TRINTECH GROUP PLC
F-1/A, 2000-04-13
PREPACKAGED SOFTWARE
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<PAGE>


  As filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on April 13, 2000

                                                Registration No. 333-32762
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                      SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                            Washington, D.C. 20549

                                ---------------

                             AMENDMENT NO. 1

                                    TO
                                   FORM F-1
                            REGISTRATION STATEMENT
                                     Under
                          The Securities Act of 1933

                                ---------------
                              TRINTECH GROUP PLC
            (Exact name of Registrant as specified in its charter)

                                ---------------

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
       Republic of Ireland                        7372                          Not Applicable
<S>                                <C>                                <C>
 (State or other jurisdiction of      (Primary Standard Industrial             (I.R.S. Employer
 incorporation or organization)       Classification Code Number)           Identification Number)
                                           Trintech Group PLC
                                           Trintech Building
                                       South County Business Park
                                              Leopardstown
                                           Dublin 18, Ireland
                                           011-353-1-207-4000
</TABLE>
  (Address and telephone number of Registrant's principal executive offices)
                                ---------------
                                 Kevin C. Shea
                                Trintech, Inc.
                         2755 Campus Drive, Suite 220
                          San Mateo, California 94403
                                (650) 227-7000
           (Name, address and telephone number of agent for service)

                                ---------------
                                  Copies to:
<TABLE>
<S>                                                <C>
               Alan K. Austin, Esq.                            Thomas W. Kellerman, Esq.
             Steven V. Bernard, Esq.                             BROBECK HALE AND DORR
         WILSON SONSINI GOODRICH & ROSATI                           Hasilwood House
             Professional Corporation                                60 Bishopsgate
                650 Page Mill Road                                   London ECN 4AJ
           Palo Alto, California 94304                            011-44-171-638-6688
                  (650) 493-9300
</TABLE>
                                ---------------
  Approximate date of commencement of proposed sale to the public: As soon as
practicable after this Registration Statement becomes effective.

  If any of the securities being registered on this Form are to be offered on
a delayed or continuous basis pursuant to Rule 415 under the Securities Act of
1933, check the following box. [_]

  If this Form is to register additional securities for an offering pursuant
to Rule 462(b) under the Securities Act, check the following box and list the
Securities Act registration statement number of the earlier effective
registration statement for the same offering. [_]

  If this Form is a post-effective amendment filed pursuant to Rule 462(c)
under the Securities Act, check the following box and list the Securities Act
registration statement number of the earlier effective registration statement
for the same offering. [_]

  If this Form is a post-effective amendment filed pursuant to Rule 462(d)
under the Securities Act, check the following box and list the Securities Act
registration number of the earlier effective registration statement for the
same offering. [_]

  If delivery of the prospectus is expected to be made pursuant to Rule 434,
please check the following box. [_]

                                ---------------
  The Registrant hereby amends this Registration Statement on such date or
dates as may be necessary to delay our effective date until the Registrant
shall file a further amendment which specifically states that this
Registration Statement shall thereafter become effective under Section 8(a) of
the Securities Act of 1933 or until the Registration Statement shall become
effective on such date as the Commission, acting pursuant to said Section
8(a), may determine.
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<PAGE>

                                Explanatory Note

   Alternate pages to be used in an international prospectus follow the back
cover page of the U.S. prospectus.
<PAGE>

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
+The information in this preliminary prospectus is not complete and may be     +
+changed. We may not sell these securities until the registration statement    +
+filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission is effective. This          +
+preliminary prospectus is not an offer to sell securities, and we are not     +
+soliciting offers to buy these securites, in any state where the offer or     +
+sale is not permitted.                                                        +
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Subject to Completion, Dated April 13, 2000

[Logo of Trintech Group PLC Appears Here]

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Trintech Group PLC
 6,000,000 American Depositary Shares
 Representing 3,000,000 Ordinary Shares
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

 We are offering 4,000,000 American depositary shares and selling shareholders
 are offering 2,000,000 American depositary shares in this offering. Each
 American depositary share, or ADS, offered by this prospectus represents one-
 half of one of our ordinary shares. The ADSs are represented by American
 depositary receipts, or ADRs. The ADSs being offered are initially being
 offered in the United States and are concurrently being offered, under a
 separate prospectus, in Germany and to institutional investors outside of the
 United States and Germany. We will not receive any of the proceeds from the
 sale of ADSs by the selling stockholders.

 The ADSs are quoted on the Nasdaq National Market under the symbol TTPA and
 on the Neuer Markt segment of the Frankfurt Stock Exchange under the symbol
 TTP. The last reported sale price of the ADSs on the Nasdaq National Market
 on April 7, 2000 was $43.25 and the last reported sale price of the ADSs on
 the Neuer Markt on April 7, 2000 was  (Euro)42.80 per ADS.

 Investing in the ADSs involves risks. See "Risk Factors" beginning on page 6.

 THE SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION AND STATE SECURITIES REGULATORS HAVE
 NOT APPROVED OR DISAPPROVED THESE SECURITIES OR DETERMINED IF THIS PROSPECTUS
 IS TRUTHFUL OR COMPLETE. ANY REPRESENTATION TO THE CONTRARY IS A CRIMINAL
 OFFENSE.

 A copy of this prospectus, together with the documents specified in
 paragraphs 11 and 14 of Annex A in this prospectus, has been delivered to the
 Registrar of Companies in the Republic of Ireland.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                          Per American
                                           Depositary
                                             Share          Total
                                          ------------ ----------------
  <S>                                     <C> <C>      <C>   <C>
  Public offering price                   $   (Euro)   $     (Euro)
  Underwriting discounts and commissions
  Proceeds, before expenses, to Trintech
  Proceed to selling shareholders
</TABLE>

 We and the selling shareholders identified on pages 66 and 67 of this
 prospectus have granted the underwriters the right to purchase up to 900,000
 ADSs to cover any over-allotments.

 The underwriters expect to deliver the ADRs evidencing the ADSs in book entry
 form through the facilities of The Depositary Trust Company and Clearstream
 Banking AG on or about         2000.

 Deutsche Banc Alex. Brown
               Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette
                                Robertson Stephens
                                                                       Chase H&Q

 The date of this prospectus is        , 2000
<PAGE>

   "Payment is at the heart of commerce, and we have been at the heart of
secure electronic payment since its creation. We have a simple philosophy--
produce the best solutions that allow consumers, businesses and financial
institutions to pay securely."

                                               John McGuire, co-founder and CEO.

   We have been a leading provider of secure electronic payment solutions to
leading banking, technology and retail organizations since our creation in
1987. Whether electronic payments take place in the physical world or over the
Internet, we supply a comprehensive range of end-to-end solutions that enable
consumers, merchants and financial institutions to by, sell and process, with
confidence and security.

                    Trintech securing end-to-end e-commerce

                                  Paygate Logo

                         Secure e-payment solutions to
                        enable institutions to capture,
                          authorize and settle payment
                       card transactions in the physical
                          world and over the Internet.

                          Banks, financial transaction

      Payware Logo

                                 Payware Logo

                                                            Payware Logo

   PayWare Net for e-         PayWare ERP payment     Electronic point of sale
  merchants and PayWare      enables organizations     systems, Compact 9000i
       NetHost for         with deployed enterprise     and PayWare for Call
    Internet/commerce         resources planning      Centers allows merchants
service providers allows       systems. PayWare         in the physical world
 virtual world merchants     PurchaseCard enables        accept and process
  to accept and process      secure Internet based      payment transactions
      payment card           business-to-business             securely.
  transactions securely    payment and procurement.
   over the Internet.


                                                       Physical world commerce

                             Business-to-consumer
  Business-to-consumer            e-commerce
       e-commerce
<PAGE>

   Our product family is based on three core payment card transaction
platforms:

 .  PayGate: an enterprise solution that allows banks, financial transaction
   processors, Internet service providers and commerce service providers to
   authorize and settle payment card transactions.

 .  PayWare: an integrated merchant payment technology for the transactions in
   the physical world and for business-to-consumer and business-to-business
   transactions over the Internet.

 .  NetWallet: a secure virtual wallet that can protect and evoke the
   cardholder's payment cards when transacting commerce on-line.

 .  EzCard: a virtual version of the consumers plastic credit card that resides
   on the consumers personal computer and automatically completes e-merchant
   payment forms, improving speed and security of shopping on-line. Also allows
   streaming of advertising directly to the ezCard.

   In our mission to be the world's leading provider of secure e-payment
solutions for payment card transactions, we will continue to pursue a
technology strategy to embrace and extend our position in the world of secure
e-payments--be that in the physical world or the world of e-commerce.


                                       2
<PAGE>


                                    SUMMARY

   This summary highlights information contained elsewhere in this prospectus.
You should read the entire prospectus carefully.

                               Trintech Group PLC

   We are a leading provider of secure electronic payment infrastructure
solutions, known as e-payment solutions, for payment card transactions. We
develop, market and sell a comprehensive suite of software products, and
electronic point of sale systems known as PoS systems, that enable end-to-end
card-based electronic payments in the physical world and over the Internet. We
offer vendor-neutral, open, feature-rich software products that provide a
highly secure e-payment solution for each of the parties to an e-payment
transaction--the bank or other financial transaction processor, the merchant
and the cardholder. With the launch of our first Internet product in 1996, we
shifted our growth strategy to emphasize e-commerce software products for
Internet applications. In addition, in February 2000 we jointly announced with
Motorola the availability of an e-payment software application for mobile
commerce, or m-commerce, transactions involving mobile phones. We have also
established strategic relationships with VISA, MasterCard, VeriSign, RSA
Security, Compaq, SAP and Intershop. Our customers include banks, card
associations, financial transaction processors and Internet service providers
in major markets including Germany, the United States, Scandinavia, the United
Kingdom and South America.

   The growth of payment card transactions, in conjunction with increased
payment card fraud, has driven the need for more comprehensive, secure and
effective hardware and software payment products to process these transactions.
More recently, the growth of the Internet as a medium for commerce has
significantly increased the risk that payment card fraud and repudiation can
occur. According to a study conducted by VISA International in 1999, several
member banks in its European region were experiencing repudiation and
discovered fraud rates as high as 50% for Internet transactions while
transactions originating on the Internet represent only 1% to 2% of total
transaction volumes. The results of this study support our belief that the
growth of e-commerce has further driven the demand for comprehensive and
effective solutions for secure e-payment transactions.

   Our mission is to become the leading worldwide provider of secure e-payment
infrastructure solutions for payment card transactions. Our product suite
consists of software and electronic PoS systems for use with a variety of
operating systems, databases, merchant web servers, and networked and
standalone computers. Our product suite consists of more than 20 modules
designed to perform authorization, data capture and settlement for e-payment
transactions, as well as management of merchant e-payment systems. These
modules can be deployed as an end-to-end solution or integrated with modules of
other vendors. Our software products for the Internet incorporate the principal
security standards for e-payment transactions, secure socket layer, known as
SSL, and secure electronic transaction, known as SET.

   We were incorporated in 1987. As of February 29, 2000, we had 306 employees
operating from offices in Dublin, Ireland, San Mateo, California, Austin,
Texas, Princeton, New Jersey, Miami, Florida and Frankfurt, Germany. Our
principal executive office, which is also our registered office, is located at
Trintech Building, South County Business Park, Leopardstown, Dublin 18,
Ireland. Our telephone number at that location is 353-1-207-4000.

   This prospectus contains forward-looking statements which involve risks and
uncertainties. Our actual results could differ materially from those
anticipated in these forward-looking statements as a result of unexpected
events and trends, as well as the factors described in the section of this
prospectus entitled "Risk Factors." This prospectus may not be used in
connection with the offer or sale of any ADSs to the public in any jurisdiction
where the offer or sale would be unlawful.

                                       3
<PAGE>

                                  The Offering

<TABLE>
<S>                                              <C>
ADSs offered by us.............................. 4,000,000 shares
ADSs offered by selling shareholders............ 2,000,000 shares
Equivalent ADSs to be outstanding after the
 offering....................................... 54,281,444 shares
Use of proceeds................................. For working capital and general
                                                 corporate purposes, including product
                                                 development, sales and marketing,
                                                 international expansion and the
                                                 acquisition of complementary products or
                                                 businesses. See "Use of Proceeds."
Nasdaq National Market symbol................... TTPA
Neuer Markt symbol.............................. TTP
</TABLE>

   The number of equivalent ADSs to be outstanding after the offering is based
on 25,140,722 ordinary shares outstanding as of January 31, 2000, after giving
effect to a two-for-one ADS split effected on March 21, 2000. As a result of
the two-for-one ADS split, each ordinary share equals two equivalent ADSs. The
number of equivalent ADSs to be outstanding after the offering excludes
7,222,654 equivalent ADSs, or 3,611,327 ordinary shares, issuable upon exercise
of options outstanding under our share option schemes at January 31, 2000 and
500,000 equivalent ADSs, or 250,000 ordinary shares, issuable upon the exercise
of a warrant outstanding at January 31, 2000.

   The following table summarizes the financial data of our business. Note 11
of the notes to the consolidated financial statements provides an explanation
of the method used to calculate pro forma basic and diluted net income (loss)
per equivalent ADS. The information presented under "As Adjusted" reflects the
receipt of net proceeds of approximately $161.9 million, or approximately
(Euro)168.8 million, from the sale of 4,000,000 ADSs offered by us at an
assumed public offering price of $43.25, or  (Euro)45.10, per ADS.

