Top Stories

A year ago, Jobbio had a rescue plan. Now it’s calling in a liquidator

The recruitment platform, backed by IIU and Michael Smurift Jr, entered Scarp a year ago to restructure the business. With its most recent accounts showing retained losses of €37.9m, it is now set to appoint a liquidator.

Dealmaking in “interesting times”: IMAP returns to a changed Dublin

Eleven years after its last visit to Dublin, IMAP returned to the capital as a guest of Key Capital. CEO of the Irish finance house Colin Morgan and IMAP chair Jurgis Oniunas talked shifting global dealmaking trends amid geopolitical uncertainty.

“Aviation is moving slowly to benefit from AI”: Ex-Ryanair exec Peter Bellew launches start-up investment fund

Bellew served as the Irish airline’s chief operations officer before a controversial exit to rival EasyJet in 2020. Now, he has set up a seed fund to back aviation start-ups.

“The family-run businesses are the best-run regional papers in Ireland”

The Kennelly family have sold Kerry's Eye to Donagh and Jennifer O’Doherty's Webprint after 53 years at the helm of the regional title. It's a long-term play in a county that "punches above its weight when it comes to news".

The Berlusconi inheritance, the Central Bank and the Irish courts

The late Italian magnate’s legacy reaches into asset-management and life-insurance subsidiaries of the Mediterranean bank Mediolanum, which employs more than 200 staff in Dublin.

They chose careers in the trades and still wound up with debt

As community colleges and union apprenticeships fill up, more students are turning to pricier training options for blue-collar careers, write Te-Ping Chen and Lauren Weber, The Wall Street Journal.

Money in, founders out: The Danish deal to rescue the Drogheda factory

Bisca will take over East Coast Bakehouse in a deal that will see an investment of almost €13 million and the departure of Michael Carey and Alison Cowzer.

“It’s a mess”: Reclassification of 6,600 gig workers as employees leaves many confused

More than two years after the Supreme Court ruled Domino's Pizza delivery drivers were PAYE employees, not contractors, artists and writers appearing at public libraries are the latest freelancers affected by new tax rules.

Top Voices

What a new Apple CEO will mean for you and your devices

With incoming chief John Ternus, Apple is doubling down on hardware in the age of AI, writes Nicole Nguyen, The Wall Street Journal.

John Looby: The case for active investing

Another period of market turmoil acts as a reminder of the value of the “endowment effect”: knowing the stocks you own can help avoid the dumb-money effect and the impact of volatility on passively managed portfolios.

A partial rebound and a permanent loss? What the first data on Ireland’s new rental rules reveal

New rent rules appear to have lifted supply in early 2026, but the recovery masks a more troubling reality: the market may now be permanently smaller.

Thomas Hubert: There is no reason to doubt long-term market returns – or is there?

John Looby rightly argues that economic growth has held steady since the Industrial Revolution. But what happens when underlying global population growth and fossil-fuel use come to an end?

Patrick O’Donovan and a line crossed in plain sight: Rewinding the week that was

The media is not beyond criticism, but when senior ministers begin questioning coverage without evidence, the balance between scrutiny and influence becomes harder to ignore.

The definitive McIlroy book hasn’t been written yet – I know just the man for the job

No interviewer has got more out of the two-time Masters champion over the years than Paul Kimmage. If McIlroy ever agrees to let someone write the full story of his life and career, there's no better collaborator. But could they agree on the rules of engagement?

Dan O’Brien: When an out-of-touch Government meets a public at boiling point

Something seems to have changed in the past ten days. If it brings more scrutiny to how successive governments have continued to unthinkingly throw taxpayers’ money at problems, it will be for the best.

Room service – part 3: A thousand welcomes meets market forces

Ireland’s international reputation for hospitality will be closely watched as more institutional capital enters the hotel market – perhaps no more so than when the Ryder Cup arrives in Adare next year.