Top Stories

Costly and deadlocked: Charting a tricky path for the row over the children’s hospital

Six years into the litigation, the proceedings to resolve who bears the cost of overruns at the new children's hospital has become almost as unwieldy as the underlying dispute.

Mark Goodman adds tea brand to health foods portfolio

Niks Tea has been blending and packaging organic brews in Dublin for 24 years. Its founder has been bought out by Independent Irish Health Foods.

Landlord rights win out in Bewley’s row over iconic Harry Clarke windows

A six-year row over the ownership of Harry Clarke's stained glass windows in Bewley's has been comprehensively resolved in landlord RGRE's favour. In a statement, the group welcomed the win after a "lengthy" and sometimes "farcical" legal dispute.

Eamon Waters’ next act: Building a circular economy empire

Plans for the Huntstown circular economy hub next to the family's Bia Energy bioenergy plant, stalled since 2024 due to a planning appeal, has now received the green light from the planning commission.

Fraud, bribery, and the 200 jobs that never were: The collapse of ASG’s Irish expansion

Allstate Sales Group collapsed and its CEO faces serious fraud charges in the US, entangled with the company’s bungled Irish expansion and its hiring drive that never got going.

Enhanced cooperation: Enrico Letta makes his case for a deeper unified EU market in Irish visit

The EU’s largest economies want to push ahead with the Savings and Investment Union despite reservations from Ireland around a two-speed Europe and centralising of power.

The 500-year-old Beretta gun dynasty is betting big on the U.S.

The Italian company has taken a stake in American rival Ruger as part of a push to win more business in the U.S., writes Alistair MacDonald, The Wall Street Journal.

Leveraging AI to offset the US dollar’s decline: two lessons from Kerry’s annual results

Kerry Group failed to sparkle in 2025 as it regrouped following the sale of legacy Irish dairy processing, introduced a more aggressive digital transformation programme, and faced a geopolitical challenge different from tariffs.

Top Voices

I wanted Hollywood to accept me. So I made the biggest mistake of my career

In an exclusive book excerpt, the former CEO of Sony Entertainment Michael Lynton opens up about his role in unleashing one of the worst cyberattacks in corporate history, writes The Wall Street Journal.

SME Ireland still plays an upbeat part in the world’s strange symphony

As multinationals continue to support the domestic economy, one must wonder – when will cost-of-living concerns become a drag on Irish businesses' growth?

Colm McCarthy: The cost of neutrality is about to soar

We like to think neutrality keeps costs down and choices simple. In a Europe that’s rearming at speed, that assumption is starting to look expensive.

Ronan Lyons: Europe needs to account for the in-betweeners

Accounting rules designed for macroeconomic surveillance now shape housing policy in powerful ways, increasingly including independent social providers like Ireland's AHBs on government balance sheets.

Peter Kinsella: The strong dollar era is over

For decades, Washington defended the greenback in word if not always in deed. Now, with Trump abandoning the script and investors scrambling to hedge, the USD’s overvaluation is being exposed – and Asia looks set to drive the next wave lower.

Stripe and the $140bn question: Rewinding the week that was

The country has produced industrial titans and dealmakers. The Collisons have taken a different route, embedding Stripe at the heart of global commerce and thinking in decades, not quarters.

Brett Igoe: Ireland used to kill teams at turbo speed. Now we can’t execute it

Remember when Ireland were the side that thrived in chaos? When the pace lifted, we got sharper. Now, when it speeds up, we’re the ones making the mistakes.

Dan O’Brien: Ireland ranks surprisingly high in EU housing league

Housing trends in Ireland compare more favourably with peer countries than one might believe, including for younger people – but this does not mean current policy is adequate.