                      Summary Consolidated Financial Data
        (in thousands of U.S. dollars, except share and per share data)

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                 Year Ended January 31,
                                            ---------------------------------
                                               1998       1999        2000
                                            ---------- ----------  ----------
<S>                                         <C>        <C>         <C>
Consolidated Statement of Operations Data:
Revenue:
 Product................................... $   10,824 $   14,554  $   18,457
 License...................................      4,101      4,477       9,158
 Service...................................      1,721      2,002       2,629
                                            ---------- ----------  ----------
   Total revenue...........................     16,646     21,033      30,244
Total cost of revenue......................      9,694     13,913      17,257
                                            ---------- ----------  ----------
Gross margin...............................      6,952      7,120      12,987
Total operating expenses...................      6,733     13,944      27,145
                                            ---------- ----------  ----------
Income (loss) from operations..............        219     (6,824)    (14,158)
Net income (loss).......................... $      175 $   (6,873) $  (12,111)
                                            ========== ==========  ==========
Basic net income (loss) per equivalent
 ADS....................................... $     0.01 $    (0.21) $    (0.31)
                                            ========== ==========  ==========
ADSs used in computation of basic net
 income (loss) per equivalent ADS.......... 31,376,670 32,315,662  38,619,928
                                            ========== ==========  ==========
Diluted net income (loss) per equivalent
 ADS....................................... $     0.01 $    (0.21) $    (0.31)
                                            ========== ==========  ==========
ADSs used in computation of diluted net
 income (loss) per equivalent ADS.......... 31,498,322 32,315,662  38,619,928
                                            ========== ==========  ==========
</TABLE>

                                       4
<PAGE>


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                              January 31, 2000
                                                             -------------------
                                                             Actual  As Adjusted
                                                             ------- -----------
<S>                                                          <C>     <C>
Consolidated Balance Sheet Data:
Cash and cash equivalents................................... $10,862  $172,739
Marketable securities.......................................  48,830    48,830
Working capital.............................................  57,803   219,680
  Total assets..............................................  74,295   236,172
Long-term obligations, less current portion.................   1,127     1,127
Series B preference shares..................................     --        --
  Total shareholders' equity ...............................  61,116   222,993
</TABLE>

                                ----------------

   Except as otherwise specified, all information in this prospectus assumes no
exercise of the underwriters' over-allotment option. All share and per share
numbers in this prospectus have been adjusted to give effect to a two-for-one
split of our ADSs effected on March 21, 2000. As a result of the ADS split,
each of our ordinary shares is represented by two ADSs.

   PayGate Acquirer(TM), PayGate NetIssuer(TM), PayWare PurchaseCard(TM),
PayWare SmartCard(TM), PayWare ERP(TM), PayWare Net(TM), PayWare NetHost(TM),
NetWallet(TM), EzCard(TM), Compact 9000(TM), Compact 9002(TM), S/PAY(TM) and
Trintech(TM) and our logo are our trademarks and PayGate(R), PayWare(R) and
PayPurse(R) are our registered trademarks. SAP R/3(R) is a registered trademark
of SAP AG. This prospectus also includes product names and other trade names
and trademarks of other organizations.

                                       5
<PAGE>

                                  RISK FACTORS

   You should carefully consider the following risks before making an
investment decision. Our business, operating results and financial condition
could be materially adversely affected by any of the following risks. The
trading price of the ADSs could decline due to any of these risks, and you
could lose all or part of your investment. You should also refer to the other
information described in this prospectus, including our financial statements
and the related notes.

We recently emphasized e-commerce software for Internet payment transactions,
an area in which we have limited experience.

   We introduced our first e-commerce software product for Internet payment
transactions in 1996, and the majority of our e-commerce products and modules
that we currently market have been released in the last twelve months. As a
result, we have a very limited operating history in developing, marketing and
selling our e-commerce software, which makes the prediction of future operating
results for this portion of our business very difficult. A substantial majority
of our research and development expenses in the past two years has related to
e-commerce software for payment card transactions, and this effort will
continue to account for a significant percentage of our total research and
development expenses. Demand for our e-commerce software may not increase and
these products may not gain market acceptance. If we fail to increase sales of
our e-commerce software, our future revenue and net income, as well as the
prospects for this critical portion of our business, will be materially
adversely affected.

The standards for e-commerce payment transactions that we support may not
achieve broad market acceptance or market acceptance may be slower than
anticipated.

   A significant part of our business strategy is to continue to develop
software products that support both SSL and SET standards for payment card
transactions over the Internet. If neither achieves broad market acceptance,
our results of operations and prospects will be materially adversely affected.
In addition, if a new standard emerges that is more accepted by the
marketplace, we may not be successful in developing products that comply with
that standard on a timely basis, or at all.

   The SSL standard was developed in 1996, but it has not achieved broad
acceptance outside of North America. In particular, SSL has not achieved broad
acceptance in Europe, which is currently our primary market for our e-payment
solutions for payment card transactions in the physical world. The SET standard
was first implemented in 1997 to address perceived security limitations of SSL.
However, the SET standard has been adopted at a slower rate than we originally
anticipated, and currently the SET standard has achieved limited market
acceptance, particularly in the United States. Because our product development
efforts have focused on these two standards, future sales of our e-payment
products for Internet transactions and the rate of revenue growth attributable
to these products, will be materially adversely affected if these standards do
not achieve broad market acceptance.

   Part of our strategy has been, and continues to be, to develop products that
support the SET standard. We pursue this strategy because we believe that
marketing SET-compliant products can differentiate us from competitors that do
not market SET-compliant products. We further believe that this differentiation
is important to our business because the level of competition relating to SSL
products is significantly greater than that relating to SET products. However,
the adoption of SET has been impeded by several factors, including:

  .  the ease of using SSL as compared to SET

                                       6
<PAGE>

  .  limited financial incentives for cardholders and merchants to use SET

  .  the installed base of SSL technology, including embedded functionality
     in Netscape products

   If SET technology is not broadly adopted, we will lose a potential
competitive advantage, and our prospects and results of operations could be
materially adversely affected.

To be successful, we will need to effectively respond to future changes in the
rapidly developing markets in which we sell our software products.

   The markets for our e-payment software solutions for the physical world and,
in particular, for payment card transactions over the Internet, are at early
stages of development and are rapidly evolving. Our ability to design, develop,
introduce and support new e-payment software products and enhancements to
existing products on a timely basis that meet changing market needs and respond
to technological developments is critical to our future success. In addition,
these products will need to support industry standards and interoperate with a
variety of third parties' products, including those of our competitors. We may
be unable to develop interoperable products, and widespread adoption of a
proprietary or closed e-payment standard could preclude us from effectively
doing so. Also, the number of businesses and cardholders engaged in e-commerce
may not grow or could decrease, reducing the potential market for our e-
commerce products.

The market for e-payment solutions for mobile commerce may not develop and, if
it does develop, we may not be able to develop products that successfully
compete in this market, either of which would significantly impact our
financial results and prospects.

   In February 2000, we announced the availability of our first e-payment
solution for making online purchases from mobile phones and other wireless
devices. We have not yet begun to market or sell this m-commerce payment
product, nor do we currently have any commercial customers for this product. We
intend to invest a significant portion of our future research and development
expenses to enhance this first product and to develop one or more additional
products for the m-commerce payment market. However, we cannot predict whether
we will be successful in these development efforts or whether our existing
product or any future m-commerce products will gain market acceptance. We do
not currently expect to recognize significant revenue from m-commerce products
until at least late fiscal 2002. In addition, if this market develops, we may
face significant competition from major telecommunication service providers and
mobile phone handset and equipment providers, among others. These companies
have significantly more resources than us and may develop new standards for
payment card mobile phone based transactions which we do not address and may
not be able to support in the future. In addition, these companies may provide
similar products to ours at a lower cost or at no cost to facilitate sales of
their telecom equipment or mobile phones. If we fail to generate significant
sales of our m-commerce payment products, our future revenue and net income, as
well as the prospects for this portion of our business, will be materially
adversely affected.

We depend on sales of our electronic point-of-sale systems for payment card
transactions for a substantial majority of our total revenue.

   A substantial majority of our total revenue historically has been derived
from the sale of our electronic payment card point-of-sale system products. We
expect that these products will continue to account for a significant
percentage of our total revenue through at least fiscal 2002. We have
historically marketed our electronic PoS system products solely in Europe, and

                                       7
<PAGE>

particularly in Germany. For fiscal 2000, our customers in Germany accounted
for over 88% of our electronic PoS system product revenues. We intend to
continue to focus substantially all of our marketing efforts for our electronic
PoS system products in Europe, and particularly in Germany. As a result, our
future results of operations will depend on continued market demand for, and
acceptance of, these products in Europe in general and Germany in particular. A
reduction in demand for our electronic PoS system products could have a
material adverse effect on our business, financial condition and results of
operations.

Average selling prices for electronic PoS system products may continue to
decline, adversely affecting our results of operations, particularly our
revenue and operating and net income.

   The market for electronic PoS system products is characterized by increasing
price competition, which historically has caused the average selling prices of
our electronic PoS systems to decrease over the life of each product. We expect
this trend to continue. To offset declines in the average selling prices of our
electronic PoS system products, we will need to reduce the cost of these
products by implementing cost reduction design changes, obtaining cost
reductions as and if volumes increase and successfully managing manufacturing
and subcontracting relationships. We do not operate our own manufacturing
facilities, and, as a result, we may not be able to reduce our costs as rapidly
as companies that operate their own manufacturing facilities. If we do not
design and introduce lower cost versions of our electronic PoS system products
in a timely manner or successfully manage our manufacturing relationships,
margins on our electronic PoS system products will decrease. A decrease in
margins or an accelerated decrease in average selling prices could have a
material adverse effect on our business, financial condition and results of
operations.

We have incurred losses and expect continued losses.

   We incurred a net loss of $12.1 million for the year ended January 31, 2000,
and we have incurred net losses in nine of our last twelve quarters. As of
January 31, 2000, we had an accumulated deficit of $21.6 million. In fiscal
2000 we substantially increased our operating expenditures to build our
presence in the e-commerce software business. This has included significant
increases in our research and development expenses related to the development
of e-commerce capable products, and substantial increases in our sales and
marketing personnel. We intend to continue to grow our operating expenditures
and, consequently, we expect to continue to report losses from operations for
at least two years.

Our business is subject to currency fluctuations that can adversely affect our
operating results.

   Due to our multinational operations, our business is subject to fluctuations
based upon changes in the exchange rates between the currencies in which we
collect revenues or pay expenses and the Irish pound and the euro. In
particular the value of the U.S. dollar and U.K. pound sterling impacts our
operating results. Our expenses are not necessarily incurred in the currency in
which revenue is generated, and, as a result, we are required from time to time
to convert currencies to meet our obligations. These currency conversions are
subject to exchange rate fluctuations, and changes to the value of the Irish
pound or the euro relative to other currencies could adversely affect our
business and results of operations. For example, sales of our electronic PoS
systems in Germany are denominated in euro while a portion of the related
manufacturing costs are denominated in U.K. pounds sterling. As a result, in
the year ended January 31, 2000, margins on electronic PoS systems were
negatively impacted.

   In addition, our consolidated financial statements are prepared in Irish
pounds and translated to U.S. dollars for reporting purposes. As a result, even
when foreign currency

                                       8
<PAGE>

expenses substantially offset revenues in the same currency, our net income may
be diminished, or our net loss increased, when reported in U.S. dollars in our
financial statements.

Our quarterly operating results are difficult to predict because they can
fluctuate significantly. This limits your ability to evaluate our historical
financial results and increases the likelihood that our results will fall below
market analysts' expectations, which could cause the price of our ADSs to drop
rapidly and severely.

   We have experienced significant quarterly fluctuations in operating results
and cash flows and we expect that these fluctuations will continue in future
periods. In addition, our revenue is difficult to predict for several reasons.
As a result, we believe that our quarterly revenue, expenses and operating
results are likely to vary significantly in the future. Thus, it is likely that
in some future quarters our results of operations will be below the
expectations of public market analysts and investors, which could have a severe
adverse effect on the trading price of our ADSs. We also believe that period-
to-period comparisons of our quarterly operating results are not necessarily
meaningful and that, as a result, these comparisons should not be relied upon
as indications of our future performance.

   Quarterly fluctuations have been, and may in the future be, caused by
factors which include:

  .  the size and timing of orders

  .  currency fluctuations

  .  product mix

  .  the rate of acceptance of new products

  .  purchasing and payment patterns of our customers

  .  our pricing policies and those of our competitors

   In addition, our revenue is difficult to predict for the following reasons:

  .  we have generally recognized a substantial portion of our revenue in the
     last month of each quarter

  .  the market for our e-commerce products is new and rapidly changing

  .  the sales cycle for our products is typically 6 to 12 months and varies
     substantially from customer to customer

   Over the past few years, we have substantially increased our investment in
our infrastructure, and we expect to continue to do so. As a result, if revenue
in any quarter falls below expectations, expenditure levels could be
disproportionately high as a percentage of revenue, and our business and
operating results for that quarter would be adversely affected, perhaps
materially.

We derive a significant amount of our revenues from a limited number of
customers.

   A significant percentage of our revenue is derived from a limited number of
our customers. Approximately 40% of our total revenue for the year ended
January 31, 2000 was
attributable to our three largest customers in that period. The loss of any
major customer, or any reduction or delay in orders by any major customer,
could have a material adverse effect on our business, financial condition and
results of operations.


