Mayo-born Paul Cadden ran a successful chain of six award winning restaurants in Dublin. Overnight he had to close them all as a result of the Covid-19 lockdown, but now he is gingerly making a return through a take-away business.
Management in Britain were gearing up to make swingeing changes to the retailer before the Covid-19 lockdown. With its network temporarily closed, it has made the move permanent. What forced the decision, and what impact will it have on the high street here?
The bottom has dropped out of Ireland's sport sponsorship market as a result of Covid-19. The question now is whether it will come back in the same form.
New court documents in a bitter legal battle between Larry Goodman and a former senior executive suggests the levels of bitterness between the two sides have left the door open to intransigence, ambush tactics and tit for tat claims.
Jewellery designer Nigel O’Reilly is building both his brand and his business. He has just turned down two offers from investors, landed a major US agent and is being lauded by big name clients. But what impact will Covid-19 have on his efforts?
The makers of premium whiskey brand The Wild Geese claim Irish Distillers is abusing its dominant position in the market. But is their legal action against the Pernod Ricard subsidiary in jeopardy?
Cartier, one of the world’s top luxury brands, is tackling Facebook in Ireland over what it alleges are counterfeit posts. It is the latest in a string of actions, but arguably the most significant, taken against the US social media giant here.
Dublin born artist Sean Scully is in a legal battle with an international art gallery because he claims that he, and other artists, have not been paid. The gallery in question is the Blain Southern gallery that called in creditors earlier this year and went into administration.
The European Investment Bank plans to use its financial muscle to help SMEs survive the crisis. Priorities and criteria will be altered, according to its Irish vice president Andrew McDowell, who says that Irish firms will be big beneficiaries of its funding.
The Covid-19 crisis has frozen the property market. Commercial rent payments have collapsed. Shares prices of listed property funds have fallen and opened ended property funds have closed the gates. Just how long can the property market stay frozen before it cracks?
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