Top Stories

Unpredictable: Part 2 – “I’m not doing something that involves wearing an orange jumpsuit”

Hopes that Intrade might make a fortune for its founders and investors were hit by a hostile regulatory climate in the US. That did not deter its CEO John Delaney, who dreamed big after leaving his small Laois village.

The fuel-price crunch that’s turning into a disaster for airlines

The higher costs that took down Spirit are squeezing the entire industry, especially budget carriers, writes Alison Sider, The Wall Street Journal.

The Rothschild dynasty survived wars and crises. Will the Epstein Files tear it apart?

Ariane de Rothschild’s association with the sex offender tests a truce between two banks that share the dynastic name, writes Margot Patrick The Wall Street Journal.

How does one tell the story of abuse in 2026? Frank McGuinness’s new show comes to the Abbey

During the piece’s intense, yet hopeful 75 minutes, the protagonist, simply named Man, relives the violence, loyalty and love that shaped him and the province of Ulster he loves, yet must leave.

F1 thought the Mercedes dynasty was over. Toto Wolff was plotting to bring it back

Five years since it last won a constructors’ title, the team has won the first three Grands Prix of the season, writes Josuha Robinson, The Wall Street Journal.

“You have an emotional response, because they are where we came from”

The director of the National Archives, Orlaith McBride, talks about the huge state project to bring the 1926 Census to life. She talks about the stories that are in the census and the stories that are found in the margins.

The other side of a property mogul: Assault conviction shocks industry

Cathal O’Connor had it all. A black Porsche, and stakes in companies with assets of €40m. A “despicable and disgraceful” assault of children now sends him to prison

10 years on, Aryzta is set to pay dividends again

The listed baked goods manufacturer has just removed the final barrier to capital returns – at last, historic Irish shareholders might say.

Top Voices

602 minutes: The numbers behind Leinster’s most radical European preparation

Leinster have the strongest squad remaining in this competition. With an international in every position, this is a group of players that should be targeting a club double. With the talent available to Cullen and Nienaber, that is a realistic ambition, not a fanciful one.

The stages of entrepreneurship: Stage 2 – scaling while “staying rooted in our principles”

“Delegate, don’t abdicate” has been Jack Kirwan’s mantra to turn Sprout & Co into a business on track to run 14 restaurants with 500 staff. Good hiring and a structured system are key to this phase of growth.

Dan O’Brien: Why it is past time to cut income tax

Personal taxes set at their current levels during the financial crisis are unfair – particularly when we examine what has been done with the resulting State revenues.

Colm McCarthy: It is surely time to abolish DPER and stop the pretence

If things go pear-shaped internationally, the Government’s lack of seriousness in the last few weeks has diminished future fiscal capacity. The failure will, on past form, trigger a budget adjustment consisting of another pro-cyclical assault on the capital programme.

Britain’s fiscal tightrope: Rising yields, political drift and the return of 1970s economics

The real verdict on the UK isn’t at the ballot box but in the bond market, where higher yields are testing debt sustainability. In fact, the UK’s current malaise is not wholly dissimilar to the 1970s.

John Looby’s pilgrimage to Omaha: The prelude

On the eve of a first visit to Berkshire Hathaway’s AGM, John Looby reflects on Buffett’s wisdom, Munger’s influence, and the principles that have guided generations of investors.

In a country at war with itself, what does a fractured US mean for the rest of the world?

As America grapples with political fracture and foreign conflict, the question is no longer just what the US becomes – but what its instability means beyond its borders.

Dion Fanning: When private equity and big data take on football

Many attempted to find fault with the managerial style of Liam Rosenior when he left Chelsea this week. But was what happened at the club a feature, not a bug, when private equity takes control of sport?