HomeThemesTypesDBAbout
Showing: ◈ Dublin×
The Irish balance sheets of a range of global banks that run international operations from Dublin has ballooned to more than half a billion euros.
Amid acute political uncertainty and the upheaval of Brexit, the movement of goods on the island of Ireland has been transforming and seeing a significant boost.
Pzena Investment Management, a US-based investment company, has revealed it is awaiting approval from Irish regulators to open its first European office in Dublin.
MEP Brian Hayes says Dublin would be ‘ideal’ location for banking watchdog / The London based financial watchdog European Banking Authority (EBA), could relocate to Dublin once the UK moves ahead with plans to exit the European Union.
The absolutely enormous cargo ship that was christened by Leo Varadkar and other luminaries in Dublin Port on Friday morning is officially to be called Celine but over the course of a long and lavish ceremony marking its birth it was more commonly referred to by its shiny new nickname, Brexit Buster.
‘It’s entirely Brexit,’ says haulier who has been caught up in 15km queues.
Shipping line CLdN says it has ‘contingencies’ for UK ‘landbridge’ delays in a hard Brexit.
City financial firms have so far committed to move at least 7,000 jobs and £1 trillion of assets out of the UK to prepare for Brexit, with the true cost likely to be higher, research has found.
Nearly two months after Great Britain (GB) left the EU single market and customs union, the volume of freight being shipped across the Irish Sea from the Republic of Ireland to GB is still down significantly, raising further questions about government claims that trading volumes are returning to normal.
Armstrong Teasdale is the latest international law firm to establish offices in Dublin since Brexit and it plans to hire up to 20 lawyers for office headed by Irishman.
Companies avoiding United Kingdom landbridge, according to Chambers Ireland.
The UK Government’s approach to Brexit trade policy and negotiations protocol is causing “potentially irreparable damage” to Wales’ ports, researchers have said.
Thomson Reuters is planning to move its foreign exchange trading business from London to Dublin due to Brexit. The company has applied to the Irish central bank for a licence, the Financial Times reported.
Two weeks into Brexit, problems are mounting and recriminations are flying in all directions. The reality of Brexit is proving every bit as toxic as the four-and-a-half-year slog that got us to this point.
'Wimbledonisation' helped the City of London become Europe’s financial capital. But leaving the EU has been much less of an advantage.
New study highlights increasing importance of French market for Irish exporters. / The Republic’s bilateral trade with France has mushroomed to a record €30 billion per annum in the wake of Brexit, according to a new report.
US financial giant is making the decision to cater for its European market.
The Seanad Special Select Committee on the Withdrawal of the United Kingdom from the European Union will meet this afternoon to discuss the impact of Brexit on the business sector, and on trade across the island and between Ireland and Britain.
Rule changes and high costs have been cited for the move, leaving the Irish airline listed solely on the Euronext Dublin exchange.
PREPARATIONS for a possible no-deal Brexit are included in the programme for a new Irish government agreed by Fianna Fáil, Fine Gael and the Greens.
The Port of Dunkirk, close to the BeNeLux region, is eyeing even stronger links with Dublin Port and Rosslare Europort while also examining new routes to Ireland's southern ports.
Officials identify sites in Dublin for lorries to park if port becomes congested by checks.
The U.K.’s departure from the European Union has gifted the City of London’s European rivals with a once-in-a-generation opportunity to win back some of the business that has gravitated towards the Square Mile over the past few decades.
A previously confidential government study detailing 142 areas of life in Northern Ireland that will be impacted by Brexit has been published, revealing risks to everything from cooperation on congenital heart disease and cross-border child protection to rules preventing the looting of national treasures.
Blind people and people who require assistance dogs for other medical reasons would need to enter Ireland at “approved” entry points.