                                       9
<PAGE>

We rely on strategic relationships that may not continue in the future.

   We have developed strategic relationships with larger, public companies. We
rely in part on these relationships to co-market our products and generate
leads for our direct sales force. However, these relationships are not
exclusive, and the third party generally is not obligated to market our
products or provide leads. We will need to establish additional strategic
relationships to be successful.

   Two of the companies with which we have developed strategic relationships
are VISA International and MasterCard International. We believe that our
reputation has benefited from past transactions and joint press releases with
VISA and MasterCard, as well as from VISA's equity investment in us in 1998.
Neither VISA nor MasterCard is obligated to continue to conduct business or
marketing activities with us. VISA's or MasterCard's endorsement of one or more
of our competitors could cause existing customers to switch to competitors and
could materially adversely affect our ability to add new customers.

Our success depends on our ability to expand our direct sales force.

   We have sold our products almost exclusively through our direct sales force.
Our future revenue growth will depend in large part on our ability to recruit,
train and manage additional sales personnel worldwide. We have experienced and
continue to experience difficulty in recruiting qualified sales personnel, and
the market for these personnel is highly competitive. We may not be able to
successfully expand our direct sales force, and any expansion of the sales
force may not result in increased revenue. Our business and results of
operations will be materially adversely affected if we fail to successfully
expand our direct sales force.

Our growth may be limited if we fail to build an indirect sales channel.

   Indirect sales channels accounted for approximately 4% of our total revenue
in fiscal 2000. We recently have established relationships with a limited
number of resellers and systems integrators and consultants. These are new,
early-stage relationships and, as such, are generally untested. Our existing
indirect channels will have to generate significant revenue, and we will need
to establish additional indirect channels to be successful.

Increased competition may result in decreased demand for our products and
services, which may result in reduced revenues and gross margins and loss of
market share.

   The market for e-payment software and electronic PoS systems is intensely
competitive, and we expect competition to continue to increase. Our competitors
include Verifone, a subsidiary of Hewlett-Packard, and Giesecke & Devrient for
our electronic PoS system products, and IBM, Verifone and GlobeSet for our e-
payment software. In addition, the companies with whom we have strategic
relationships could develop products or services which compete with our
products or services. Growing competition may result in reduced revenues and
gross margins and loss of market share, any one of which could have a material
adverse effect on our business, financial condition and results of operations.
Some competitors in our market have longer operating histories, significantly
greater financial, technical, marketing and other resources, greater brand
recognition and a larger installed customer base than we do. In addition,
current and potential competitors may make strategic acquisitions or establish
cooperative relationships to expand their product offerings and to offer more
comprehensive e-payment solutions. We also expect to face additional
competition as other established and emerging companies enter the market for e-
payment solutions.

                                       10
<PAGE>

We depend on a few key personnel to manage and operate us.

   Our success is largely dependent on the personal efforts and abilities of
our senior management, including in particular John McGuire, Cyril McGuire,
George Burne, Kevin Shea, Paul Byrne, Chris Meehan and John Harte. The loss of
one or more of members of our senior management could have a material adverse
effect on our business and prospects.

If we are unable to attract and retain highly skilled personnel with experience
in the e-payment and banking industries, we may be unable to grow our business.

   The market for qualified personnel with experience in the e-payment and
banking industries in general, and software engineers with this experience in
particular, is highly competitive. Our strategic plan requires continued
investment in research and development and sales and marketing personnel.
Failure to successfully attract, hire, assimilate and retain qualified
personnel could limit the rate at which we develop new products and generate
sales, which could have a material adverse effect on our business, prospects
and results of operations.

Our reliance on third parties to manufacture our electronic PoS system products
involves risks, including, in particular, reduced control over the
manufacturing process and product quality.

   Our electronic PoS system products are manufactured by Keltek and Fujitsu.
Our reliance on outsourced manufacturers involves significant risks, including:

     .  reduced control over delivery schedules, quality assurance and cost

     .  the potential lack of adequate manufacturing capacity

     .  the potential misappropriation of our intellectual property

   We must make binding forecasts as much as three months in advance of
expected delivery dates. If product sales do not meet these forecasts, our
cashflow would be adversely impacted, and the risk that our inventory could
become obsolete would increase. If Keltek or Fujitsu cease manufacturing our
electronic PoS system products or increase their prices, we may not be able to
rapidly obtain alternative capacity at a comparable price. Any delay in
delivery of products to our customers or any increase in manufacturing costs
could have a material adverse effect on our business and results of operations.

   We have in the past received products that contained defects from our
manufacturers. Because we warrant the quality of our electronic PoS system
products to our customers, we have been required to repair or replace defective
products at our own expense. This expense has in the past exceeded the amounts
reimbursed to us by the manufacturers. This expense has not in the past had a
material adverse effect on our results of operations. However, any repetition
of these or similar problems could have a material adverse effect on our
reputation, business and results of operations.

We may not be able to timely respond to rapid technological changes that impact
our business.

   The markets for our e-payment software and electronic PoS system solutions
are susceptible to rapid changes due to technology innovation, evolving
industry standards, changes in customer and cardholder needs and frequent new
product introductions. We will need to use leading technologies effectively,
continue to develop our technical expertise and enhance our existing products
on a timely basis to compete successfully in these markets. We may not be
successful in achieving these business requirements.


                                       11
<PAGE>

We may be unable to protect our proprietary rights. Unauthorized use of our
technology may result in development of products which compete with our
products.

   Our success depends in part on our ability to protect our rights in our e-
payment and PoS system technology. We rely upon a combination of patents,
contractual rights, trade secrets, copyright laws and trademarks to establish
and protect these rights. We also enter into confidentiality agreements with
our employees, consultants and third parties to seek to limit and protect the
distribution of our proprietary information regarding this technology. However,
we have not signed protective agreements in every case. Unauthorized parties
may copy aspects of our products and obtain and use information that we regard
as proprietary. Other parties may breach confidentiality agreements and other
protective contracts we have executed. We may not become aware of, or have
adequate remedies in the event of, a breach.

Some may claim that we infringe their intellectual property rights, which could
result in costly litigation or require us to reengineer or cease sales of our
products.

   We believe that our products do not infringe upon the intellectual property
rights of others and that we have all rights necessary to use the intellectual
property employed in our business. However, we have not performed patent
searches for all of the technologies encompassed in our products. Third parties
may in the future claim that our current or future products infringe their
proprietary rights. Any infringement claim, with or without merit, could result
in costly litigation or require us to reengineer or cease sales of our
products, any of which could have a material adverse effect on our business,
financial condition, results of operations and prospects. Infringement claims
could also require us to enter into royalty or licensing agreements. Licensing
agreements, if required, may not be available on terms acceptable to us or at
all.

Our industry and our customers' industry are subject to government regulations
that could limit our ability to market our products.

   Our current and prospective customers include non-U.S. and state and
federally chartered banks and savings and loan associations. These customers,
as well as customers in other industries that we plan to target in the future,
operate in markets that are subject to extensive and complex regulation. While
we are not directly subject to this regulation, our products and services must
be designed to work within the extensive and evolving regulatory constraints
under which our customers operate. If our products fail to comply with
regulations applicable to our customers, or if we cannot timely and cost-
effectively respond to changes in the regulatory environments of each of our
customers, our product sales could be materially adversely affected, which
could have a material adverse effect on our business, prospects and results of
operations.

   Exports of software products utilizing encryption technology are generally
restricted by the U.S., Irish, German and various other foreign governments.
Our inability to obtain and maintain required approvals under these regulations
could adversely affect our ability to sell our products. Also, U.S., Irish,
German or other foreign legislation or regulations may further limit levels of
encryption or authentication technology that may be sold or exported. Any
export restrictions of this sort, new legislation or regulations, or increased
costs of compliance could have a material adverse effect on our business,
results of operations and prospects.

   Our electronic PoS system products must comply with standards established by
telecommunications authorities in various countries, as well as with
recommendations of quasi-regulatory authorities and standards-setting
committees. Failure to comply with these standards and recommendations could
limit our ability to sell these products.


                                       12
<PAGE>

Rapid growth could strain our personnel and systems.

   We have recently experienced rapid expansion of our operations in multiple
countries, which has placed, and is expected to continue to place, significant
demands on our administrative, operational and financial personnel and systems.
Because of these demands, we hired a significant number of employees in fiscal
2000 and expect to continue hiring during fiscal 2001. Our inability to train
and integrate our new employees and promptly address and respond to rapid
growth if it occurs could have a material adverse effect on our business and
results of operations.

We may fail to integrate adequately acquired products, technologies or
businesses.

   From time to time, we evaluate opportunities to acquire additional product
offerings, complementary technologies and businesses. Any future acquisition
could result in difficulties assimilating acquired products, technologies and
businesses, amortization of acquired intangible assets and diversion of our
management's attention. Our management has limited experience in assimilating
acquired organizations and products into our operations. We may not be able to
integrate successfully any products or technologies or businesses that might be
acquired in the future, and the failure to do so could have a material adverse
effect on our business and results of operations. In addition, the accounting
treatment for any future acquisition may result in the recognition of
significant goodwill which, when amortized, would adversely affect our net
income (loss) and earnings per equivalent ADS.

Trading in our shares could be subject to extreme price fluctuations and you
could have difficulty trading your shares.

   The market for shares in newly public technology companies is subject to
extreme price and volume fluctuations, often unrelated to the operating
performance of these companies. Due to the potential volatility of our stock
price, we may in the future be the target of securities class action
litigation. Securities litigation could result in substantial costs and divert
our management's attention and resources. In addition, although the ADSs are
quoted on the Nasdaq National Market and the Neuer Markt, the daily trading
volume has been limited. An active trading market may not develop or be
sustained. In addition, the Neuer Markt is a new trading market. The Neuer
Markt may experience delays in settlement and clearance as trading volume
increases. These factors could adversely affect the market price of the ADSs.

The rights of shareholders in Irish corporations may be more limited than the
rights of shareholders in United States and German corporations.

   The rights of holders of ordinary shares and, therefore, some of the rights
of ADS holders, are governed by Irish law and the laws of the European Union.
As a result, the rights of our shareholders differ from, and may be more
limited than, the rights of shareholders in typical United States or German
corporations. In particular, Irish law significantly limits the circumstances
under which shareholders of Irish corporations may bring derivative actions.

Our three largest shareholders have the ability to significantly influence or
control corporate actions, which limits your ability to influence or control
corporate actions. This concentration of ownership also can reduce the market
price of the ADSs.

   Our three largest shareholders will own approximately 46% of our equivalent
ADSs after completion of this offering, or 45% if the underwriters' over-
allotment option is exercised in full. If these shareholders act together, they
will have the ability to significantly influence, if not control, the election
of directors and the outcome of all corporate actions requiring

                                       13
<PAGE>

shareholder approval. This concentration of ownership also may have the effect
of delaying or preventing a change in control of us, which in turn could reduce
the market price of the ADSs.

Our corporate tax rate may increase, which could adversely impact our cash
flow, financial condition and results of operations.

   We have operations and generate substantially all of our taxable income in
the Republic of Ireland. Currently, some of our Irish subsidiaries are taxed at
rates substantially lower than U.S. or German tax rates. If our Irish
subsidiaries were no longer to qualify for these lower tax rates or if the
applicable tax laws were rescinded or changed, our operating results could be
materially adversely affected. In addition, if German, U.S. or other foreign
tax authorities were to change applicable tax laws or successfully challenge
the manner in which our subsidiaries' profits are currently recognized, our
taxes could increase, and our business, cash flow, financial condition and
results of operations could be materially adversely affected.

You will experience an immediate and substantial dilution in the book value of
your investment.

   Purchasers of ADSs in this offering will experience immediate and
substantial dilution.

Future sales by existing shareholders could depress the market price of our
ADSs.

   Sales of ADSs in the public market following this offering could adversely
affect the market price of the ADSs. All of the ADSs offered under this
prospectus and the international prospectus will be freely tradable in the open
market. In addition,

  .  25,223,930 ADSs may be sold immediately after completion of this
     offering subject, in some cases, to volume and other restrictions under
     Rule 144 promulgated under the U.S. Securities Act of 1933; and

  .  29,056,848 additional ADSs may be sold 91 days after the date of this
     prospectus.

The German takeover code, our articles of association and Irish law may make an
acquisition of us more difficult, which could affect the trading price of our
ADSs.

   As required by the Neuer Markt, we have adopted the takeover code
recommended by the Stock Exchange Expert Commission at the German Federal
Ministry of Finance. Although this takeover code does not have the force of
law, it is generally required by the Frankfurt Stock Exchange that companies
listed on the Neuer Markt acknowledge these takeover provisions. The
applicability of the takeover code, as well as provisions of our articles of
association and Irish law, could delay, defer or prevent a change of control of
us, which in turn could reduce the market price of the ADSs. In addition, the
rights of our shareholders under the takeover code could differ from the rights
of shareholders under the United States federal and state laws governing tender
offers and takeovers.

