Top Stories

Banksy’s identity has been revealed. Expect his art to sell for a lot more

Anonymity helped the street artist move unchecked but made some collectors wary; ‘I feel more comfortable knowing who he is,’ says collector Peter Brant, writes Kelly Crow, The Wall Street Journal.

A Vegas gambler, a Hollywood power player and the legal fight roiling Paramount

A self-professed fixer sued Paramount’s Jeff Shell for breach of verbal contract and fraud. Shell and the company are fighting back, writes Joe Flint, The Wall Street Journal.

Deel CEO Alex Bouaziz successfully contests inclusion in corporate spy case

In the clash between two US HR giants over corporate espionage claims, the High Court rules that individual Deel employees will not be joined to Rippling’s case.

An Easter eggscape: Examiner appointed to Skelligs Chocolate

The craft chocolate business, controlled by Paddy McKillen Jr, is cash-flow insolvent with debts of around €2.7m, including over €900,000 owing to the Revenue Commissioners, the court heard. An investor linked to the businessman is understood to be in the wings.

“We stretched out our runway for as long as we could”: Teleatherapy to appoint liquidators

The Cork start-up was building software for speech and language therapists but struggled to turn its pilots with the HSE and the NHS into commercial contracts.

Keith Ryan’s legacy lives on in the business he built—and the lives he touched

Keith Ryan was a trusted advisor to some of Ireland’s most accomplished leaders and families, but he never saw them merely as clients—he treated them as friends. His passing came far too soon.

Chasing the double win: Climate start-ups can still raise funds – if they can make money

The global backlash against green regulation has forced a reckoning among climatetech founders and investors, but they say resource efficiency remains an attractive sector to start and grow companies.

Craic, crisis and comebacks: The Adie McGennis story

Ireland’s recruitment veteran reflects on IPO highs, crash-era buyouts, and why human relationships still matter more than AI. Plus, he explains why is he still connecting North American firms with the Irish market.

Top Voices

Travels with Looby: Part three – In search of some answers

Between bookshops, galleries and long lunches with friends, Washington feels timeless — yet the distant thunder of war reminds us how closely the city lives with power.

Peter Kinsella: Oil prices reached $119 today. Here is what I think happens next

Oil’s leap to $119 is more than a price spike – it’s the start of a global economic shock that could drive inflation higher, disrupt supply chains and reshape interest-rate predictions.

Travels with Looby: Part two – In search of some answers

A trip to Japan with an old friend who first taught me why Warren Buffett matters becomes a journey through temples, history and boardrooms – and a search for signs that corporate Japan may finally be changing.

Travels with Looby: Part one – In search of some answers

Stepping away from finance, I set out to travel in search of perspective – and found it in Durham, where ancient faith, industrial memory, and resilient communities meet.

OpenAI’s bid to allow x-rated talk is freaking out its own advisers

Warnings surface that the company risks creating a "sexy suicide coach" if it begins allowing sexually explicit chats, writes Sam Schechner and Georgia Wells, The Wall Street Journal.

Why brand strategy determines M&A winners

A clear identity and culture strategy is now central to protecting deal value in Ireland’s mid-market M&A landscape.

Ireland’s new St Patrick’s Day pitch in Washington: Rewinding the week that was

Two-way investment may act as a “Donald pleaser” but the core issues of tax and EU regulation are where Ireland is really promoting itself as a bridge to Europe for US business.

“There for the taking?” The data says otherwise and Ireland will wait for Scots to crack, again

Maybe Darcy Graham is right to be bullish. Maybe Finn Russell plays the game of his life in the one city that’s never let him do his brilliant thing. Maybe. But the data, the history, and the venue all point the same way.