Top Stories

China’s ‘two billion feet’ are suddenly running from Nike

Quick-moving domestic athletic brands are now able to match American quality and cachet in the hypercompetitive and increasingly nationalistic market, writes Jon Emont, The Wall Street Journal.

JPMorgan and the delicate art of paying off employees

A staffer raises an embarrassing claim. A probe follows. Deciding what to do next—and whether to offer a payout—gets tricky for employers., write Chip Cutter and Lauren Weber, The Wall Street Journal.

The insider-trading scandal that is rocking M&A law firms

A job-hopping lawyer accessed files and recruited lawyers at elite firms to tip traders about pending deals, prosecutors say, writes David Michaels, The Wall Street Journal.

The €11,200 Irish dispute that could reshape European Works Councils

A consultative forum for employees of multinationals, European Works Councils (EWCs) are a new post-Brexit phenomenon in Ireland. Telecoms firm Verizon is now challenging a High Court finding that a company's obligation to an EWC is “potentially much wider than just money".

From a $275m Spac deal to a €135m liquidation: Alternus Energy’s Icarus rise and fall

Two years after it entered the Nasdaq, an Irish company promising to become a leading transatlantic solar power producer is leaving investors and creditors to nurse heavy losses.

Last chance saloon: The story of hospitality king Paddy McKillen Jr’s epic bankruptcy fight

A detailed series of court affidavits and WhatsApp messages has revealed a deteriorating relationship between Paddy McKillen Jr and a lender, now at the centre of a contested €2.1 million bankruptcy claim.

Credit and credibility: Paddy McKillen Jr accused of “bad faith” and “dishonesty” in bankruptcy suit

The former Press Up boss is trying to set aside a bankruptcy summons on a disputed €2.1m debt issued by Herbert Street Propety Finance alleging it is void and results from illegal lending.

Xi’s China: Dazzling technology, military muscle—and an economic mess

Government pours money into AI, electric cars and military power, while consumer confidence sags and job market grows bleak, writes Brian Spegele, The Wall Street Journal.

Top Voices

Byron Fry: Reassessing the role of nuclear in Ireland’s energy future

The present crises do not make the case for Irish nuclear power in their own right. What they do is make the case against strategic complacency much harder to defend.

John Looby’s pilgrimage to Omaha, the heart of Middle America

Omaha is a unique experience. The number of investors – seasoned and new, and investment ideas – silly and sensible, packed into such a tight space over such a short time is unmatched.

Sometimes the most interesting stories can be found in the least likely places: Rewinding the week that was

The quiet village of Ballinakill, Co Laois plays a key part in one of wildest stories of my time in journalism – even if the central character in an extraordinary saga was in a hurry to leave it.

The comfortable, uncomfortable win for Leo Cullen’s juggernaut

Leinster’s win over Toulon was decisive for long stretches, yet Leo Cullen’s post-match rhetoric and a messy finish ensured the performance sparked more questions than it answered.

AI Is distorting practically everything about the economy

It makes growth look better and the job market look worse. Maybe an AI investment bust wouldn’t hurt so much after all. writes Greg Ip, The Wall Street Journal.

A quiet legal shift that could weaken corporate accountability

The Company Law Review Group is scrutinising the power for creditors to seek court-ordered inspections to investigate company affairs. Will its final advice limit or strengthen rules to expose corporate malfeasance?

Tara Shine: This crisis is a chance to go back to basics

Trump and his war on Iran are doing wonders to revive stalled decarbonisation efforts. Emergencies make what was impossible possible.

Joined-up, coordinated, or neither? Ireland’s problem with plans

Ireland’s dysfunctional housing system is unable to adjust when reality outpaces outdated official plans. Could a "city-led" model like that in Finland and Denmark change the landscape for the better?