                                       14
<PAGE>

                                USE OF PROCEEDS

   We expect to receive approximately $161.9 million, or approximately
(Euro)168.8 million, in net proceeds from the sale of the 4,000,000 ADS offered
by us at an assumed public offering price of $43.25, or approximately
(Euro)45.10, per ADS, or approximately $180.2 million, or approximately
(Euro)187.9 million, if the underwriters' over-allotment option is exercised in
full, after deducting estimated offering expenses and underwriting discounts
and commissions. We will not receive any proceeds from the sale of ADSs by the
selling shareholders. We estimate that the offering expenses payable by us will
be $2,992,247, or approximately (Euro)3,120,174. Estimated underwriting
discounts and commissions payable by us will be approximately $8,131,000, or
approximately (Euro)8,478,624, or approximately $9,045,738 or approximately
(Euro)9,432,469 if the underwriters' over-allotment option is exercised in
full.

   We intend to use the net proceeds from this offering to grow and expand our
business, including growing our research and development and sales and
marketing organizations, for international expansion and for working capital
and other general corporate purposes. We may also use a portion of the net
proceeds to acquire additional products, technologies and businesses that we
believe will complement our current or future business. However, we have no
specific oral or written agreements or commitments to do so, and are not
currently negotiating any acquisitions. We have not identified specific uses
for the proceeds, and we will have broad discretion over their use. We intend
to invest the net proceeds from this offering in short-term, investment grade,
interest-bearing securities until they are used.

                                DIVIDEND POLICY

   We have not declared or paid any cash dividends on our share capital. We
currently intend to retain future earnings, if any, to fund the development and
growth of our business. Future dividends, if any, will be determined by our
board of directors. Under the Companies Acts of the Republic of Ireland,
dividends may only be paid out of such of our profits as are legally available
for distribution. Any dividends declared by us would be paid in the currency
determined by our directors at that time.

                     PRESENTATION OF FINANCIAL INFORMATION

   Unless otherwise specified, all reference to U.S. dollars, dollars or $ are
to United States dollars, the legal currency of the United States of America.
All references to euro or (Euro) are to the euro, the legal currency of the
Republic of Ireland and the Federal Republic of Germany. All references to
IR(Pounds) are to Irish pounds, and all references to the Deutsche mark or the
DM are to the Deutsche mark. All references to sterling or U.K. pound sterling
are to the pound sterling, the legal currency of the United Kingdom. For
convenience purposes, U.S. dollars have been converted to euro at the noon
buying rate for cable transfers in New York in foreign currencies certified by
the Federal Reserve Bank of New York on April 7, 2000, which was US$1.00 equals
(Euro)1.043.

   Our financial statements are presented in U.S. dollars and have been
prepared in conformity with United States generally accepted accounting
principles.

   Our fiscal year ends on January 31. As used in this prospectus, fiscal 1998
refers to the financial year ended January 31, 1998, fiscal 1999 refers to the
financial year ended January 31, 1999 and fiscal 2000 refers to the financial
year ended January 31, 2000.

                                       15
<PAGE>

                           EXCHANGE RATE INFORMATION

   A significant portion of our revenues and expenses is denominated in
currencies other than U.S. dollars. We do not currently anticipate paying any
dividends to shareholders. However, any dividends declared by us would be in
the currency determined by our directors at the time they are declared, and
exchange rate fluctuations would affect the U.S. dollar equivalent of any cash
dividend received by holders of ADSs that is paid in a currency other than U.S.
dollars.

   The Maastricht Treaty, to which each of the Republic of Ireland and the
Federal Republic of Germany is a signatory, provided that on January 1, 1999,
the euro became legal tender in those member states of the European Monetary
Union that satisfied the convergence criteria stated in the Maastricht Treaty
and so elected to adopt the euro as its legal tender, including Ireland and
Germany. The conversion rate between the Irish pound, which will continue to
have legal tender status through a transition period ending June 30, 2002, at
the latest, and the euro was fixed by the Council of the European Union at
IR(Pounds)0.787564. The conversion rate between the Deutsche mark, which will
continue to have legal tender status through a transition period ending June
30, 2002, at the latest, and the euro was fixed by the Council of the European
Union at DM 1.95583.

   On December 31, 1998, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York discontinued the
quotation of noon buying rates for currencies now denominated in euro,
including Irish pounds and Deutsche marks.

   Prices quoted for the ADSs on the Neuer Markt are quoted in euro. Prices
quoted for the ADSs on the Nasdaq National Market are quoted in U.S. dollars.

Irish Pounds

   The table below presents, for the periods and dates indicated, information
concerning the noon buying rates for the Irish pound expressed in Irish pounds
per US$1.00. The information below the caption "Period Average" represents the
average of the noon buying rates on the last business day of each full calendar
month during the relevant period. No representation is made that the Irish
pound or U.S. dollar amounts referred to below could be or could have been
converted into U.S. dollars or Irish pounds at any particular rate or at all.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
     Fiscal Year Ended                                                                Period
     January 31,                    High             Low         Period Average        End
     -----------------        ---------------- ---------------- ---------------- ----------------
     <S>                      <C>              <C>              <C>              <C>
     1995.................... IR(Pounds)0.7132 IR(Pounds)0.6198 IR(Pounds)0.6597 IR(Pounds)0.6404
     1996....................           0.6487           0.6033           0.6220           0.6390
     1997....................           0.6445           0.5915           0.6212           0.6287
     1998....................           0.7731           0.6218           0.6720           0.7315
     1999 (through December
      31, 1998)..............           0.7391           0.6443           0.7004           0.6709
</TABLE>

                                       16
<PAGE>

Deutsche Marks

   The table below presents, for the periods and dates indicated, information
concerning the noon buying rates for the Deutsche mark expressed in Deutsche
marks per US$1.00. The information below the caption "Period Average"
represents the average of the noon buying rates on the last business day of
each full calendar month during the relevant period. No representation is made
that the Deutsche mark or U.S. dollar amounts referred to below could be or
could have been converted into U.S. dollars or Deutsche marks, at any
particular rate or at all.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                               Period   Period
     Fiscal Year Ended January 31,            High     Low    Average    End
     -----------------------------          -------- -------- -------- --------
     <S>                                    <C>      <C>      <C>      <C>
     1995.................................. DM1.7627 DM1.4920 DM1.5938 DM1.5232
     1996..................................   1.5362   1.3565   1.4233   1.4895
     1997..................................   1.6485   1.4450   1.5192   1.6362
     1998..................................   1.8810   1.6399   1.7557   1.8315
     1999 (through December 31, 1998)......   1.8542   1.6060   1.7521   1.6670
</TABLE>

Euro

   The table below presents, for the period indicated, information concerning
the noon buying rates for the euro expressed in euro per US$1.00. The
information below the caption "Period Average" represents the average of the
noon buying rates on the last business day of each full calendar month during
the relevant period. No representation is made that the euro or U.S. dollar
amounts referred to below could be or could have been converted into U.S.
dollars or euro, at any particular rate or at all.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                  Period  Period
     Fiscal Year Ended January 31,                   High   Low   Average  End
     -----------------------------                  ------ ------ ------- ------
     <S>                                            <C>    <C>    <C>     <C>
     1999 (from January 1, 1999)................... 0.8794 0.8466 0.8794  0.8794
     2000.......................................... 1.0249 0.8819 0.9567  1.0249
     2001 (to February 29, 2000)................... 1.0370 0.9940 1.0370  1.0370
</TABLE>

                   PRICE RANGE OF AMERICAN DEPOSITARY SHARES

   The ADSs are listed on the Nasdaq National Market under the symbol TTPA and
on the Neuer Markt under the symbol TTP. Public trading of the ADSs commenced
on September 24, 1999. Prior to that date, there was no public market for the
ADSs. The following table sets forth, for the periods indicated, the high and
low sale price per ADS on the Nasdaq National Market and on the Neuer Markt,
after giving effect to a two-for-one ADS split effected on March 21, 2000:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                             Nasdaq
                                            National
                                             Market           Neuer Markt
                                          ------------- -----------------------
                                           High   Low      High         Low
                                          ------ ------ ----------- -----------
<S>                                       <C>    <C>    <C>         <C>
Year Ended January 31, 2000
  Third Quarter (from September 24,
   1999)................................. $ 8.81 $ 6.00 (Euro) 8.48 (Euro) 5.75
  Fourth Quarter......................... $31.69 $ 8.75 (Euro)32.80 (Euro) 8.35
Year Ending January 31, 2001
  First Quarter (through February 29,
   2000)................................. $56.00 $29.25 (Euro)60.05 (Euro)30.00
</TABLE>

   As of April 7, 2000 there were fourteen holders of record of the ADSs. On
April 7, 2000, the last sale price reported on the Nasdaq National Market for
the ADSs was $43.25 per ADS and the last sale price reported on the Neuer Markt
was (Euro)42.80 per ADS.

                                       17
<PAGE>

                                 CAPITALIZATION

   The following table presents as of January 31, 2000:

  .  our actual capitalization; and

  .  our capitalization as adjusted to reflect the issuance and sale of
     4,000,000 ADSs representing 2,000,000 ordinary shares offered by us in
     this offering at an assumed public offering price of $43.25 , or
     approximately (Euro)45.10, per ADS and the application of the estimated
     net proceeds from the sale of these ADSs after deducting estimated
     underwriting discounts and commissions and estimated offering expenses

   The outstanding share information excludes 7,222,654 equivalent ADSs, or
3,611,327 ordinary shares, issuable upon the exercise of options outstanding as
of January 31, 2000, at a weighted average exercise price of $5.98, or
approximately (Euro)6.24, per ADS, and 500,000 equivalent ADSs, or 250,000
ordinary shares, issuable upon the exercise of a warrant outstanding as of
January 31, 2000 at an exercise price of $3.00, or approximately (Euro)3.13,
per ADS. This table should be read in conjunction with our consolidated
financial statements included elsewhere in this prospectus.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                               January 31, 2000
                                 -----------------------------------------------
                                                (in thousands)
                                        Actual                As Adjusted
                                 ----------------------  -----------------------
                                    $         (Euro)        $         (Euro)
                                 --------  ------------  --------  -------------
<S>                              <C>       <C>           <C>       <C>
Long-term obligations, less
 current portion...............  $  1,127         1,175  $  1,127          1,175
 Series B preference shares,
  par value $0.0027, 10,000,000
  shares authorized; no shares
  issued and outstanding.......       --            --        --             --
Shareholders' equity:
 Ordinary shares, par value
  $0.0027; 100,000,000 ordinary
  shares authorized; 25,140,722
  ordinary shares issued and
  outstanding, actual;
  27,140,722 ordinary shares
  outstanding as adjusted......        71            74        76             80
Additional paid-in capital.....    84,286        87,889   246,158        256,682
Accumulated other comprehensive
 income........................    (1,656)       (1,727)   (1,656)        (1,727)
Accumulated deficit............   (21,585)      (22,508)  (21,585)       (22,508)
                                 --------  ------------  --------  -------------
Total shareholders' equity ....    61,116        63,728   222,993        232,527
Total capitalization...........  $ 62,243  (Euro)64,903  $224,120  (Euro)233,702
                                 ========  ============  ========  =============
</TABLE>

                                       18
<PAGE>

                      SELECTED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL DATA

   The following selected consolidated statements of operations data for the
years ended January 31, 1998, 1999 and 2000 and the consolidated balance sheet
data at January 31, 1998, 1999 and 2000 are derived from our consolidated
financial statements, which have been audited by Ernst & Young and are included
in this prospectus. The selected consolidated statements of operations data for
the years ended January 31, 1996 and 1997 and the consolidated balance sheet
data at January 31, 1996 and 1997 are derived from our audited consolidated
financial statements which are not included in this prospectus. This table
should be read in conjunction with our consolidated financial statements and
"Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of
Operations" included elsewhere in this prospectus.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                          Year Ended January 31,
                          ----------------------------------------------------------
                             1996        1997        1998        1999        2000
                          ----------  ----------  ----------  ----------  ----------
                           (in thousands of U.S. dollars, except share and per
                                               share data)
<S>                       <C>         <C>         <C>         <C>         <C>
Consolidated Statement
 of Operations Data:
Revenue:
  Product...............  $    4,355  $    8,235  $   10,824  $   14,554  $   18,457
  License...............         738       1,359       4,101       4,477       9,158
  Service...............       1,478       2,496       1,721       2,002       2,629
                          ----------  ----------  ----------  ----------  ----------
   Total revenue........       6,571      12,090      16,646      21,033      30,244
                          ----------  ----------  ----------  ----------  ----------
Cost of revenue:
  Product...............       3,637       6,080       8,352      10,851      12,034
  License...............          27         132         334         648       2,981
  Service...............         478         857       1,008       2,414       2,242
                          ----------  ----------  ----------  ----------  ----------
   Total cost of
    revenue.............       4,142       7,069       9,694      13,913      17,257
                          ----------  ----------  ----------  ----------  ----------
  Gross margin..........       2,429       5,021       6,952       7,120      12,987
Operating expenses:
  Research and
   development..........         557       1,170       1,729       3,676       8,892
  Sales and marketing...       1,019       1,783       2,474       5,921       8,849
  General and
   administrative.......       1,087       1,951       2,530       4,347       7,336
  Stock compensation....         --          --          --          --        2,068
                          ----------  ----------  ----------  ----------  ----------
   Total operating
    expenses............       2,663       4,904       6,733      13,944      27,145
                          ----------  ----------  ----------  ----------  ----------
Income (loss) from
 operations.............        (234)        117         219      (6,824)    (14,158)
Interest income
 (expense), net.........          58          25          18         272       1,208
Exchange gain (loss),
 net....................         (32)        (69)        (12)       (321)        842
Income (loss) before
 provision for income
 taxes..................        (208)         73         225      (6,873)    (12,108)
Provision for income
 tax....................          (2)         (3)        (50)        --           (3)
                          ----------  ----------  ----------  ----------  ----------
Net income (loss).......  $     (210) $       70  $      175  $   (6,873) $  (12,111)
                          ==========  ==========  ==========  ==========  ==========
Basic net income (loss)
 per equivalent ADS.....  $    (0.01) $     0.00  $     0.01  $    (0.21) $    (0.31)
                          ==========  ==========  ==========  ==========  ==========
ADSs used in computation
 of basic net income
 (loss) per equivalent
 ADS....................  30,595,930  30,595,930  31,376,670  32,315,662  38,619,928
                          ==========  ==========  ==========  ==========  ==========
Diluted net income
 (loss) per equivalent
 ADS....................  $    (0.01) $     0.00  $     0.01  $    (0.21) $    (0.31)
                          ==========  ==========  ==========  ==========  ==========
ADSs used in computation
 of diluted net income
 (loss) per equivalent
 ADS....................  30,595,930  30,595,930  31,498,322  32,315,662  38,619,928
                          ==========  ==========  ==========  ==========  ==========
</TABLE>

