For years Ireland’s most expensive home has been at the heart of an epic courtroom asset battle involving bankrupt developer Sean Dunne. Now the former owners of the Dublin 4 mansion have been landed with a €1.4 million tax bill.
Dubliner Andrew Lynch is the chief operating officer of Huckletree, a network of co-working spaces in the UK, Ireland and Norway. He discusses the chemistry of co-working spaces, the pressure to grow, and getting 'booted around' by WeWork.
The Consumer Protection and Competition Commission’s data for 2019 shows private equity played an outsized role in Irish mergers and acquisitions. Overseas private equity investors are snapping up Irish assets in the healthcare, sports, aviation and property industries.
A Berlin-based film company is suing Octagon Films directors Morgan O’Sullivan and James Flynn claiming they systematically diverted over €40 million from the company. The claims are categorically denied.
Its shares may be suspended, and the company engulfed in controversy. But investors are still interested in acquiring Datalex shares through off market transactions. Analysis shows 10% has been sold to new investors who have not yet been identified.
Declan Taite, the managing partner and joint country lead of Duff & Phelps, has been at the coalface of Irish restructuring and insolvency for more than two decades.
The housing charity is increasingly working with property developers and investors to provide much-needed supported housing. But Francis Doherty, the man in charge of its housing portfolio, says more landlord incentives are needed to stop tenants losing their home in the first place.
Ted Cunningham is the only person who went to jail in relation to the Northern Bank heist. Fifteen years later, he maintains his innocence and wants to clear his name. So why did he plead guilty and how did £3m in cash end up in his house? This is his story.
Feted as the racehorse owner behind Cheltenham winner, Kicking King, Dublin businessman Conor Clarkson reaped the rewards of a fortune made in property. Then he lost it all. On the verge of bankruptcy, he was thrown a lifeline. This is the story of how the rescue deal fell apart.
Lennox Lewis introduced the Comer Brothers to President Museveni of Uganda. The result was an ambitious plan to develop a new city outside Kampala. More than a decade on, the scheme has stalled and is now mired in legal action. Just what happened to the Irish development firm in Uganda?
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