Joe Lynam


Joe Lynam is an award winning broadcaster who presents on the BBC World Service in the United Kingdom.
Lynam was a business correspondent. He was the relief business presenter on BBC's flagship Today Programme. Between 2011 and 2013, he was the business correspondent with Newsnight.

Overview

During the height of the European debt crisis 2011-2012, Joe Lynam was business correspondent with Newsnight and travelled to Cyprus, Spain, Belgium, Italy and Ireland to cover the sense of fear in many Eurozone countries.
Between 2008–2012, Joe Lynam was the BBC's Weekend Business Correspondent covering economic, business, company, financial and personal finance news on the main BBC One bulletins as well as BBC News, BBC World News, BBC Radio 4, BBC Five Live and the BBC World Service.
He was also relief Business Presenter on BBC News and BBC Breakfast.

Education

Lynam studied International Commerce at University College Dublin in Dublin.

Broadcasting career

Lynam broke the story in August 2006 when a planned terror plot involving a liquid bomb on a UK plane was unearthed.
At the key G20 crisis summit in London in April 2009, Lynam was the first broadcast journalist to reveal live on BBC News with Emily Maitlis that the total amount of money pledged to fix the financial system was going to be $1.1trillion
Lynam is widely credited with breaking the news that Ireland was in talks with the IMF and EU to get a bailout loan in November 2010. Although this was initially denied by the Irish government, it was proven to be true.
In March 2012, Lynam broke the story that the UK Government was in serious talks with with the view to selling it a substantial stake in RBS. This story led to a RBS share prices jumping 5% the following day
In September 2012, Lynam broadcast a report on Newsnight about alleged mis-selling by several UK based investment banks in Italy and how the UK regulator, the FSA, was made aware of it but failed to act.
In 2016 Joe and the on Radio 4 were awarded the prestigious for his work on fraud and Vishing. He was the first to .
In 2017, he acquired the full highly critical report for the FCA into how RBS 'mistreated its small business customers'. This led to an enquiry by MPs on the Treasury Committee in the House of Commons. In 2018 he was awarded the at the Headline Money Awards

Personal life

Lynam lives in West London with his Estonian wife Riina. They have two sons.
Lynam is a cousin of the Irish-born British BBC and ITV presenter Des Lynam.
His father died in 2010. Joe senior had been RTÉ's show jumping correspondent in the 1980s.His mother, Christina Lynam, runs a charity Cara Malawi to which he regularly contributes.
In 2010, Lynam helped raise money for the Chiltern Centre for disabled children in Greys Road, Henley-on-Thames, and Power International in High Wycombe.
Before becoming a journalist, Lynam ran a chain of pubs in Germany in the 1990s and speaks fluent German.
Lynam chaired a debate for the London Irish Business Society on the future of the Eurozone, again benefiting Cara Malawi.

His son's birth in a car

Joe Lynam's second son was born in the front seat of his car on the way to the hospital.
He admitted that he "broke every red light" in an effort to get his wife who was at the time his girlfriend to hospital in time; he was not fast enough however – and the little boy Seán was born in his Vauxhall Astra estate on 21 June 2013.
The story was widely covered in many media outlets including The Daily Telegraph and the BBC's in house magazine Ariel.