Tag Archives: accountancy dublin

News of the World: Money expert on Debt

IRELAND is in payback mode at the moment. As a country we’re experiencing “deleveraging”, which means that many people are using most of their money to pay back excessive borrowing. However, that practice only puts cash into the banking system and not the real economy.

Bloomberg: Irish seek to delay ‘evil day’ of reckoning

“While banks may be able to contain bad-loan losses on their mortgage books, “a big and ongoing problem is that a large part of their mortgage books are based on ECB tracker rates, which banks are funding at a loss,” said Karl Deeter, operations manager with Dublin-based Irish Mortgage Brokers.”

What kind of accountant do you want?

Do you want a person who can merely do up your books and has the credentials to stand over the final figures? If so then Advisors.ie is perhaps a solution for you.

If you’d rather have a person who can look at your business, do you books, finalize figures and perform an audit where necessary then we are likely the solution for you.

But if you want an accountant in Dublin who can do all of that and also figure out ways to cut your costs, reduce your tax bills and use the best methods for ensuring that you stay in business and don’t pay more tax then necessary, while also being able to advise you personally on your finances and also shop around on your behalf for cheaper solutions for the financial products and services you use then we are definitely the people you are looking for!

Sunday Times: Buy to fret

We were pleased to get a mention in the Sunday Times article by Kathy Foley called ‘buy to fret’. You can find her on Twitter too! We don’t often find such a candid quote as the last part of the mention we got! “The banks are all saying investors have to be first to give up the ghost,” said Karl Deeter, of Irish Mortgage Brokers. “They will lean heavily on them and get a judgment because they didn’t do what the bigger people do and isolate the loan, buying the property through a limited company. “Nobody feels any sympathy for them.