
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Mal is live from Singapore this week, joining Alex from the eTail Asia conference where AI dominated every session and the conversation is shifting — Asia's big marketplace-first model is starting to make room for DTC. Back home, Australians are dealing with a second consecutive RBA rate rise, a fuel crisis driven by the Strait of Hormuz shutdown, and the kind of cost-of-living pressure that changes how consumers spend and what operators need to do about it.
This episode covers the macro squeeze in full — what rising rates, oil prices and shipping costs actually mean for your business — alongside the latest in agentic commerce (Shopify's big move and Walmart's quiet reality check), Myer's luxury beauty pivot, and the usual retail openings, closings and M&A news from around the country.
H&M exits Tasmania / By Charlotte opens in WA: Global fast fashion retreats from low-density markets while a homegrown premium DTC brand goes big in Western Australia with three stores at launch.
KMD rejects Stokehouse's Rip Curl demerger bid: The surf and outdoor giant turned down a proposal to spin off Rip Curl and merge it with US label Stokehouse, citing no new capital, shareholder dilution and a deal structure that created no value.
Priceline franchise sale narrows to final four: The sale of Priceline Pharmacy's franchisee operations has reached its final stage with four undisclosed bidders, signalling further consolidation in Australian pharmacy retail.
Rates, oil and the operator squeeze: The RBA's second consecutive rate rise to 4.10% — driven by a global energy crisis after Iran closed the Strait of Hormuz — is pushing fuel prices, freight costs and mortgage stress higher, with a third rise tipped for May.
Agentic commerce arrives — but is anyone buying: Shopify has opened its infrastructure so millions of merchants can sell inside ChatGPT, but Walmart's months-long trial of in-chat checkout has produced disappointing sales results.
Myer bets big on luxury skincare: After ending its 17-year Mecca partnership, Myer is repositioning beauty as its greatest growth opportunity with La Mer, Guerlain, Swiss Perfection and Helena Rubinstein landing in bespoke shop-in-shop formats.
By Ecom NationMal is live from Singapore this week, joining Alex from the eTail Asia conference where AI dominated every session and the conversation is shifting — Asia's big marketplace-first model is starting to make room for DTC. Back home, Australians are dealing with a second consecutive RBA rate rise, a fuel crisis driven by the Strait of Hormuz shutdown, and the kind of cost-of-living pressure that changes how consumers spend and what operators need to do about it.
This episode covers the macro squeeze in full — what rising rates, oil prices and shipping costs actually mean for your business — alongside the latest in agentic commerce (Shopify's big move and Walmart's quiet reality check), Myer's luxury beauty pivot, and the usual retail openings, closings and M&A news from around the country.
H&M exits Tasmania / By Charlotte opens in WA: Global fast fashion retreats from low-density markets while a homegrown premium DTC brand goes big in Western Australia with three stores at launch.
KMD rejects Stokehouse's Rip Curl demerger bid: The surf and outdoor giant turned down a proposal to spin off Rip Curl and merge it with US label Stokehouse, citing no new capital, shareholder dilution and a deal structure that created no value.
Priceline franchise sale narrows to final four: The sale of Priceline Pharmacy's franchisee operations has reached its final stage with four undisclosed bidders, signalling further consolidation in Australian pharmacy retail.
Rates, oil and the operator squeeze: The RBA's second consecutive rate rise to 4.10% — driven by a global energy crisis after Iran closed the Strait of Hormuz — is pushing fuel prices, freight costs and mortgage stress higher, with a third rise tipped for May.
Agentic commerce arrives — but is anyone buying: Shopify has opened its infrastructure so millions of merchants can sell inside ChatGPT, but Walmart's months-long trial of in-chat checkout has produced disappointing sales results.
Myer bets big on luxury skincare: After ending its 17-year Mecca partnership, Myer is repositioning beauty as its greatest growth opportunity with La Mer, Guerlain, Swiss Perfection and Helena Rubinstein landing in bespoke shop-in-shop formats.