Top Stories

Boeing’s legal battles with a Russian aircraft lessor have landed in the Irish courts

Timaero, which is linked to sanctioned Russian bank VEB, has issued legal proceedings against Boeing in Ireland, on top of its long-running US lawsuit against the aviation giant.

Inland Fisheries to return before PAC amid new details on protected disclosure report and Garda enquiries

Frustrated politicians want the full facts on allegations the embattled agency allowed an employee involved in a car crash to produce invalid insurance documents to An Garda Síochána. Records released to The Currency give an insight into who knew what and when.

Confessions of a coffee man: From the brink of bankruptcy to a €35m exit

David McKernan is back in the game, looking to buy a new business or two and helping his son's start-up. He tells the full story of "horrific" stress steering Java Republic through multiple storms until he got a happy ending – with a little help from Denis O'Brien.

Fexco plots more M&A in early 2026 as Sainsbury’s acquisition progresses

Neil Hosty, the chief executive of the Co Kerry financial exchange business, talks international expansion, acquiring the bureau de change arm of the British grocery chain, and why Ireland should be cautious around recreating France's start-up campus Station F.

The Digital Hub’s costly limbo: Delayed dissolution proves pricey to taxpayer

The Government is three years behind plans to dissolve the Digital Hub Development Agency. A previously unreleased state report reveals an expanding Exchequer bill, land transfer delays, and lack of a coherent plan for the Liberties campus.

Controversial streaming platform Rumble eyes Irish beachhead for merger

The social media platform, which is popular with right-wing influencers and hosts Donald Trump’s Truth Social, plans to establish an Irish entity after acquiring a German AI company.

Revealed: Ireland blocks dual-use exports to Israel due to the “high risk” of military diversion

Released documents reveal the Government refused exports to either an Israeli state body or a weapons company this year. Authorities already approved millions worth of exports during Israel’s assault on Gaza.

“The Government should set a target of 2030 for copper switch-off”

Siro has become Ireland’s second-largest fibre network owner. As full coverage looms, CEO John Keaney discusses how to push adoption of the high-speed broadband technology – and make it profitable for his shareholders ESB and Vodafone.

Top Voices

Australia’s grand social experiment will captivate lawmakers the world over

The Australian government's decision to restrict access to social media for children under 16 is one of the sternest regulatory approaches to the industry to date. Should it work, it will be hard for other countries not to follow suit.

John Looby: Lessons from three decades in the financial markets

As he steps back after more than three decades in financial markets, John looks back on the crises, triumphs, and lessons that shaped his career — and the enduring truth that in investing, temperament often matters far more than theory.

“We legged it to the door”: The Irish security expert keeping executives out of harm’s way

When a business deal in West Africa turned into a potential ambush, Terry McElvaney’s quick thinking saved the day. Now, the founder of Sentinel Risk is bringing elite executive protection to Ireland’s boardrooms.

So much money, so little time: Rewinding the week that was

Even by Ireland’s record-breaking tax revenue standards, this year’s record is staggering. The Government has one year left to turn this gold mine into housing and infrastructure.

Voters shift, tempers flare: America enters a season of sour politics

As Tennessee voters inch leftward and Trump lashes out at immigrants, allies and adversaries alike, Washington is consumed by economic alarm, foreign-policy fog and a restless MAGA base.

The EU has taken a gentle approach in its first big DSA action against X

Friday’s €120m fine against Elon Musk’s social media site, which has its EU office in Ireland, is on the lower end of the spectrum. Now is the European Commission ready for a battle with the billionaire on reforms to the platform?

John Looby: Britain’s long road to economic purgatory

Rachel Reeves and her recent budget are just the latest victims of a series of historic mistakes. Both are destined to join their recent predecessors as short historic footnotes.

Stuart Fitzgerald: Stop working hero hours – the best CEOs are ruthless allocators of their time

A business student's perceptive question about whether the payback for long hours justifies the grind didn't get the response it deserved from me. Here's my imperfect attempt at answering her properly.