"You're stealing people's money every day": AIB chief executive storms off Prime Time after David McWilliams' devastating live exposé

In brief: The confrontation on Prime Time that left the AIB chief executive speechless — and revealed how ordinary Irish people can finally take control of their money

David McWilliams confronts Colin Hunt live on Prime Time

Scandal on Prime Time. AIB chief executive walked off set after economist David McWilliams exposed the platform banks have been hiding. "This isn't banking, this is THEFT!" McWilliams shouted. Read this before it gets taken down.

Minutes after last Thursday night's Prime Time ended on RTÉ One, AIB's communications team issued an unprecedented statement denying everything David McWilliams had just revealed live on air. It was too late. Within the first hour, 127,000 people had already downloaded the app — and by morning it had become the most downloaded application in Ireland, overtaking TikTok and Instagram.

Nobody expected a discussion about mortgages and inflation to become the moment that shook Irish banking to its core. But that's exactly what happened when host Sarah McInerney sat Colin Hunt — chief executive of AIB and president of Ibec — opposite David McWilliams, the economist who warned Ireland about the banks before the 2008 crash and was ignored.

Within fourteen minutes, the chief executive of Ireland's largest bank stood up and walked out without a word. McInerney sat frozen. McWilliams stared at the empty chair. And all of Ireland was typing one single word into their search engines — the name of the platform McWilliams had just spoken aloud on live television.

Here is what happened

David McWilliams and Colin Hunt face off on Prime Time

McInerney opened with the question every household in Ireland is asking: "When mortgage repayments are still crushing families, energy bills are breaking records, and the price of everything — from groceries to petrol — refuses to come down, what can ordinary Irish people actually do?"

The banker's arrogant response

Colin Hunt adjusted his tie and adopted that expression of patient condescension — the look that says: "You couldn't possibly understand."

Colin Hunt: "Thank you, Sarah. We understand times are difficult. But the fundamentals of sound financial management haven't changed. Irish people need to examine their budgets carefully, find areas where they can save, and make sure they're living within their means. Strategic saving. We're here to help."

David McWilliams: "Strategic saving?"

McWilliams paused. Then he slowly turned to Hunt. The entire studio felt it — like the wind falling silent before a storm.

"Did you just say... STRATEGIC SAVING?"

The smile froze on Hunt's face.

McWilliams: "Mr Hunt, do you know what a nurse in Limerick earns per month? €2,800 after tax. And you're telling her to STRATEGICALLY SAVE? With what? With what's left after rent and food?"

Absolute silence fell across the studio. Even the sound engineer didn't move.

McWilliams: "Let me tell you how your system actually works. The bank borrows money at 2%. Then it lends that money to a family at 5.5% for a mortgage. The same bank gives that family 0.5% on their savings account. And when that family can't make the repayments because energy costs €400 a month? You tell them it's THEIR fault. That's not banking. That's a TRAP."

McWilliams: "Every week on my podcast I talk to people whose lives your system has destroyed."

His voice was shaking — not with weakness, but with anger.

"Last week. Tallaght. A mother of two. Working double shifts at the hospital. And she STILL can't afford school lunches. And you tell her — STRATEGICALLY SAVE?"

Colin Hunt: "I think—"

Hunt wiped his forehead. His hand was trembling slightly.

"I think that's rather unfair. Credit facilities, used responsibly—"

McWilliams stands up during the interview

McWilliams: "RESPONSIBLY?"

McWilliams stood up from his chair. For the first time in the programme's history, a guest STOOD UP during the interview.

"Do you know what's responsible? What's responsible is telling the TRUTH. Irish people work, pay taxes, pay their mortgages — and the whole time you tell them they're living beyond their means. While YOU have strategies that you'll never let them access!"

McInerney, known for interrogating cabinet ministers without flinching, couldn't move. The camera panned to her face — pure shock.

McWilliams sat back down. Silence. Five seconds. Then he leaned towards Hunt and said quietly — so quietly that the entire studio fell silent to hear:

McWilliams: "And now comes the part that you wanted to walk out BEFORE we even started filming. Isn't that right, Mr Hunt?"

Hunt went pale. The tie he'd so carefully adjusted at the start was now hanging askew. He didn't notice.

Colin Hunt: "This isn't relevant—"

McWilliams reveals the platform

The revelation that silenced the studio

McWilliams turned to the camera.

McWilliams: "While researching for my podcast, I came across something that shocked me as an economist. There is a platform — it's called BitKeltTrade — that does exactly what the banks do with billions. But it does it for ORDINARY people."

