Top Stories

Wrights of Howth take action after losing €9.45m airport tender bid

The incumbent Wrights of Howth claims a previous row with the DAA over rates is one of the reasons why it failed to win the latest tender contract for a food and convenience store with heavy footfall in the arrivals hall of terminal one.

What to do with €170bn in “idle” Irish deposit accounts? Enter Spark Venture Funding

“Some of them are going to fail," says CEO Chris Burge of the equity crowdfunder "but the upside opportunity is huge for some of those early-stage businesses".

Belfast’s Harland & Wolff has been pulled from the EU’s shipbreaking list

The list details European and international shipyards for breaking down and recycling EU-flagged vessels but the Belfast yard did not provide the “necessary information for renewal”.

A punch in the face, a barefoot general’s fight and the coup that unraveled

A scramble for power in West Africa kicked off 24 hours of gunbattles, betrayal, kidnapping and superstition, writes Michael M. Phillips, The Wall Street Journal.

How the Iran war unraveled the Gulf’s image as a luxurious safe haven

Missiles and drones have shattered the illusion that ‘you’re not in the Middle East’—and the impact is being felt across the region, write David S. Cloud, Georgi Kantchev, Omar Abdel-Baqui and Caitlin McCabe, The Wall Street Journal.

The making of Roy Keane in the Ireland he was trying to escape

Dion Fanning talks to Dave Hannigan about his new book We Need to Talk About Roy and what Keane’s life tells us about Ireland.

Adobe CEO to depart after 18 years amid AI disruptions

Company’s shares slide as it has struggled to convince investors it can outpace industrywide challenges, writes Katherine Hamilton, The Wall Street Journal.

Tinakilly: “I’m not looking for vengeance. I’m just extremely sad we’ve arrived at this”

Recalled to give evidence, Gerard Lane accepted in a moment of anger he threatened Tinakilly House co-owner Denis Connolly that he would become the "partner from hell". However he denied this was motivating his case against his business partner.

Top Voices

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.

Dan O’Brien: Inflation is the least serious of this war’s ramifications

Western economies are much less dependent on oil prices than during the Iranian revolution of 1979. But as Trump heads to China, geopolitical turmoil could be far from abating.

Reconsider your failing strategy, Mr. President

Intentional ambiguity won’t serve Trump well during the upcoming midterm elections, writes Jason L Riley, The Wall Street Journal.

In the face of Trump’s war, stock investors should do nothing or hunt for bargains

In the face of Trump's War, buttressed by Damodaran’s life vests, stock investors should do nothing. And heeding the advice of Buffett, those with cash should be hunting for bargains.

Zippay’s arrival in 2026 is not fashionably late – but the competition is welcome

The pillar banks hope to claw back some of the market share conceded to fintechs like Revolut with its new payments service. Whether it's a case of too little, too late remains to be seen.