Business News
Brexit
6th September 2019
For information on how Brexit will affect your business please call our offices or click on the following link to find out information on how importing goods into Ireland will be affected.
If you’re targeting North America, the chances are that your digital marketing budget includes an allocation for advertising. Last year, US digital ad spending surpassed television for the first time. Fortunately, the adage about half the money in advertising being wasted – but no one knowing which half – applies less and less in the […]
Read MoreBank of Ireland has reported an underlying profit of €480m for the first six months of this year, rounding off a busy week of results for Irish banks. Bank of Ireland also reported operating expenses of €881m in the first six months of the year, which are broadly flat in comparison with the first half […]
Read MoreLabour costs in Ireland are rising at one of the slowest rates in the EU despite the country’s strong economic performance. Ireland is currently the fastest-growing economy in western Europe, yet the latest data from Eurostat shows that wage costs in the country rose by just 1.1pc in the last three months of last year. […]
Read MoreIreland is one of the countries “leading the race to the bottom” in the facilitation of global tax avoidance, according to a new report from charity group Oxfam. Oxfam said there “is strong evidence” that Ireland is aiding significant corporate-tax-avoidance schemes for European banks. In a report titled ‘Opening the Vaults’, researchers at Oxfam, in […]
Read MoreIrish-based companies are among the biggest foreign owners of UK firms, ahead of Japan and well ahead of rising powerhouse China. More than one-in-four of the UK’s most important businesses are foreign owned, according to figures from the UK’s Office for National Statistics (ONS). The data shows as many as 24,145 UK businesses are owned […]
Read MoreThe price of an average semi-detached house in parts of Dublin is inflating as fast as in the boom years and the period immediately before the Central Bank introduced its lending restrictions two-and-a-half years ago. Prices in North County and South County Dublin both increased by 5.6pc in the three months since December, while Dublin […]
Read MorePublic sector workers get paid 40pc more on average than their private sector counterparts, a report claims. By contrast, in the UK public sector pay is almost on a par with the private sector, with Ireland’s public/private pay gap high by European standards, the paper states. The study by Davy Stockbrokers argues that any future […]
Read MoreOn Wednesday, the UK prime minister is scheduled to ’trigger’ Article 50 of the Treaty on European Union to announce to the 27 other EU member states that the UK intends to leave the union. It will be no surprise. On June 23 last a majority of voters in the UK and Gibraltar voted in […]
Read MoreIreland’s application for membership of the China-led Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB) has been formally approved. Ireland is one of 13 applicants to the new Beijing-based international financial institution whose membership was approved yesterday. It is the first time the AIIB has welcomed new members since it inception, the multilateral financial institution said. The approved […]
Read MoreEuro-area lenders took €233.5bn in free long-term loans from the European Central Bank as they prepare for the potential end of extraordinary stimulus. The take-up in the last of the ECB’s Targeted Longer-Term Refinancing Operations (TLTROs) – four-year loans at a rate that starts at zero and could go lower – compares with a median […]
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