowd-sources graphics design service after he saw the London Olympics logo, which was released several years ago after months of development and hundreds of thousands of dollars in fees to a professional design firm. The logo was panned by the public and the media.
"The traditional design process is expensive, slow and very risky," said Lynch.
In late 2009 DesignCrowd received $300,000 from angel investors and spread that money thin over two years, during which the business grew by around 1300 per cent.
One of the angel investors was Todd Forest, the boss of NineMSN. But Lynch remains the single biggest shareholder, even after the venture capital injection from Starfish.
"The market that we're operating in is the global graphic design market – it's a $180 billion market and there's over 120 million small businesses in the world," said Lynch.
"To get our service in front of those small businesses and to get a slice of that global market, we need capital."
Lynch said 60 per cent of his clients were new businesses looking for a logo but now he is trying to target businesses that are in later stages of their life cycle and also offer them related services beyond just graphic design.
According to market research firm IBISWorld, there are 11,000 designers employed at design agencies around Australia. Lynch said that on DesignCrowd there were 40,000 freelance designers and clients typically received over 100 different designs, allowing them to pick the best one.
Lynch said he was now in an aggressive expansion phase and was urgently seeking to hire 10 staff to fund his moves into the US and Britain.
Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/technology/techno ... z1cc1EDQvS
“If you trust in yourself, and believe in your dreams, and follow your star. . . you'll still get beaten by people who spent their time working hard and learning things and weren't so lazy.”