Top Stories

A painful extraction: “Locked-out” dentist sues in partnership row

When a dentist in a Dublin clinic refused to sell the practice to an outside bidder, she claims her fellow partners moved to suspend and ultimately expel her from the business. The dispute is now being litigated in the High Court.

KamaGames calls in receivers to related company with €7.2m debts

The mobile games company, founded in Russia and now based in Dublin, has appointed receivers to a company called Pinterpod, with which it shares a director.

New addition to the fleet: David Goddard completes landmark Temble Bar hotel deal

Goddard’s new Lanthorn venture has bought The Fleet Hotel on behalf of Thomas Röggla’s TMR hotel grouping. It is the asset manager's first major deal since leaving Davy last year along with its €1.6 billion property portfolio.

Three years after Pharmapod’s collapse, a shareholder dispute lingers

A High Court judge has refused Paddy Digan’s application for summary judgment against the founder of now-defunct Pharmapod over a contentious loan. The dispute sheds light on the circumstances surrounding the company's demise.

“I need to avoid energy vampires, or ‘mood hoovers’ as I like to call them”

Crafting queen Sara Davies entered the BBC's Den as the youngest ever Dragon on the show. Having just stepped in to save the business she founded 20 years ago, she discusses her return to Crafter's Companion and the lessons from her journey in business.

Destination Comer City: The brothers take over Austrian equestrian centre and venue

The Comer Group has acquired a 200-hectare equestrian centre and horseracing track in Austria. It is set to be renamed Comer City.

Korean giant Hanwha has started an aviation leasing unit. Dublin is a core arm of the strategy

Chief executive Jeff Lewis speaks to The Currency about being the “new kid on the block” in the leasing business and where Ireland fits into its plans.

Revealed: How toxic “forever chemicals” are impacting MetroLink’s planning case

The €9.5bn metro is a key project under the National Development Plan. Internal project emails show that the recent discovery of PFAS-contaminated soil at Dublin Airport is proving problematic in getting the project through the planning system.

Top Voices

The Government rides in on a cliché-ridden list of promises to do a little for everyone

The 2025 fiscal targets have been abandoned just three months after they were adopted in the October budget. Instead, the Programme for Government promises more of the same, implicitly relying on a continuation of strong revenue inflows.

Tara Shine: The new government needs to choose between the contradictions of its climate programme

When it comes to climate change and sustainability, the Programme for Government contains a lot of positive commitments – until you look at the direction set for individual sectors of the economy.

Breturn? Brentry? Donald Tusk reminds Labour of one of Britain’s easiest routes to growth

As economic growth continues to underwhelm and bond markets flex their unpredictability, a new deal with Europe must offer a tantalising prospect to Prime Minister Keir Starmer.

John Collins: The new Government has heard tech entrepreneurs’ concerns. Will it take them on board?

The reversal of a decision to shut down the NDRC is the most visible aspect of a shift towards indigenous start-ups and scale-ups in the Programme for Government, despite a lack of other concrete details.

Ronan Lyons: The surge in housing inflation shows the scale of the challenge ahead

The market has seen something close to double-digit inflation despite (or on top of) all the increases seen in the previous decade. How has that happened?

Private equity is marching to a town or village near you: Rewinding the week that was

Of the 464 deals completed in Ireland last year, 74 of those involved private equity. And the advance of PE is showing no signs of slowing down.

The intermingling of politics, business and internet culture has gone hand-in-hand with the trollification of political discourse

The far-right’s leading position in Austria illustrates the global trend also emerging in Germany and could shed light on possible European futures.

Sam Smyth: Farewell Donnacha Fox, investment broker, man of great integrity and friend

Quilter Cheviot founder Donnacha Fox died suddenly last week at the peak of his career as one of the country’s leading investment advisers. Family and friends gathered in Dublin to remember and pay tribute.