Top Stories

A private equity billionaire mounts his biggest takeover yet: the Pentagon

Stephen Feinberg is trying to win congressional approval of the largest defense budget ever while browbeating contractors to speed production, write Drew FitzGerald, Lara Seligman, and Marcus Weisgerber, The Wall Street Journal.

Galway ventilation business catches the eye of Sweden’s Lindab Group

Established in 2014, Connaught Ventilation Supplies has grown to a turnover of more than €10 million and attracted the attention of a Swedish mulitnational which intends to aquire it.

Conor McGregor settles Proper No. 12 whiskey row

The MMA fighter welcomed the settlement and said it would allow him to focus on training for his upcoming fight this summer.

The Bezos Vs. Musk space race is heating up

Bezos-founded companies push ahead in satellite connections and rocket launches; Musk’s SpaceX has dominated both businesses for years, writes Amira McKee, The Wall Street Journal.

Room service – Part 1: Why Ireland’s hotel building boom stops at the M50

The imminent opening of the luxury Sofitel hotel at Dublin Airport and the arrival of the Hoxton points to strong demand in cities, but regions are struggling to make the capital investment work for new-build hotels.

China’s CALC pushes back in unrepaired engine dispute with Willis Lease Finance

Chinese but Irish-based lessor CALC continues its quarrel with Willis Lease Finance over an engine deal gone awry – questions abound about damage to the engine and when it was returned.

U.S. oil blockade is set to boost American exports—and prices at the pump

U.S. crude exports are poised to hit a record this month as more than 70 supertankers approach the Gulf Coast to load up on oil, write Collin Eaton and Benoît Morenne, The Wall Street Journal.

A licence to look away: Susan O’Keeffe on Larry Goodman, power, and the Beef Tribunal

After exposing corruption at the heart of Ireland’s beef industry, Susan O’Keeffe found herself blamed, arrested and discredited. This is her account of what really happened – and what Ireland chose to ignore.

Top Voices

The State has, in effect, been held to ransom – and in choosing to pay, it has set a dangerous precedent

This is a case of the State using the country’s balance sheet to insulate domestic businesses from international shocks — using international money. This model, as we know, is unsustainable.

How to navigate a transformed executive recruitment market

Senior executives tend to sell their experience to employers and blame ageism when it doesn’t work out. It’s time to turn this approach on its head, according to Loren Greiff, who switched from recruiting to advising candidates.

The stubborn bet that built a €375m company: Rewinding the week that was

When Fergal Broder refused to shut down LotusWorks in its darkest days, it looked like defiance. Decades later, that decision has culminated in a major deal – one that highlights the growing global demand for Irish engineering firms.

The push notifications – ceasefire on, ceasefire off, strait open, strait closed – carry on in their tug of war

I was in New York City for much of this past week, where the news cycle follows you into the subway and into the back of the yellow cab and generally is much harder to avoid than in other parts of the world.

The Women’s Six Nations is back – unfortunately, you’d hardly know it

There are questions about whether the women's game in Ireland is moving fast enough. Governance, competition structures and funding models all need work.

Fuel protesters claim to defend SMEs and motorists. They are hitting them hardest

The overlap between fuel-price and anti-immigrant protest organisers goes hand-in-hand with their disregard for the hurt they cause to small businesses and their staff.

John Looby: The age of ignorance is over and Trump now stands permanently exposed

The movement started by Michael Gove’s public call to ditch the experts has ended with Donald Trump stuck at the Strait of Hormuz. The consequences are, at last, sinking in.

Token efforts: Part 2 – Blockchain finance’s threat and opportunity for Ireland

Ireland has done exceptionally well to become a hub for critical financial market infrastructure like fund domiciles and administration. How it navigates the blockchain frontier will determine the country's long-term success in the industry.