Top Stories

From Tinakilly to Monasterio: Gerard Lane believes “all trust has completely broken down”

UCD graduate Gerard Lane made a fortune in the Philippines and Malaysia before investing in hotels in Ireland and Spain. He is now in a row with his former co-owner of Tinakilly House.

PwC’s Enda McDonagh: “Uncertainty has become structural for businesses”

The latest PwC Global CEO Survey finds Irish CEOs increasingly cautious about their own growth but positive about Ireland’s economy. The firm’s managing partner, Enda McDonagh, says the new normal is structural uncertainty — and that AI is forcing firms to rethink strategy.

Orsted’s Irish assets valued at almost €1bn in European onshore portfolio deal

The Danish company remains in the Irish offshore market, while the sale to Copenhagen Infrastructure Partners will see the Irish headquarters, staff and projects continue.

The wild markets behind Polymarket’s ‘truth machine’

Shayne Coplan has built the crypto-based betting platform into a $9 billion company; Justice Department probe gets shelved, writes Alexander Osipovich and Caitlin Ostroff, The Wall Street Journal.

Cavan’s Boxmore Plastics shielded from PE-backed parent’s bankruptcy

Pretium Packaging, owned by Clearlake Capital, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in the US but the company says its 100-plus staff in Cavan are not affected by the restructuring.

“Inadequate record keeping” at Waterford council in sample audit of €20m walking and cycling grants

There is no indication of any serious wrongdoing, but auditors said poor management of procurement, invoice, and other project documents still raises serious risks around reputation, public trust, legal and regulatory compliance, and protection from any potential legal challenges.

Table stakes – Part 1: “Ireland Inc is wealthy, you shouldn’t be hearing restaurateurs roaring”

In a sharply contrasted 2026 for Ireland’s restaurants, the country’s culinary reputation is expected to reach new heights this year while rising costs means the life raft of July's Vat cut will be too little too late for some.

“This isn’t what I would do in a perfect world. I wouldn’t choose to be a public figure”

Paul Murphy has been protesting and advancing his core belief in socialism all his adult life. In this wide-ranging interview, he talks about injustice, not caring what people think of him, and Roy Keane.

Top Voices

Kevin Warsh, Jeffrey Epstein, inequality and the ‘mob’

Especially at times like this, the multitudes enjoy seeing wealthy people dragged through the mud, writes Allysia Finley, The Wall Street Journal.

Ronan Lyons: Ireland’s housing crisis: a European problem, intensified

For younger adults in Ireland, the gap between how they expected to live and how they actually live has become stark. New European research shows that this experience is not uniquely Irish.

ESG investment stuck between Mary, Chandra, and Donald: Rewinding the week that was

For years, investors and regulators asked asset managers to go green. A Trump-led backlash tells them it no longer matters, or not now. Flooding shows nature doesn’t seem to get the message.

Failure to look after No1 comes back to haunt Irish rugby: Brett Igoe on an Achilles’ heel

Ireland's reliance on Andrew Porter at loosehead prop is made painfully clear by appearance stats. The system has struggled to produce viable replacements and Andy Farrell is now paying the price.

Dan O’Brien: The IDA has been too successful for Ireland’s own security

Reliance on US multinationals, risky energy supply, and low defence spending are all symptoms of insufficient adptation to the new world order among Irish political leaders.

Our gadgets finally speak human, and tech will never be the same

Generative AI makes voice interactions with devices more productive—and a lot less annoying, writes Christopher Mims, The Wall Street Journal.

John Looby: Why narrative, relativity and emotion explain our fractious world

To understand our divided world, the rational assessment of economic well-being offers us little. The sometimes-great joy, but often-great damage wrought by emotion, comparison and narrative offers us much more.

The stages of entrepreneurship: Stage 1 – the hustle

Bootstrapping and doing everything yourself puts early-stage entrepreneurs in the seductive position of being in full control, but this comes at a growing cost over time.