
The week ahead in business: CSO figures on new vehicles and agriculture prices, and the latest data on imports and exports
On Wednesday, the Central Statistics Office will give a figure for the number of vehicles licensed for the first time in July. Those of you sitting on a beach with little to do could compare the figure with sales from last January, in order to work out how much more popular the 251 registration number was in its first month compared with that of the 252.
Given the intensity of the debate about the rising cost of groceries, and who is to blame, the CSO's release on Thursday of agricultural prices is worth watching. Beef and dairy prices, in particular, have been increasing steadily, and the Competition and Consumer Protection Commission has reported that farm-gate prices went up by more than 19pc in the last year.
On Friday, we will get the export and import figures for June. There was a spike in exports to America in the first quarter of the year, as US buyers tried to get ahead of the tariff regime being threatened by president Donald Trump. Sales subsided in April and May, and our guess is that trend may have continued.
Results will be reported tomorrow by the British bookmaker Entain, the owner of the Ladbrokes and Coral brands. The following day we get Q2 results from Glanbia, the nutrition supplement maker, whose share price jumped in April after its first-quarter figures were better than analysts expected.
The Central Bank of Ireland will publish retail interest rates on Wednesday, showing the average rates offered by banks for loans and savings. Savers in this country have been getting some of the lowest returns in the eurozone, with the demand deposit rates offered by the three main banks hovering between 0.01pc and 0.25pc.
Finally, on Thursday, the CSO produces quarterly figures on productivity in Ireland. In this, the second week of August, our guess is that productivity will be at a quarterly low.
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The Journal
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Fine Gael response Baby Pereppadan's business partner businessman Babu Valooran Kochuvarkey has claimed that nurses had full knowledge of the fees that they paid, and that the two sums of just over €3,000 and one sum of €3,600 that were charged to the three nurses were expenses related. Mr Valooran said that he would further engage with one nurse who had requested a refund of additional fees. The three nurses have told The Journal that these were lump sum agency fees that they were asked to pay at the outset of their recruitment, and that they themselves paid for expenses including accommodation in Dublin during their examination period and transport in cash; they have also provided documentation which appears to support their claims. Britto Pereppadan has claimed that his father's business partner, Babu Valooran Kochuvarkey, had owed him a sum of money, which he paid to him, and that he didn't know how it was obtained. Asked for a response to the revelations in the article last Friday, a spokesperson for Fine Gael said that Councillor Baby Pereppadan had himself made the party aware of the piece. Yesterday at a press conference Tánaiste and party leader Simon Harris said that he is going to 'reserve judgement' on the matters covered in the article until he is provided with clarifications by the Pereppadans. Asked if he planned to take action on any of the revelations Harris said: 'I understand that the councillors are disputing some of that and are currently seeking legal advice, and my party headquarters has sought more information from them in relation to that and I await the outcome of that.' When pressed on whether Fine Gael would investigate further the Tánaiste said that the two councillors 'will provide my party headquarters with more information and I will wait until I have all the facts'. 'Once I have all the facts, I will make a judgement then,' Harris added. 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