

Durie tagr full#
They don't call Durie the ACCC-whisperer for nothing! His closeness in particular to its chairman Rod Sims is well-known.Īfter the publication, Ruralco went into a trading halt, but made no immediate comment on Durie’s prediction. The DuerrGroup accelerates sales in Q3 (1124 million) and now expects full year sales to reach upper end of the target range (3,900-4,200 million). This was taken rather seriously in some quarters. Suggesting that the ACCC hadn’t budged on its initial concerns about the deal, released in June. Use census records and voter lists to see where families with the Durie surname lived. Lancashire had the highest population of Durie families in 1891. This was about 31 of all the recorded Duries in United Kingdom.

In 1891 there were 28 Durie families living in Lancashire. Peter BraigĪnd so it was that Durie, first thing on Wednesday morning, wrote a piece titled “ACCC set to nix Ruralco deal”, in reference to Canadian company Nutrien’s $460 million bid to buy Ruralco, which, Durie argued, would be rejected “based on preliminary views it will involve the removal of a major competitor”. The most Durie families were found in and Scotland in 1841. The competition watchdog raised "preliminary" concerns about the proposed Nutrien takeover of Ruralco.

As demonstrated by the reverse ferret executed last week by veteran business columnist John Durie in The Australian.Ī reverse ferret, for those uninitiated in the lore of Fleet Street, refers to a 180-degree turn done so elegantly (and shamelessly) as to leave readers (hopefully) none the wiser as to one’s changed prognosis. Instagram's parent company Facebook declined to comment, and its attorneys Ragesh Tangri and Allyson Bennett of Durie Tangri didn't immediately respond to a request for comment. But some traditions, heartwarmingly, still hold. And so it was that Durie, first thing on Wednesday morning, wrote a piece titled ACCC set to nix Ruralco deal, in reference to Canadian company Nutrien’s 460 million bid to buy Ruralco. These days in the media, little is as it used to be.
