Manna Air Delivery has ended its Irish delivery business, saying the lack of a national policy framework makes it impossible to trade. It will continue investing in R&D in Ireland but its drones will now fly elsewhere.
Global success of AI-related companies in South Korea, Taiwan and Japan stokes market fever, write Jiyoung Sohn in Seoul, Joyu Wang in Taipei and Junko Fukutome in Tokyo, The Wall Street Journal.
The only EU agency based in Ireland was founded more than 50 years ago, carrying out research into European living and working conditions.
XTX Markets is locked in $70 million dispute with Dell over server supplies to its Finnish data centre compound. Previously it filed a WRC racial discrimination case over Russian sanctions. Now the Supreme Court will decide can a company complain under equality laws.
In debut as chairman, Kevin Warsh stripped away the central bank’s policy hints and committed to bringing inflation down—but wouldn’t say what that will take, writes Nick Timiraos, The Wall Street Journal.
Cathal O’Connor has weeks to put his business affairs in order before starting a custodial sentence for the violent assault of three teens. The Currency examines the scale of the property network, multi-million euro assets, and projects in the pipeline.
LPS International Plant Limited, a Co Galway plant-hire business, owes a staggering €106m to Revenue in undeclared Vat, interest and penalties, and is now in liquidation. How did it get here?
Mubadala is pumping $200 million into a joint venture with existing investors to take control of the electricity cable connecting Ireland to the UK.
A graduation photo ended Ipswich’s playoff run, sparking outrage, confrontations and a ‘CSI-level investigation, writes Scott Calvert, The Wall Street Journal.
Rusal and its sanctioned shareholder Oleg Deripaska are no strangers to courtrooms in several countries, from Jersey to Qatar and Russia to Australia.
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