Top Stories

How former prince Andrew’s trade-envoy role sowed the seeds of his downfall

The ex-prince is now under police investigation over his conduct in office, bringing his time as Britain’s trade representative under scrutiny, write Max Colchester, Margot Patrick, and David Luhnow, The Wall Street Journal.

Denis O’Brien loses action against data regulator on all grounds argued

Businessman Denis O'Brien has tried for years to force a PR firm to disclose the name of its client. He has now failed to force the Data Protection Commission to make the firm do so.

Eli Lilly’s Irish tax bill almost tripled to $6.6bn last year

The pharma giant, one of Ireland's top-three taxpayers together accounting for almost half of corporation tax payments in 2024, is accelerating its growth on the back of successful weight-loss drugs.

Amazon is now America’s biggest company. Its 17-year journey to surpass Walmart

Walmart had held title as biggest company by annual revenue since 2009, writes Sarah Nassauer and Sean McLain, The Wall Street Journal.

“Anti-Irish? Me?” – Stephen Jones on infuriating rugby fans and stepping away from his beloved post

For 42 years he pulled no punches as rugby correspondent of The Sunday Times, often incurring the wrath of Irish supporters.

Eamon Waters firm nets €4.4m in first Ipas payments for converted D4 office

Vista Bay Unlimited received its first payments for the recently opened 622-bed centre at Merrion House in Dublin 4. New State data shows overall payments for emergency accommodation hit €1.6bn last year.

Magnier backs down and drops appeal in Barne Estate row

The bloodstock tycoon has dropped his appeal over the purchase of the 750-acre Barne Estate on "pragmatic grounds". Magnier and Barne's new owner Maurice Regan issue statements.

Tinakilly Hotel row: “I’ve a partner from hell coming at me”

Hotelier Denis Connolly told the High Court he decided to sell a Spanish hotel resort for €5.6m last year without notifying his business partner, citing "lawfare" and difficulties coping with proceedings as a lay litigant.

Top Voices

The blame game: When coaching deflection replaces performance analysis

From ‘intent’ to ‘keyboard warriors’ in nine days: what attribution theory tells us about recent messaging by Andy Farrell. Meanwhile, unsparing data on the performance of his Irish players presents a different picture.

Beauty and brutality: The Irish vision behind Dior and McQueen

As New York, London, Milan and Paris launch another season of fashion weeks, the spotlight falls on two Irish designers at the summit of the industry – Jonathan Anderson at Dior and Seán McGirr at Alexander McQueen.

John Looby: Stock investors should ignore the noise 

Crypto, gold, Trump, the Fed and Forex generate just some of what we should ignore, and we should concentrate instead on protecting our purchasing power.

I wanted Hollywood to accept me. So I made the biggest mistake of my career

In an exclusive book excerpt, the former CEO of Sony Entertainment Michael Lynton opens up about his role in unleashing one of the worst cyberattacks in corporate history, writes The Wall Street Journal.

SME Ireland still plays an upbeat part in the world’s strange symphony

As multinationals continue to support the domestic economy, one must wonder – when will cost-of-living concerns become a drag on Irish businesses' growth?

Colm McCarthy: The cost of neutrality is about to soar

We like to think neutrality keeps costs down and choices simple. In a Europe that’s rearming at speed, that assumption is starting to look expensive.

Ronan Lyons: Europe needs to account for the in-betweeners

Accounting rules designed for macroeconomic surveillance now shape housing policy in powerful ways, increasingly including independent social providers like Ireland's AHBs on government balance sheets.

Peter Kinsella: The strong dollar era is over

For decades, Washington defended the greenback in word if not always in deed. Now, with Trump abandoning the script and investors scrambling to hedge, the USD’s overvaluation is being exposed – and Asia looks set to drive the next wave lower.