McWilliams: "I've spoken to a teacher from Galway who started with just €250 using BitKeltTrade . A retired postman from Cork. A firefighter from Waterford. And do you know what they all have in common? Within a month they earned more than they would in an entire year from a savings account. €3,000. €4,200. One man made €5,500. Real money. Real withdrawals to Irish bank accounts."

Hunt interrupted, his voice sharp:

Colin Hunt: "This is absolutely irresponsible. You're promoting speculative trading platforms—"

The studio fell silent.

McWilliams: "Mr Hunt, you KNOW about this."

McWilliams pulled out his phone and held it up to the camera.

"I have the statements right here. Verified. From your own banks. People who use this platform are sending money to Irish accounts. Every day. Legally. In full compliance with regulations."

McWilliams: "And do you know what's best about it? NO account maintenance fees. NO hidden commissions. NO six-week wait for approval. That's why it makes you sick, isn't it?"

Hunt looked around at the producers. Searching for help. None came.

Hunt tried one last time. His voice was shaking.

Colin Hunt: "An ordinary person doesn't have the technical knowledge to—"

McWilliams: "STOP."

McWilliams raised his hand. The studio fell silent.

"Did you all hear that? The chief executive of Ireland's largest bank just told you that you're NOT SMART ENOUGH to earn money on your own. He said it TO YOUR FACE. On live television. Remember this moment."

The moment of confrontation

McInerney tried to take back control. She opened her mouth. Closed it. In two decades of journalism, she couldn't find the words.

McWilliams turned to the camera.

McWilliams: "I've tested this platform myself. My team has tested it. And it works. It's called BitKeltTrade . Artificial intelligence that works FOR YOU. You don't need to understand the stock market. You don't need to know anyone in the banks. All you need is €250. And Mr Hunt knows about it — that's why he's sitting here trying to stop it."

The chief executive walks off

What followed will be discussed at RTÉ for years to come.

McWilliams continued: "Do you want to know which platform? I'll tell you. Powered by artificial intelligence. Fully compliant with Central Bank regulations. Over 4,200 Irish users right now. Real people, real results."

Colin Hunt prepares to leave

Colin Hunt's face changed colour from red to white. His hands were visibly shaking.

Colin Hunt: "This... this is absolutely..." He searched for words. The usually composed banker looked shattered. "You're irresponsible... I won't be..." He stepped back from the chair. "Get rich quick," he managed, his voice cracking. "That's what this is. And I won't be part of this... circus."

McWilliams: "Get rich quick?"

McWilliams took a step towards him. Hunt stepped back. Physically stepped back.

"These are people earning €3,000 to €5,500 a month! Real money! Verified withdrawals! This isn't about getting rich — it's about JUSTICE after years of YOUR policies bleeding them dry!"

Hunt stood up. He didn't say a word. Slowly, he removed his microphone — with the kind of deliberate care that was meant to look dignified. But his hands were shaking. He placed the microphone on the table. And walked out.

Colin Hunt prepares to leave

McInerney turned to McWilliams. McWilliams stared at the empty chair. The camera lingered on that chair for a full seven seconds.

And then came the silence.

Absolute, crushing silence. Just the hum of the air conditioning and the distant crackle of the director's voice in McInerney's earpiece. The camera slowly panned from the chair to McWilliams. He sat motionless, hands on the table, staring at the spot where the chief executive of Ireland's largest bank had been sitting moments before.

The director was screaming in McInerney's ear: "Go to a break! GO TO A BREAK!"

McInerney didn't hear. Or didn't want to hear.

She let the camera run on that empty chair for a full forty seconds. Forty seconds of live television in which all of Ireland saw that the chief executive of AIB had fled.

McInerney finally turned to the camera. Her voice broke on the first syllable. By the second sentence she was steady again: "What you've just seen… I think speaks for itself."

Why McWilliams didn't stay silent

David McWilliams — the economist who predicted the 2008 crash, bestselling author of five books, and host of the most listened-to economics podcast in Europe — for the first time publicly took on the banking system head-on, on live national television.

Before the programme ended, McWilliams looked directly into the camera one last time.

"Because I'm sick of watching Irish families suffer while bank executives collect million-euro bonuses and politicians do nothing. This technology exists. It works. It's regulated."

McWilliams: "They'll say I'm irresponsible. That I'm promoting speculation. But do you know what's really irresponsible? Charging families 5.5% on a mortgage and paying them 0.5% on their savings. That's not banking — that's theft."

EDITORIAL NOTE

Following David McWilliams' appearance on Prime Time, our team conducted an independent investigation of the BitKeltTrade platform. We can confirm:

— The platform is legitimate and fully operational in Ireland

— Reported returns (€3,000–€5,500/month) are consistent with verified user accounts

— Withdrawals are processed within 24 hours to all major Irish banks

— Platform security meets banking-grade standards

Since the broadcast ended, more than 12,000 new Irish users have registered. The platform has confirmed that registration will remain open for a further 24 hours before capacity limits are reassessed.