                                       19
<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                          January 31,           January 31, 2000
                                  ----------------------------  ----------------
                                                                           As
                                   1996   1997   1998   1999    Actual  Adjusted
                                  ------ ------ ------ -------  ------- --------
                                         (in thousands of U.S. dollars)
<S>                               <C>    <C>    <C>    <C>      <C>     <C>
Consolidated Balance Sheet Data:
Cash and cash equivalents.......  $2,100 $1,899 $  272 $ 1,691  $10,862 $172,739
Marketable securities...........     --     --     --    7,178   48,830   48,830
Working capital.................   1,223  1,541  1,449   9,437   57,803  219,680
  Total assets..................   4,289  6,330  7,003  20,261   74,295  236,172
Long-term obligations, less
 current portion................     157    432    546     935    1,127    1,127
Redeemable preference shares....     283    --     --   17,760      --       --
  Total shareholders' equity
   (net capital deficiency).....   1,052  1,739  1,642  (4,700)  61,116  222,993
</TABLE>

   See note 11 of notes to consolidated financial statements for an explanation
of the method used to calculate basic and diluted net income (loss) per
equivalent ADS. Basic and diluted net income (loss) have been calculated after
giving effect to a two-for-one ADS split effected on March 21, 2000. As a
result of the two-for-one ADSs split, each ordinary share equals two equivalent
ADSs. The information under "As Adjusted" reflects the receipt of net proceeds
of approximately $161.9 million, or approximately (Euro)168.8 million, from the
sale of 4,000,000 ADSs offered by us at an assumed public offering price of
$43.25, or approximately (Euro)45.10, per ADS.

                                       20
<PAGE>

                    MANAGEMENT'S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OF

                 FINANCIAL CONDITION AND RESULTS OF OPERATIONS

Overview

   From our organization through 1995, we developed and marketed electronic PoS
systems and e-payment software for payment card transactions in the physical
world. In early fiscal 1997, we launched our first products for Internet e-
payment transactions. Today, our revenue is primarily derived from three
sources:

   Product Revenue. Product revenue, which continues to represent the majority
of our total revenue, is derived from sales of our electronic PoS system
products, primarily the Compact 9000 and 9000i PoS devices and the Compact 950-
PP pin pad. Revenue for these products is recognized at the time the products
are shipped.

   License Revenue. Software license revenue is derived from license fees from
our e-payment software products for payment card transactions in the physical
world and over the Internet, and the provision of related support and
maintenance services to customers. We recognize software license revenue under
SOP 97-2. Under the terms of SOP 97-2, where an arrangement to deliver software
does not require significant production, modification or customization, we
recognize software license revenue when all of the following criteria are met:

  .  persuasive evidence of an arrangement exists;

  .  delivery has occurred;

  .  our fee is fixed or determinable; and

  .  collectibility is probable.

   Before fiscal 1999, we recognized software license revenue under SOP 91-1.
Under SOP 91-1, the initial license fee, as well as subsequent license fees
arising from upgrades and licenses of additional modules, were generally
recognized at the time of shipment, provided that we had no significant vendor
obligations or collection uncertainties remaining. We also license our software
on a recurring rental basis, and, under SOP 97-2, we recognize revenue from
these arrangements ratably over the life of the agreement. Customer support and
maintenance fees are established as a percentage of the software license price,
typically 18% per year, and are generally paid quarterly. We recognize revenue
related to customer support and maintenance fees ratably over the life of the
agreement. The adoption of SOP 97-2 did not have a material effect on our
operating results.

   Service Revenue. We derive service revenue from consulting services,
educational and training services and customization and implementation
services. Services are provided primarily on a time and materials basis for
which revenue is recognized in the period that the services are provided.

   With the launch of our first Internet product in fiscal 1997, we shifted our
growth strategy to emphasize e-commerce software products for Internet
applications. Due in part to this shift in emphasis, revenue from software
license fees increased by 202% for the fiscal year ended January 31, 1998,
increasing from 11% of total revenue for the fiscal year ended January 31, 1997
to 25% of total revenue for the fiscal year ended January 31, 1998. In the
fiscal year ended January 31, 1999, software license revenue grew by 9% over
the prior year, and accounted for 21% of total revenue for the year. Software
license and related service revenue growth in fiscal 1999 was negatively
influenced by several factors, including the overall slower than anticipated
rate of adoption of emerging secure e-payment technologies by banks and

                                       21
<PAGE>

financial transaction processors, particularly SET technology. Our software
license and related service revenue was also negatively impacted by the re-
direction of information technology funds by our customers to address euro and
year-2000 issues, as well as the economic situation in Asia, which we believe
led potential customers to become cautious. In the fiscal year ended January
31, 2000, software license revenue grew by 105% over the prior year, and
accounted for 30% of total revenue for the year. Software license and related
service revenue growth in fiscal 2000 was positively influenced by increased
adoption of SSL e-payment technologies by banks and financial transaction
processors.

   We have historically sold our products primarily through a direct sales
force in Europe and North and South America, which accounted for 96% of our
total revenue in fiscal 2000. Since January 1998, we have established strategic
relationships with VISA, MasterCard, RSA Security, Compaq and SAP, which
provide joint marketing opportunities as well as lead-generation for our direct
sales force. To facilitate worldwide market penetration, we have begun to
establish indirect sales channels, such as resellers and systems integrators.
Revenue from products sold through indirect sales channels is recognized net of
commissions and discounts.

   The following table illustrates our revenues for the fiscal years ended
January 31, 1998, 1999 and 2000 by customer location before intercompany
eliminations:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                     Year Ended January 31,
                                                   ----------------------------
                                                     1998      1999      2000
                                                   --------  --------  --------
                                                     (in thousands of U.S.
                                                            dollars)
<S>                                                <C>       <C>       <C>
Germany........................................... $ 21,176  $ 25,649  $ 31,616
Europe (excluding Germany)........................    6,906    12,245    18,762
Rest of the world.................................    1,934     2,238     6,580
Eliminations......................................  (13,370)  (19,099)  (26,714)
                                                   --------  --------  --------
  Total........................................... $ 16,646  $ 21,033  $ 30,244
                                                   ========  ========  ========
</TABLE>

   Cost of product revenue includes outsourced manufacturing costs, and
packaging, documentation, labor and other costs associated with packaging and
shipping our electronic PoS system products and the amortization of capitalized
software development costs. Cost of license revenue includes shipping, software
documentation, labor, third-party license fees and other costs associated with
the delivery of software products from which license revenue is derived and the
cost of providing after-sale support and maintenance services to customers.
Cost of service revenue includes labor, travel and other non-recoverable costs
associated with the delivery of services to customers.

   Research and development expenses consist primarily of labor and associated
costs connected with the development of our software products and electronic
PoS system products. Sales and marketing expenses consist of labor costs,
including commissions, travel and other costs associated with sales activity,
and advertising, trade show participation, public relations and other marketing
costs. General and administrative expenses consist primarily of labor and
recruitment costs, facilities costs, telephone and other office costs and
depreciation.

   Due to our decision to emphasize e-commerce software products for Internet
applications, in fiscal 1999 and in fiscal 2000, we substantially increased our
operating expenditures to build our presence in this business. This has
included significant increases in our research and development expenses related
to the development of e-commerce capable products, and substantial increases in
our sales and marketing personnel as we have expanded our global sales
capabilities. We intend to continue to grow our operating expenditures and,
consequently, we expect to continue to report losses from operations through at
least fiscal 2002.

                                       22
<PAGE>

   We operate as a holding company with operating subsidiaries in Ireland,
Germany, the United Kingdom and the United States and a financing subsidiary in
the Cayman Islands. Each subsidiary is taxed based on the laws of the
jurisdiction in which it is incorporated. Because taxes are incurred at the
subsidiary level, and one subsidiary's tax losses cannot be used to offset the
taxable income of subsidiaries in other tax jurisdictions, our consolidated
effective tax rate may increase to the extent that we report tax losses in some
subsidiaries and taxable income in others. In addition, our tax rate may also
be affected by costs that are not deductible for tax purposes, such as
amortization of goodwill.

   We have significant operations and generate substantially all of our taxable
income in the Republic of Ireland, and some of our Irish operating subsidiaries
are taxed at rates substantially lower than U.S. tax rates. One Irish
subsidiary currently qualifies for a 10% tax rate which, under current
legislation, will remain in force until December 31, 2010, and another Irish
subsidiary qualifies for an exemption from income tax as our revenue source is
license fees from qualifying patents within the meaning of Section 234 of the
Irish Taxes Consolidation Act, 1997. We currently anticipate that we will
continue to benefit from this tax treatment, although the extent of the benefit
could vary from period to period, and our tax situation may change. In
addition, if these subsidiaries were no longer to qualify for these tax rates
or if the tax laws were rescinded or changed, our operating results could be
materially adversely affected.

   A significant portion of our revenue, costs, assets and liabilities are
denominated in currencies other than the U.S. dollar, and we and all of our
subsidiaries, other than our U.S. and Cayman Islands subsidiaries, have
functional currencies other than the U.S. dollar. These currencies fluctuate
significantly against the U.S. dollar. As a result of the currency fluctuations
resulting primarily from fluctuations in the U.S. dollar and the Irish pound
and the conversion to U.S. dollars for financial reporting purposes, we
experience fluctuations in our operating results on an annual and, in
particular, on a quarterly basis. We also experience significant fluctuations
in the value of marketable securities denominated in U.S. dollars, which are
translated to Irish pounds, our functional currency on preparing consolidated
financial statements. At January 31, 2000, the value of marketable securities
was $48.8 million. From time to time we have in the past and may in the future
hedge against the fluctuations in exchange rates. Future hedging transactions
may not successfully mitigate losses caused by currency fluctuations. We expect
to continue to experience exchange rate fluctuations on an annual and quarterly
basis, and currency fluctuations could have a material adverse impact on our
results of operations.

   The conversion to the euro has not had a material effect on the pricing of,
or the market for, our products, licenses and services, and we do not expect
the conversion will have a material effect in the future.

                                       23
<PAGE>

Results of Operations

   The following table presents our results of operations expressed as a
percentage of total revenue, after giving effect to rounding, for the periods
indicated:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                   Year Ended January 31,
                                                   ----------------------------
                                                    1998      1999       2000
                                                   -------   -------    -------
<S>                                                <C>       <C>        <C>
Revenue:
  Product.........................................      65%       69%        61%
  License.........................................      25        21         30
  Service.........................................      10        10          9
                                                   -------   -------    -------
    Total revenue.................................     100       100        100
Cost of revenue:
  Product.........................................      51        52         40
  License.........................................       2         3         10
  Service.........................................       6        11          7
                                                   -------   -------    -------
    Total cost of revenue.........................      59        66         57
                                                   -------   -------    -------
  Gross margin....................................      41        34         43
Operating expenses:
  Research and development........................      10        17         29
  Sales and marketing.............................      15        28         29
  General and administrative......................      15        21         24
  Stock compensation..............................      --        --          7
                                                   -------   -------    -------
    Total operating expenses......................      40        78         90
                                                   -------   -------    -------
Income (loss) from operations.....................       1       (32)       (47)
Other expenses:
  Interest income (expense), net..................      --         1          4
  Exchange gain (loss), net.......................      --        (1)         3
                                                   -------   -------    -------
  Income (loss) before provision for income
   taxes..........................................       1       (32)       (40)
Provision for income taxes........................      --        --         --
                                                   -------   -------    -------
    Net income (loss).............................       1%      (32)%      (40)%
                                                   =======   =======    =======
</TABLE>

Fiscal Year Ended January 31, 2000 Compared To Fiscal Year Ended January 31,
1999

 Revenue

   Total Revenue. Total revenue increased $9.2 million to $30.2 million in the
fiscal year ended January 31, 2000 from $21.0 million in the fiscal year ended
January 31, 1999, an increase of 44%. The increase was primarily attributable
to increased sales of electronic PoS system products and software license fees.

   We have historically derived a significant portion of our total revenue from
a small number of customers. In the fiscal year ended January 31, 2000, Which,
a subsidiary of Tyco, accounted for 20% of our total revenue and Deutsche
Verkehrs Bank Zentrale accounted for 11% of our total revenue. In the fiscal
year ended January 31, 1999, Which accounted for 33% of our total revenue and
Bank of Ireland accounted for 11% of our total revenue.

