• Weekly Round Up

    Bank of Ireland MyHome report shows fresh momentum in house prices

    This morning we have published the Bank of Ireland / MyHome report. Asking price inflation accelerated in Q2 2026, with the national median asking price rising 4.3% during the quarter to €395,000 and annual growth reaching 5.0%. This is somewhat surprising given anecdotal reports of slower house price growth, particularly in the capital. Dublin asking prices […]

  • Weekly Round Up

    Payrolls data still point to heathy pace of Irish job creation

    This morning’s CSO data, showing another 0.5% gain in employee numbers in the first four months of 2026, to 2.6 million in April, are a reassuring sign that a healthy pace of job creation has been sustained this year. Construction (+4.5%), health (+4%), public administration (+3.4%) and professional/scientific (+2.8%) were among the fastest-growing sectors, while […]

  • Weekly Round Up

    Revised rate expectations may give UK housing market a reprieve

    This morning’s Rightmove data showing asking prices falling by 0.6% in June, down 0.5% year-on-year, highlights the fragile state of the UK housing market. They follow last week’s RICS survey showing a large net majority of UK estate agents reporting falling prices (-35%), new buyer enquiries (-34%) and sales (-37%). The catalyst for the recent […]

  • Weekly Round Up

    Record Irish GDP contraction masks robust domestic economy

    The CSO confirmed today that the record 12% fall in Irish GDP in Q1 2026 reflected just a small number of multinational firms in the pharmaceutical sector. The underlying story is that the surge in exports in 2025, ahead of feared US tariffs, is now unwinding in early 2026. Hence, the Irish GDP growth rate […]

  • Weekly Round Up

    Taking the temperature of the Irish housing market in Q2

    Ahead of the Q2 Bank of Ireland/MyHOME report—which we will publish in July and which will set out how asking prices moved ahead of the key summer trading season—we thought now was a good time to take stock of recent developments in the Irish housing market. RPPI transaction price data have had a soft start […]

  • Weekly Round Up

    Ireland’s weak labour market data likely affected by volatility

    At face value, this morning’s CSO Labour Force Survey (LFS) is very concerning, employment falling by 0.6% in Q1 2026 to 2.8 million, annual job creation flattening off to zero, and the unemployment rate rising to 5%. However, volatility looks to be at play. The figures suggest full-time employment has increased by 1.5% over the […]

  • Weekly Round Up

    Could Bank of England defy markets and keep rates on hold?

    Oil prices and events in the Middle East, are increasingly shaping market expectations for central bank policy. While markets and economists broadly agree on the ECB’s near-term trajectory—expecting two-to-three rate hikes in 2026—there is a clear divergence thereafter: economists anticipate rates will fall back toward neutral levels (~2%), whereas markets imply persistently tighter policy, the […]

  • Weekly Round Up

    Markets taking sanguine view of May 7th local election risks

    Markets appear complacent on the risks the UK’s May 7th local elections pose to the sterling exchange rate. Opinion polls point to heavy losses for both Labour and the Conservatives, boosting Reform UK and increasing political uncertainty. Poor results could weaken Keir Starmer’s position and raise fears of less fiscally disciplined policies, particularly if Chancellor […]

  • Weekly Round Up

    Irish housing completions rise to 38,200 in year to March

    Today’s Irish residential completions figures show a very welcome rise, up 33% to 7,856 in Q1 2026, ahead of the pace we had forecast. Completions in the past twelve months were 38,200. The striking feature of the Q1 data is that the pace of expansion of house completions (+33% to 5,500 in Q1 2026) has […]

  • Weekly Round Up

    Irish government now expects larger €9bn surplus in 2026

    This week the Department of Finance revised up its projection for the government surplus to €9.2bn (2.5% of GNI*) in 2026, close to double the €5.1bn forecast in December once the cost of recent energy price supports and other spending is excluded. The explanation is €4.4bn of lower-than-expected borrowing (or larger surpluses) in semi-state bodies, […]