Top Stories

Supreme Court gives green light to Denis O’Brien’s Red Flag data access appeal

For nearly a decade, businessman Denis O'Brien has sought disclosure of a dossier about him compiled by Red Flag PR for an unidentified client, both in the courts and under data access laws. Now the matter is bound for the Supreme Court and maybe the CJEU.

Airlines and hyperscalers clamor for turbines. Only a few companies make the parts.

Specialized manufacturers in the sector are a new pick-and-shovel play for investors, writes Jinjoo Lee, The Wall Street Journal.

US biotechs are keeping more secrets to beat copycats in China

Western biotechs get a new playbook with tighter controls to stay ahead of an ultra-efficient pharmaceutical pipeline overseas, writes Xavier Martinez, The Wall Street Journal.

“On the cheap”: Jim Flavin opposes €6.6bn private-equity bid for DCC

The DCC founder, who owns a 3.22% stake, joins three other significant shareholders in opposing the price offered by KKR and Energy Capital Partners. He says DCC could be “the next CRH”.

Finance by design: Part 4 – The €102bn losses still shaping the finance sector’s tax bills

Beneath the headline profits of banks, insurers, and IFSC firms lies a lesser-known story: over €100bn in accumulated losses that continue to influence corporate tax payments across the financial sector.

Tobacco stocks are coming in from the cold

Investors are taking a closer look at companies as they shift away from cigarettes, writes Carol Ryan, The Wall Street Journal.

Great expectations: Now ceremonies are over, MEPs want Ireland to get the budget done

The fate of France and Marine Le Pen is casting a wide shadow over Ireland’s EU presidency and the urgency in getting the long-term budget agreed this year, reports Jonathan Keane in Strasbourg.

The red flag that led to Graham Platner’s implosion was hiding in plain sight

Maine’s populist Senate candidate made a costly miscalculation when he doubled down on his troubled background, write Tarini Parti, Aaron Zitner, and Eliza Collins The Wall Street Journal.

Top Voices

England, the World Cup and Ireland’s identity crisis

Huge numbers in Ireland will watch England try to get past Norway in tonight's World Cup quarter-final. The majority will be fervently hoping they don't, but some of us have always felt differently about English football.

The Ortega story by Joe Haslam – Part 2: How “Celtic management” runs the show at Zara

The Inditex group’s flagship brand has surpassed Nike in global rankings by remaining rooted in its founder Amancio Ortega’s Galician heartland.

The Ortega story by Joe Haslam – Part 1: The man who made Zara the world’s most valuable fashion brand

The Inditex group’s flagship brand has surpassed Nike in global rankings by remaining rooted in its founder Amancio Ortega’s Galician heartland.

Conor Brady: EU presidency is Irish security forces’ biggest challenge since the Troubles

Investment in garda training and equipment complements intelligence-sharing on public-order threats, but gaps in areas like air defence remain.

Paul McArdle: AI is brilliant. The bill, and the odd hallucination, is the problem

AI is very powerful and will play a key role in our service delivery at The Panel, our recruitment business. However, we are beginning to see a big downside: the economics of AI.

What Ireland’s EU presidency can achieve: Rewinding the week that was

Irish ministers burned the midnight oil with their colleagues 13 years ago to agree a budget; they can do it again – and more. But they have no leadership capital on social media regulation or climate measures.

Brexit, Burnham, Farage: Dan O’Brien on the future of Irish-British relations

Beyond Andy Burnham's expected premiership, a Reform-Conservative coalition would walk away from the Windsor Framework, reviving the border dilemma faced by Ireland since Brexit.

John Looby: The easy allure of nationalist nonsense

In departing remarks, Warren Buffett marvelled at the success of the US over its 250-year history and cited a secret sauce unique to Uncle Sam. But as America celebrates its anniversary this weekend, such nationalism is proving itself to be lazy of thought and bloody of effect.