   Product. Product revenue increased $3.9 million to $18.5 million in the
fiscal year ended January 31, 2000 from $14.6 million in the fiscal year ended
January 31, 1999, an increase of 27%. Electronic PoS system sales represented
61% of total revenue in the fiscal year ended January 31, 2000 compared to 69%
of total revenue in the fiscal year ended January 31, 1999. The increase in
product revenue in absolute dollars was due primarily to increased volume of
sales, which represented approximately 160% of the increase in product revenues
for this

                                       24
<PAGE>

period, to existing and new customers. The increase in product revenue,
however, was partially offset by lower average selling prices for our
electronic PoS system products, which declined by an average of 7% per unit in
the fiscal year ended January 31, 2000 compared to the fiscal year ended
January 31, 1999. The increase of product revenue was further offset by the
impact of the declining value of the euro as against the dollar in fiscal 2000,
which reduced product revenue, when converted to and reported in U.S. dollars,
by 9% if calculated using the exchange rate we experienced in fiscal 1999.

   License. Software license revenue increased $4.7 million to $9.2 million in
the fiscal year ended January 31, 2000 from $4.5 million in the fiscal year
ended January 31, 1999, an increase of 105%. Software license revenue
represented 30% of total revenue in the fiscal year ended January 31, 2000
compared to 21% of total revenue in the fiscal year ended January 31, 1999. The
increase in software license revenue was primarily due to increased sales of
our e-payment software products to new customers.

   Service. Service revenue increased $627,000 to $2.6 million in the fiscal
year ended January 31, 2000 from $2.0 million in the fiscal year ended January
31, 1999, an increase of 31%. Service revenue represented 9% of total revenue
in the fiscal year ended January 31, 2000 and 10% of total revenue in the
fiscal year ended January 31, 1999. The increase in service revenue was
primarily due to increased sales of consulting, training and implementation
services associated with increased software license sales.

 Cost of Revenue

   Total Cost of Revenue. Total cost of revenue increased $3.3 million to $17.3
million in the fiscal year ended January 31, 2000 from $13.9 million in the
fiscal year ended January 31, 1999, an increase of 24%. Gross margin increased
to 43% in the fiscal year ended January 31, 2000 from 34% in the fiscal year
ended January 31, 1999. The increase in gross margin was attributed to
improvements in the product margin and an increase in the proportion of higher
margin software license revenues relative to product and service revenues.

   Product. Cost of product revenue increased $1.2 million to $12.0 million in
the fiscal year ended January 31, 2000 from $10.8 million in the fiscal year
ended January 31, 1999, an increase of 11%. The increase in the cost of product
revenue in absolute dollars primarily resulted from increased volume of sales.
Product revenue costs decreased to 65% of product revenue in the fiscal year
ended January 31, 2000 from 75% of product revenue in the fiscal year ended
January 31, 1999. The decrease as a percentage of product revenue was primarily
due to the introduction of a new version of the Compact 9000i electronic PoS
system in January 1999, which costs less to manufacture than its predecessor.
This decrease as a percentage of product revenue was partially offset by lower
average selling prices in fiscal 2000 for our electronic PoS system products
and by the impact of the declining value of the euro as against the dollar in
fiscal 2000. For example, sales of our electronic PoS systems in Germany are
denominated in euro while a portion of the related manufacturing costs are
denominated in U.K. pounds sterling.

   License. Cost of software license revenue increased $2.3 million to $3.0
million in the fiscal year ended January 31, 2000 from $648,000 in the fiscal
year ended January 31, 1999, an increase of 360%. Software license costs were
33% of license revenue in the fiscal year ended January 31, 2000 compared to
14% in the fiscal year ended January 31, 1999. The increase in absolute dollars
and as a percentage of license revenue resulted from the amortization of our
capitalized software development costs, increased expenditures in both
infrastructure and labor costs associated with the expansion of our support and
maintenance facilities and the cost of third-party software products sold as
part of our e-payment software solution.

                                       25
<PAGE>

   Service. Cost of service revenue decreased $171,000 to $2.2 million in the
fiscal year ended January 31, 2000 from $2.4 million in the fiscal year ended
January 31, 1999, a decrease of 7%. Service costs were 85% of service revenue
in the fiscal year ended January 31, 2000 compared to 121% of service revenue
in the fiscal year ended January 31, 1999. The decrease in the cost of service
revenue in absolute dollars and as a percentage of service revenue primarily
resulted from a lower investment in service infrastructure as compared to
fiscal 1999.

 Operating Expenses

   Research and Development. Research and development expenses increased $5.2
million to $8.9 million in the fiscal year ended January 31, 2000 from $3.7
million in the fiscal year ended January 31, 1999, an increase of 142%.
Research and development expenses were 29% of total revenue in the fiscal year
ended January 31, 2000 compared to 17% of total revenue in the fiscal year
ended January 31, 1999. The increase in absolute dollars and as a percentage of
total revenue was primarily due an increase in number of research and
development employees from 103 at January 31, 1999 to 155 at January 31, 2000.

   Sales and Marketing. Sales and marketing expenses increased $2.9 million to
$8.9 million in the fiscal year ended January 31, 2000 from $5.9 million in the
fiscal year ended January 31, 1999, an increase of 49%. Sales and marketing
expenses were 29% of total revenue in the fiscal year ended January 31, 2000
compared to 28% of total revenue in the fiscal year ended January 31, 1999. The
increase in absolute dollars primarily resulted from the recruitment of
additional sales personnel, the expansion of our sales offices in San Mateo,
California and Dublin, Ireland, and increases in direct marketing activities
and travel costs.

   General and Administrative. General and administrative expenses increased
$3.0 million to $7.3 million in the fiscal year ended January 31, 2000 from
$4.3 million in the fiscal year ended January 31, 1999, a 69% increase. General
and administrative expenses were 24% of total revenue in the fiscal year ended
January 31, 2000 compared to 21% of total revenue in the fiscal year ended
January 31, 1999. The increase in absolute dollars and as a percentage of total
revenue primarily resulted from increases in labor costs of approximately
$682,000 related to hiring additional management and administrative personnel,
facilities costs of approximately $573,000 due to the leasing of additional
office space in Dublin, Ireland, Frankfurt, Germany and Princeton, New Jersey,
telecommunications and management information systems costs of approximately
$365,000, and an increase in depreciation costs of approximately $351,000.

   Stock Compensation. For fiscal 2000, we recognized in the fourth quarter
$2.1 million of non-cash stock compensation associated with options to acquire
an aggregate of 230,000 ordinary shares (460,000 equivalent ADSs) granted to
members of our advisory board and MasterCard at fair market value on the date
of grant. The options are treated as variable options for accounting purposes
under Financial Accounting Standard 123 and Emerging Issues Task Force 96-18
("Accounting for Equity Instruments that are Issued to Other Than Employees for
Acquiring, or in Conjunction with Selling, Goods and Services" (EITF 96-18)).
As a result, in the fourth quarter we recognized, and in the future on a
quarterly basis we will recognize, non-cash stock compensation related to the
fair value of the option determined using the Black-Scholes option pricing
model on the last trading day of each quarter, multiplied by the number of
options time-apportioned over their respective vesting periods.

   Interest Income (Expense), Net. Interest income (expense), net consists of
interest income and interest expense. Interest income, net increased $936,000
to $1.2 million of interest

                                       26
<PAGE>

income, net in the fiscal year ended January 31, 2000 compared to $272,000 of
interest income, net in the fiscal year ended January 31, 1999. The increase
was due to higher cash balances arising from the sale of 5.9 million ordinary
shares in our initial public offering.

   Provision for Income Taxes. Provision for income taxes was $3,000 in the
fiscal year ended January 31, 2000 compared to no provision for income taxes in
the fiscal year ended January 31, 1999.

Fiscal Year Ended January 31, 1999 Compared To Fiscal Year Ended January 31,
1998

 Revenue

   Total Revenue. Total revenue increased by $4.4 million to $21.0 million in
the fiscal year ended January 31, 1999 from $16.6 million in the fiscal year
ended January 31, 1998, an increase of 26%. The increase was primarily
attributable to strong electronic PoS system product sales to our customers.

   In the fiscal year ended January 31, 1999, Which, a subsidiary of Tyco,
accounted for approximately 33% of our total revenue and Bank of Ireland
accounted for approximately 11% of our total revenue. In fiscal 1998, Which
accounted for 26% of our total revenue, EasyCash accounted for 12% of our total
revenue, Bank of Ireland accounted for 11% of our total revenue and GRK, the
card processing organization for Germany's community banks, accounted for 10%
of our total revenue.

   Product. Product revenue increased by $3.8 million to $14.6 million in the
fiscal year ended January 31, 1999 from $10.8 million in the fiscal year ended
January 31, 1998, an increase of 34%. Electronic PoS systems sales represented
69% of total revenue in the fiscal year ended January 31, 1999 compared to 65%
of total revenue in the fiscal year ended January 31, 1998. The increase in
product sales in absolute dollars and as a percentage of total revenue was due
primarily to an increased volume of sales of electronic PoS system products in
Germany, which increase represented approximately 114% of the increase in
product revenues for this period. This increase, however, was partially offset
by lower average selling prices for our electronic PoS system products, which
declined by an average of 14% per unit in the fiscal year ended January 31,
1999 compared to the fiscal year ended January 31, 1998.

   License. Software license revenue increased by $376,000 to $4.5 million in
the fiscal year ended January 31, 1999 from $4.1 million in the fiscal year
ended January 31, 1998, an increase of 9%. The increase in software license
revenue was due to increased sales of e-payment software products to new
customers. Software license revenue represented 21% of total revenue in the
fiscal year ended January 31, 1999 compared to 25% of total revenue in the
fiscal year ended January 31, 1998. Software license revenue declined as a
percentage of total revenue as a result of the more rapid sales growth rate of
electronic PoS system products.

   Service. Service revenue increased by $281,000 to $2.0 million in the fiscal
year ended January 31, 1999 from $1.7 million in the fiscal year ended January
31, 1998, an increase of 16%. Service revenue represented 10% of total revenue
in each of the fiscal years ended January 31, 1998 and 1999. The increase in
service revenue in absolute dollars was due primarily to an increase in sales
of software license, which resulted in increased demand for services.

                                       27
<PAGE>

 Cost of Revenue

   Total Cost of Revenue. Total cost of revenue increased by $4.2 million to
$13.9 million in the fiscal year ended January 31, 1999 from $9.7 million in
the fiscal year ended January 31, 1998, an increase of 44%. Gross margin
decreased to 34% in the fiscal year ended January 31, 1999 from 41% in the
fiscal year ended January 31, 1998. The decrease in gross margin primarily
resulted from increased headcount in our services group, the expansion of our
software license support and maintenance facilities and investment in
infrastructure, in each case in advance of associated revenue.

   Product. Cost of product revenue increased by $2.5 million to $10.9 million
in the fiscal year ended January 31, 1999 from $8.4 million in the fiscal year
ended January 31, 1998, an increase of 30%. The increase in the cost of product
revenue primarily resulted from increased volume of product shipments. Product
revenue costs as a percentage of product revenue decreased to 75% in the fiscal
year ended January 31, 1999 from 77% in the prior fiscal year primarily due to
our ability to negotiate more favorable prices from our vendors as purchase
volumes increased. This decrease was partially offset by lower average selling
prices for our electronic PoS system products.

   License. Cost of software license revenue increased $314,000 to $648,000 in
the fiscal year ended January 31, 1999 from $334,000 in the fiscal year ended
January 31, 1998, an increase of 94%. Software license costs were 14% of
software license revenue in the fiscal year ended January 31, 1999 compared to
8% in the fiscal year ended January 31, 1998. The increase in absolute dollars
and as a percentage of license revenue resulted from increased expenditures in
both infrastructure and labor costs associated with the expansion of our
support and maintenance facilities.

   Service. Cost of service revenue increased by $1.4 million to $2.4 million
in the fiscal year ended January 31, 1999 from $1.0 million in the fiscal year
ended January 31, 1998, an increase of 139%. Service costs were 121% of service
revenue in the fiscal year ended January 31, 1999 compared to 59% of service
revenue in the fiscal year ended January 31, 1998. The increase in the cost of
service revenue in absolute dollars and as a percentage of service revenue
primarily resulted from increased headcount and investment in infrastructure in
advance of associated revenue.

 Operating Expenses

   Research and Development. Research and development expenses increased $1.9
million to $3.7 million in the fiscal year ended January 31, 1999 from $1.7
million in the fiscal year ended January 31, 1998, an increase of 113%.
Research and development expenses were 17% of total revenue in the fiscal year
ended January 31, 1999 compared to 10% of total revenue in the fiscal year
ended January 31, 1998. The increase in absolute dollars and as a percentage of
total revenue was primarily due to increased labor costs resulting from
increased headcount associated with our increased emphasis on the development
of e-commerce software, and due to higher average salaries.

   Sales and Marketing. Sales and marketing expenses increased $3.4 million to
$5.9 million in the fiscal year ended January 31, 1999 from $2.5 million in the
fiscal year ended January 31, 1998, an increase of 139%. Sales and marketing
expenses were 28% of total revenue in the fiscal year ended January 31, 1999
compared to 15% of total revenue in the fiscal year ended January 31, 1998. The
increase in absolute dollars and as a percentage of total revenue primarily
resulted from the recruitment of additional sales personnel, the expansion of
our

                                       28
<PAGE>

sales offices in Campbell, California and Miami, Florida, and increases in
direct marketing activities and travel costs.