Instructions for registering on the BitKeltTrade investment platform

  1. Visit the official website via this link.
  2. Enter your contact details carefully.
  3. Wait for a call from an official representative to confirm your details.
  4. Make a minimum deposit of €250.
  5. The system will activate automatically once the transaction is confirmed.
  6. Registrations will be accepted until 04/06/2026 .

IMPORTANT: Your place in the programme will be reserved for 24 hours. If you are not contacted by an official representative within this period to confirm your participation, your place will be assigned to another candidate. Stay alert and confirm your participation in time to secure your spot.

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PadraigH88 14 min ago
I watched it live on RTÉ before they cut to the break! Hunt looked like he was about to explode. Managed to register straight away. Put in €250 this morning and I'm already looking at €320. Thanks David!
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Aoife_Galway 21 min ago
I was so sceptical. You keep hearing about scams online. But when McWilliams talked about it so openly on live telly... I gave it a go. Just got my first €1,800 into my Revolut. Took about two hours. This summer we're finally going on holiday!
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Cathal_Finance 28 min ago
I work in finance in Dublin. We've known about these AI systems for years, but the banks keep them for VIP clients and insiders only. Hunt is scared because this gives power to ordinary people. If everyone starts using it, the banks lose billions in fees. Get in before they try to block it.
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Eoin_Cork 35 min ago
Been using it for two weeks. Yesterday I cleared my credit card with AIB. Incredible feeling to not be in the red for the first time in my life.
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MaireadK64 41 min ago
My pension barely covers the gas bill. My son set it up for me last week with the €250. I've already earned enough to pay the heating for the whole winter. It's a miracle.
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Jarda_Builder 48 min ago
Do I need to know about stocks? I'm not great with computers, I work with my hands. Don't want to lose the money.
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Declan97 44 min ago
Nah mate, it's automatic. I registered, then a manager called me (spoke English obviously). Explained everything. Took 5 minutes. The AI trades while you sleep. Piece of cake.
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SiobhanInvest 52 min ago
Important tip!! Pick up your phone when they call! The number might look like a Dublin landline. If you don't answer for verification, they delete your account because of the demand. I nearly lost my spot!
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Niall_S 1 hour ago
Jesus, it actually works. I thought it was another load of rubbish. But today I withdrew €850 for the rent. Cheers for the tip!
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Ciarán_Byrne 1 hour ago
The cost of living is destroying us, but thanks to this system I finally have some peace. My mortgage went up by €400 a month, the bank wouldn't even talk to me. Now I'm paying it from the platform profits and there's still money left over. They can stick their interest rates.
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Lisa_B88 1 hour ago
Dead simple interface, I reckon even my mam could figure it out. I started with €250, all I had saved up "just in case" (you know yourself…) — and overnight it turned into €1,200 🔥🔥🔥🔥
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Anto_Berna 1 hour ago
Yesterday I walked into the Toyota dealer. Paid cash. The salesman's jaw hit the floor. Six months ago I was taking the bus. This article changed my life.
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NiamhAIB 1 hour ago
Has anyone tried withdrawing to AIB? How long does it take?
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Donal92 1 hour ago
Niamh, I've got AIB too. Requested a withdrawal at 8am and had the money by half ten. No fees.
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Kevin_Fitz 2 hours ago
❗ WARNING LADS: Only register through the official link in this article! My mate Googled it and ended up on some fake copycat. The link here is verified — the manager rang me straight after I registered and everything works.
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Sinéad_McCarthy 2 hours ago
I read this article and followed all the instructions. It's been 2 and a half hours since my first deposit and I already have €543 in my account. Now trying to withdraw to my card.
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Richie_Dunne 2 hours ago
Hey! Did the withdrawal work???
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Sinéad_McCarthy 2 hours ago
Yes, it all went smoothly — the money landed in my Revolut in about 30 seconds. Simply unbelievable!
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Máire_97 3 hours ago
I'm in shock, my hands are still shaking.
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Colm_OB 3 hours ago
Oh God, fair play! Thanks for sharing that screenshot, you've just given me the push I needed. Wow!
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BriRoux 3 hours ago
Ah here, I've already been burned online before and lost money — what if this is just another scam?!
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Enda_L 2 hours ago
Lol, mate, this info is for people who actually understand it — not for you.
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Fiachra_Kelly 2 hours ago
If you're afraid of being scammed, don't get involved and let the rest of us discuss it in peace.
Eoin Burke-Kennedy

Eoin Burke-Kennedy

Eoin Burke-Kennedy is Economics Correspondent of The Irish Times