   General and Administrative. General and administrative expenses increased
$1.8 million to $4.3 million in the fiscal year ended January 31, 1999 from
$2.5 million in the fiscal year ended January 31, 1998, a 72% increase. General
and administrative expenses were 21% of total revenue in the fiscal year ended
January 31, 1999 compared to 15% of total revenue in the fiscal year ended
January 31, 1998. The increase in absolute dollars and as a percentage of total
revenue primarily resulted from increases in labor costs of approximately
$284,000 related to hiring additional management and administrative personnel,
recruitment costs of approximately $480,000 associated with a general increase
in our employee base, facilities costs of approximately $278,000 due to the
leasing of additional office space in Dublin, Ireland, Frankfurt, Germany and
Princeton, New Jersey, telecommunications and management information systems
costs of approximately $379,000, and an increase in depreciation costs of
approximately $225,000.

   Interest Income (Expense), Net. Interest income, net increased $254,000 to
$272,000 of interest income, net in the fiscal year ended January 31, 1999
compared to $18,000 of interest income, net in the fiscal year ended January
31, 1998. The increase was due to higher cash balances arising from the
completion of equity financings in fiscal 1999 that generated gross proceeds of
approximately $20.0 million.

   Provision for Income Taxes. There was no provision for income taxes in
fiscal 1999 compared to a provision for income taxes of $50,000 in fiscal 1998.
The decrease in fiscal 1999 is partly due to the losses incurred, which did not
require a tax provision, and to non-recoverable withholding taxes incurred in
fiscal 1998.

                                       29
<PAGE>

Selected Quarterly Results

   The following table presents selected unaudited consolidated financial
information for each of the eight quarters in the period ended January 31,
2000. In our opinion, this unaudited information has been prepared on a basis
consistent with our audited consolidated financial statements and includes all
adjustments, consisting only of normal recurring adjustments, necessary to
present fairly our unaudited quarterly results when read in conjunction with
our audited financial statements included elsewhere in this prospectus. The
results of operations for any quarter are not necessarily indicative of future
results of operations.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                         Apr. 30, July 31,  Oct. 31,  Jan. 31,  Apr. 30,  July 31,  Oct. 31,  Jan. 31,
                           1998     1998      1998      1999      1999      1999      1999      2000
                         -------- --------  --------  --------  --------  --------  --------  --------
                                             (in thousands of U.S. dollars)
<S>                      <C>      <C>       <C>       <C>       <C>       <C>       <C>       <C>
Revenue:
 Product................  $3,164  $ 3,935   $ 3,101   $ 4,354   $ 3,808   $ 4,727   $ 4,890   $ 5,032
 License................   1,282    1,102       678     1,415     1,490     1,846     2,357     3,465
 Service................     570      718       370       344       676       618       783       552
                          ------  -------   -------   -------   -------   -------   -------   -------
   Total revenue........   5,016    5,755     4,149     6,113     5,974     7,191     8,030     9,049
Cost of revenue:
 Product................   2,334    3,004     2,365     3,149     2,534     3,157     3,045     3,298
 License................      70      132       210       236       647       725       574     1,035
 Service................     401      574       691       747       630       432       689       491
                          ------  -------   -------   -------   -------   -------   -------   -------
   Total cost of
    revenue.............   2,805    3,710     3,266     4,132     3,811     4,314     4,308     4,824
                          ------  -------   -------   -------   -------   -------   -------   -------
Gross margin............   2,211    2,045       883     1,981     2,163     2,877     3,722     4,225
Operating expenses:
 Research and
  development...........     767      893       825     1,191     1,638     1,950     2,387     2,917
 Sales and marketing....   1,237    1,446     1,522     1,716     1,922     1,996     2,184     2,747
 General and
  administrative........     754    1,006     1,232     1,355     1,546     1,697     1,763     2,330
 Stock compensation.....     --       --        --        --        --        --        --      2,068
                          ------  -------   -------   -------   -------   -------   -------   -------
   Total operating
    expenses............   2,758    3,345     3,579     4,262     5,106     5,643     6,334    10,062
                          ------  -------   -------   -------   -------   -------   -------   -------
Income (loss) from
 operations.............    (547)  (1,300)   (2,696)   (2,281)   (2,943)   (2,766)   (2,612)   (5,837)
Interest income
 (expense), net.........      (2)      51       153        70        98        41       252       817
Exchange gain (loss),
 net....................     (68)     (26)     (311)       84        35       228       222       357
                          ------  -------   -------   -------   -------   -------   -------   -------
Income (loss) before
 provision for income
 taxes..................    (617)  (1,275)   (2,854)   (2,127)   (2,810)   (2,497)   (2,138)   (4,663)
Provision for income
 taxes..................     --       --        --        --         (1)      --        --         (2)
                          ------  -------   -------   -------   -------   -------   -------   -------
   Net income (loss)....  $ (617) $(1,275)  $(2,854)  $(2,127)  $(2,811)  $(2,497)  $(2,138)  $(4,665)
                          ======  =======   =======   =======   =======   =======   =======   =======
</TABLE>

                                       30
<PAGE>

   The following table presents unaudited consolidated results of operations as
a percentage of total revenue for each of the eight quarters in the period
ended January 31, 2000.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                         Apr. 30, July 31, Oct. 31, Jan. 31, Apr. 30, July 31, Oct. 31, Jan. 31,
                           1998     1998     1998     1999     1999     1999     1999     2000
                         -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- --------
<S>                      <C>      <C>      <C>      <C>      <C>      <C>      <C>      <C>
Revenue:
 Product................    63 %     68 %     75 %     71 %     64 %     66 %     61 %     56 %
 License................    26       19       16       23       25       26       29       38
 Service................    11       13        9        6       11        8       10        6
                           ---      ---      ---      ---      ---      ---      ---      ---
   Total revenue........   100      100      100      100      100      100      100      100
Cost of revenue:
 Product................    47       52       57       52       42       44       38       37
 License................     1        2        5        4       11       10        7       11
 Service................     8       10       17       12       11        6        9        5
                           ---      ---      ---      ---      ---      ---      ---      ---
   Total cost of
    revenue.............    56       64       79       68       64       60       54       53
                           ---      ---      ---      ---      ---      ---      ---      ---
Gross margin............    44       36       21       32       36       40       46       47
Operating expenses:
 Research and
  development...........    15       16       20       19       27       27       30       33
 Sales and marketing....    25       25       36       28       32       28       27       30
 General and
  administrative........    15       17       30       22       26       23       22       26
 Stock compensation.....   --       --       --       --       --       --       --        23
                           ---      ---      ---      ---      ---      ---      ---      ---
   Total operating
    expenses............    55       58       86       69       85       78       79      112
                           ---      ---      ---      ---      ---      ---      ---      ---
Income (loss) from
 operations.............   (11)     (22)     (65)     (37)     (49)     (38)     (33)     (65)
Interest income
 (expense), net.........   --       --         4        1        2        1        3        9
Exchange gain (loss),
 net....................    (1)     --        (8)       1        1        3        3        4
                           ---      ---      ---      ---      ---      ---      ---      ---
Income (loss) before
 provision for income
 taxes..................   (12)     (22)     (69)     (35)     (46)     (34)     (27)     (52)
Provision for income
 taxes..................   --       --       --       --       --       --       --       --
                           ---      ---      ---      ---      ---      ---      ---      ---
   Net income (loss)....   (12)     (22)     (69)     (35)     (46)     (34)     (27)     (52)
                           ===      ===      ===      ===      ===      ===      ===      ===
</TABLE>

 Significant Quarterly Fluctuations in Revenue and Operating Results

   Our quarterly revenue and operating results have historically been subject
to significant fluctuations due to a variety of factors described below, and we
anticipate that this volatility will continue. As a result, period-to-period
comparisons of our results of operations are not necessarily meaningful and
these comparisons should not be relied upon as indications of our future
performance. It is likely that in some future quarters our results of
operations will be below the expectations of public market analysts and
investors, which could have a severe adverse effect on the trading price of the
ADSs.

   We have experienced significant fluctuations in our quarterly product
revenue. In particular, electronic PoS systems revenue has typically been
higher in the quarter ended January 31 of each year as customers on a calendar-
based fiscal year complete their capital spending plans in December and have
capital budgets available in January. In addition, revenue from sales of these
systems has typically been lower in the quarter ended October 31 of each year
as compared to the preceding quarter primarily due to slow downs associated
with our customers' vacation periods.

   License revenue can fluctuate significantly from quarter to quarter for a
number of reasons. A significant portion of our software revenue is typically
derived from a limited number of customers. As a result, small changes in the
number of customers in a particular quarter can significantly affect software
license revenue for that quarter. Additionally, because the price of our
software products varies significantly based on the product and the
functionality, the product mix in a particular quarter can also significantly
affect license

                                       31
<PAGE>

revenue in that quarter. For example, the number of customers and product mix
in the second and third quarters of fiscal 1999 were negatively influenced by
several factors. These factors included a slower than anticipated overall rate
of adoption of emerging secure e-payment technologies by banks and financial
transaction processors. Our software license revenue during these periods was
also negatively impacted by our customers re-directing their information
technology funds to address euro and year-2000 issues, as well as the economic
situation in Asia, which we believe led European customers to become cautious.
In the third quarter of fiscal 1999, we launched PayWare ERP, which integrates
our e-payment merchant functionality into SAP's enterprise resource planning
system, R/3. In the fourth quarter of fiscal 1999, we launched PayWare Net,
which has become our primary e-commerce solution for Internet merchants. Sales
for PayWare ERP and PayWare Net have positively impacted our revenues for the
fourth quarter of fiscal 1999 and for fiscal 2000. In addition, at the end of
the first quarter of fiscal 2000, we released PayGate NetIssuer, which has
positively impacted license revenues for the third and fourth quarters of
fiscal 2000.

   Service revenue has varied significantly from quarter to quarter. Service
revenue has been significantly impacted by the number of customers requesting
services and the scope of the service engagements undertaken in a particular
quarter. The demand for customization services can vary as a result of the mix
of products that are licensed to our customers as well as the requirements of
the customers for customization of our products to suit their needs. As the
functionality of our product line has broadened, the portion of service revenue
attributable to customization has declined. This is being replaced by increased
demand for consultancy, integration, educational and training services. Service
revenue in the third quarter of fiscal 1999 was negatively impacted by lower
license revenue. Service revenue in the fourth quarter of fiscal 1999 and the
fourth quarter of fiscal 2000 was also negatively impacted by the mix of
products licensed, which resulted in a relative increase in the licensing of
products that required a lower level of customization.

   Cost of revenue and gross margin has varied substantially from quarter to
quarter, both in line with revenue fluctuations and due to factors such as
headcount costs, currency fluctuations and facilities cost increases. Cost of
license revenue may be further impacted by license fees payable to third
parties from whom we license technology, which can vary depending upon product
mix and by the amortization of capitalized software development costs. For
example, in the fourth quarter of fiscal 2000, cost of license revenue
increased in part due to the cost of software which we licensed from a third
party to develop a software solution for a specific customer. Because a
substantial percentage of our costs are fixed, quarterly fluctuations in total
revenue result in significant fluctuations in our costs as a percentage of
revenue. For example, in the third and fourth quarters of fiscal 1999, we
continued to build our service organization as anticipated under our long-term
business strategy despite a downturn in service revenue during those quarters,
which resulted in negative service gross margins in each period.

   The level of research and development expenditures can vary from quarter to
quarter due to changing labor costs and other costs associated with growth in
headcount. In connection with our strategy emphasizing e-commerce software
products for Internet applications, we have generally increased our research
and development expenditures over the past few years. In particular, research
and development expenses have increased in absoluted dollars in each quarter
since the quarter ended October 31, 1998. Our ability to continue to grow our
research and development organization will depend on our ability to identify
and hire qualified personnel.

   Sales and marketing expenditure can vary significantly from quarter to
quarter depending on the timing of our advertising and promotion campaigns, the
hiring of sales personnel and

                                       32
<PAGE>

the establishment of sales offices. We are continuing to build our sales and
marketing organization, and these expenditures generally have increased from
quarter to quarter.

   In the fourth quarter of fiscal 2000, we recognized $2.1 million of non-cash
stock compensation associated with options granted to members of our advisory
board and MasterCard at fair market value on the date of grant. The options are
treated as variable options for accounting purposes. As a result, in the fourth
quarter we recognized, and in the future on a quarterly basis we will
recognize, non-cash stock compensation related to the fair value of the option
determined using the Black-Scholes option pricing model on the last trading day
of each quarter, multiplied by the number of options time-apportioned over
their respective vesting periods.

Liquidity and Capital Resources

   Until 1998, we had satisfied our cash requirements principally through cash
generated by operations, proceeds from the sale of ordinary shares to a single
outside investor and borrowings under our bank credit facilities. We have an
approved credit facility from Bank of Ireland of IR(Pounds)650,000 or
approximately $808,000 as of January 31, 2000. The credit facility bears
interest at the bank's overdraft rate which was 5.94% per year as of January
31, 2000. The facility does not have a stated expiration date, but all amounts
drawn under it are repayable on demand. As of January 31, 2000, there was $0
outstanding under the credit facility. As of January 31, 2000, we had working
capital of $57.8 million, including cash and cash equivalents totaling $10.9
million and marketable securities totaling $48.8 million.

   In fiscal 1999, we raised an aggregate of $20.0 million in private
placements of 482,765 ordinary shares and 3 million redeemable convertible
preference shares. In September 1999, we raised $59.5 million net of expenses
from the sale of 5.9 million ordinary shares in our initial public offering.

   Net cash used in operating activities was approximately $695,000, $12.6
million and $48.4 million for fiscal 1998, 1999 and 2000. Net cash used in
operating activities in fiscal 1998 resulted primarily from increases in
accounts receivable and general working capital requirements. Net cash used in
operating activities in fiscal 1999 resulted primarily from a loss on
operations of $6.9 million and net purchases of marketable securities of $7.2
million. Net cash used in operating activities in fiscal 2000 resulted
primarily from a loss on operations of $12.1 million and net purchases of
marketable securities of $41.7 million, partially offset by an increase in the
level of current liabilities.

   Net cash used in investing activities was approximately $427,000 for fiscal
1998, $4.1 million for fiscal 1999 and $1.9 million for fiscal 2000. Cash used
in investing activities was primarily related to the purchase of property and
equipment. In addition, net cash used in investing activities in fiscal 1999
included $2.5 million for the purchase of capitalized software.

   Net cash used in financing activities was approximately $427,000 for fiscal
1998. Net cash provided by financing activities was approximately $18.2 million
for fiscal 1999 and $59.2 million for fiscal 2000. Net cash used in financing
activities in fiscal 1998 primarily related to the repayment of the loans from
three of our directors and the repayment of a bank overdraft which was
outstanding at the end of fiscal 1997. Net cash provided by financing
activities in fiscal 1999 primarily related to the $20.0 million raised in
private placements of 482,765 ordinary shares and 3 million redeemable
convertible preference shares. Net cash provided by financing activities in
fiscal 2000 primarily related to the $59.5 million net of expenses raised from
the sale of 5.9 million ordinary shares in our initial public offering.

                                       33
<PAGE>

   Although we have no material commitments for capital expenditures or
strategic investments, we anticipate an increase in the rate of capital
expenditures consistent with our anticipated growth in operations,
infrastructure and personnel. Our future liquidity and capital requirements
will depend upon numerous factors including the cost and timing of expansion of
product development efforts and the success of these development efforts, the
cost and timing of expansion of sales and marketing activities, the extent to
which our existing and new products gain market acceptance, market
developments, the level and timing of license revenue and available borrowings
under line of credit arrangements.

   We believe that the proceeds generated by the sale of our securities in this
offering, together with funds available under our credit facility and cash and
cash equivalents on hand, will be sufficient to meet our projected working
capital requirements for at least the next 12 months. However, the underlying
assumed levels of revenues and expenses may prove to be inaccurate. We may be
required to finance any additional requirements within the next twelve months
or beyond through additional equity, debt financings or credit facilities. We
may not be able to obtain additional financings or credit facilities, or if
these funds are available, they may not be available on satisfactory terms. If
funding is insufficient at any time in the future, we may be unable to develop
or enhance our products or services, take advantage of business opportunities
or respond to competitive pressures. If we raise additional funds by issuing
equity securities, dilution to existing shareholders will result.

Qualitative and Quantitative Disclosure About Market Risk

   Interest income and expense are sensitive to changes in the general level of
Irish and U.S. interest rates, particularly since our investments are in short-
term instruments and our available line of credit requires interest payments at
variable rates. As of January 31, 2000, one of our subsidiaries had a contract
maturing in February 2000 and a contract maturing in May 2000, each to sell
$1.0 million for euros. Based on the nature and current levels of our
investments and debt, we have concluded that there is no material market risk
exposure.

   Our investment policy requires us to invest funds in excess of current
operating requirements in marketable securities such as commercial paper,
corporate bonds and U.S. government agency fixed income securities. As stated
in our investment policy, we are averse to principal loss and seek to ensure
the safety and preservation of invested funds by limiting default and market
risks. We mitigate default risk by investing in only investment-grade
securities.

   At January 31, 2000, our cash and cash equivalents consisted primarily of
highly liquid investments with maturity of three months or less. We have
concluded that this does not result in any material market risk exposure.

Year 2000 Readiness

   The year 2000 issue existed because many computer systems and applications
use two-digit rather than four-digit date fields to designate a year. As a
result, the systems and applications may not properly recognize the year 2000
or be able to process data including it, which has the potential to cause data
miscalculations or inaccuracies, operational malfunctions or failures.

   In November 1997, we established a year 2000 steering committee, comprised
of our group quality manager, group management information systems manager,
European controller, customer support manager and product manager. The
committee reports to Chris Meehan, our executive vice president, operations and
a member of our board of directors. The

                                       34
<PAGE>

committee was charged with evaluation of the year 2000 issue as it affects our
products and services, our internal network and supporting infrastructure and
the internal network and supporting infrastructure of our customers. To
identify and prioritize efforts for critical systems, networks, products and
key business partners, we identified the following tasks for the year 2000
committee: inventory, assessment, remediation, testing, implementation,
contingency plans and monitoring. As of January 31, 2000, these tasks have been
substantially completed.

   These costs would not have a material impact on our business, financial
condition or results of operations. We currently anticipate incurring
approximately $70,000 in fiscal 2001 in connection with continuing year 2000
related costs. Modifying and testing our information and transaction processing
systems is estimated to cost approximately $50,000 to be incurred in fiscal
2001 as we complete the installation and testing of new or modified hardware
and software. Additional capital costs to be incurred in fiscal 2001 to support
the replacement of systems, hardware or equipment are currently estimated to be
approximately $50,000. These estimates also do not include litigation or
warranty costs related to the year 2000 issue, which at this time cannot be
reasonably estimated. All year 2000 costs previously incurred have been funded
from operations.

   As of February 29, 2000, we have not experienced any year 2000 issues with
our internal network or infrastructure and we were not aware of any year 2000
issues with our products or services, or the internal network and supporting
infrastructure of our manufacturers, suppliers or strategic partners. We may
become aware of year 2000 issues in the future, which could adversely affect
our business and results of operations.

                                       35
<PAGE>

                                    BUSINESS

Overview

   We are a leading provider of secure e-payment infrastructure solutions for
payment card transactions. We develop, market and sell a comprehensive suite of
software and electronic PoS systems that enable card-based electronic payments
in the physical world and over the Internet. We offer vendor-neutral, open
software solutions that provide a highly secure e-payment solution for our
customers. Our customers include banks, card associations, financial
transaction processors and Internet service providers in major markets
including Germany, the United States, Scandinavia, the United Kingdom and South
America. Through our portfolio of feature-rich software products and electronic
PoS systems, we offer solutions for each of the parties to an e-payment
transaction--the bank or other financial transaction processor, the merchant
and the cardholder. Our comprehensive suite of software and electronic PoS
system products enables secure end-to-end payment solutions to automate the
entire e-payment transaction process.

 The E-Payment Industry

   The e-payment industry has rapidly grown throughout the world since the
1970s when banks and merchants began to encourage widespread use of credit
cards by consumers. Use of these cards has increased significantly in
traditional commerce channels, first at the countertop in a merchant's store,
and later through mail order and telephone order. More recently, the
introduction of new payment card alternatives, such as chip-based smart cards,
stored value cards, purchase cards and debit cards, has further fueled the use
of payment cards and the growth of the e-payment industry. According to The
Nilson Report, the volume of payment card transactions at the merchant in the
United States alone is expected to increase from 16 billion in 1997 to 39
billion in 2005. The growth of payment card transactions, in conjunction with
increased payment card fraud, has driven the need for more comprehensive,
secure and effective hardware and software payment products to process these
transactions. In particular, financial institutions and merchants have broadly
adopted electronic PoS systems and secure software solutions to mitigate fraud
and to improve the efficiency of payment card transaction processing.

   With the emergence of e-commerce, the Internet has developed as a new and
significant sales channel for goods and services. Payment cards have emerged as
the predominant means of making purchases over the Internet, further driving
the demand for comprehensive and effective solutions for secure e-payment
transactions. According to International Data Corporation, the number of people
with access to the world wide web will rise from 159 million in 1998 to
approximately 510 million in 2003. The growing base of users, combined with the
convenience of the Internet as a medium for commerce, helps drive the growth of
e-commerce. International Data Corporation estimates that global business-to-
consumer e-commerce revenue will grow from $15 billion in 1998 to $117 billion
in 2002. International Data Corporation additionally estimates that the number
of on-line shoppers will increase from 30.8 million in 1998 to 133.9 million in
2002. Merchants are increasingly seeking to participate in e-commerce due to
the global reach of the Internet, combined with the lower transaction costs
compared to the traditional retail market place and the increasing use of the
Internet for a broad range of business-to-business and business-to-consumer
activities. Emerging channels for Internet access, such as mobile phones for
wireless Internet access, are expected to further fuel the growth of e-
commerce.

 E-Payment Transactions

   Each of the participants in an e-payment transaction operates within a
framework of policies and standards established by card associations such as
VISA and MasterCard and card

                                       36
<PAGE>

companies like American Express and Discover Financial Services. They have
established the network and processing infrastructures required to authorize
payments and transfer funds, and have implemented large-scale marketing
programs to promote consumer and merchant acceptance of existing card brands
and new card-related products.

   Through the use of payment cards, cardholders traditionally have had the
flexibility to purchase goods and services either in person at a merchant's
physical store or conveniently in their own homes or offices through telephone
or mail order. These traditional distribution channels have been broadened by
the emergence of the Internet as a medium for commerce. The global acceptance
of payment cards and the convenience they provide facilitate business-to-
consumer and business-to-business commerce in the physical world and over the
Internet.

   To initiate a typical payment card transaction, the merchant receives the
cardholder's payment card information through a variety of means, including
physical presentation of the actual card, mail order, telephone order or over
the Internet. The e-payment system at the merchant location captures the card
and transaction information and forwards this information to the merchant's
bank or a third-party financial transaction processor. Through its payment
software system, the merchant's bank or processor requests authorization from
the cardholder's bank. The cardholder's bank receives the information, confirms
that the cardholder has sufficient funds or credit available and approves or
declines the transaction. If the transaction is approved, the cardholder's bank
charges the cardholder's account while the merchant's bank or processor
transfers funds to the merchant's account.

   The following depicts the flow in an e-payment transaction:

[GRAPHIC DEPICTION OF E-PAYMENT TRANSACTION SETTING FORTH THE FLOW OF GOODS OR
SERVICES FROM THE MERCHANT TO THE CARDHOLDER AND THE FLOW OF FUNDS FROM THE
CARDHOLDER TO THE CARDHOLDER'S BANK TO THE MERCHANT'S BANK TO THE MERCHANT]

                                       37
<PAGE>

 E-Commerce Transactions

   In an Internet transaction, the payment card information must first be
entered by the cardholder either directly on the merchant's web site or into an
electronic wallet resident on the cardholder's computer or mobile phone.
Typically, software resident on the cardholder's computer or mobile phone
encrypts and then transmits the information to the merchant over the Internet.
The e-commerce payment software resident on the merchant's server receives the
card information and forwards this information to the merchant's bank or
financial transaction processor. The merchant's bank's or processor's e-payment
system captures and processes the payment information and, together with the
cardholder's bank, settles the transaction.

   Software is required by each participant at each stage of an e-commerce
payment transaction. Banks, financial transaction processors, merchants and
cardholders are interdependent, and therefore the e-payment systems that link
them must interoperate to efficiently and securely complete payment card
transactions. It is also necessary for e-commerce software payment systems to
integrate with existing hardware and software payment systems, particularly
mainframe systems that continue to be operated by banks and financial
transaction processors. Additionally, the increased globalization of e-commerce
presents payment challenges, such as translation adjustments for multi-currency
transactions and the ability to bill cardholders in the currency of their
choice.

 The Need for Security and Authentication

   Losses incurred as a result of payment card fraud are typically borne
primarily by the card companies or member banks of card associations, and to a
lesser extent by merchants and cardholders. In addition, card companies and
member banks incur significant administration costs to verify the authenticity
of charges that cardholders have repudiated. This repudiation can occur when
the name of the merchant for a particular charge presented on the cardholder's
monthly bill is unrelated to the name of the merchant from whom the cardholder
made the purchase or when the cardholder believes that their card has been used
fraudulently. To minimize fraud and repudiation in the physical world, card
associations and card companies have encouraged merchants to use electronic PoS
systems and e-payment software solutions, often in conjunction with enhanced
encryption and other embedded security technology.

   The emergence of the Internet as a medium for commerce has significantly
increased the risk that payment card fraud and repudiation can occur. According
to a recent study conducted by VISA International, several member banks in its
European region were experiencing repudiation and discovered fraud rates as
high as 50% for Internet transactions while transactions originating on the
Internet represent only 1% to 2% of total transaction volumes. In addition,
according to Jupiter Communications, Internet merchants report a repudiation
level ranging from 25% to 30% of their total revenue. We believe that the
higher incidence of fraud and repudiation in Internet transactions is primarily
caused by:

  .  an inability to effectively verify the identity of, or authenticate, the
     cardholder

  .  an inability to confirm the legitimacy of, or authenticate, the merchant

  .  theft of cardholder information that resides unencrypted on a merchant's
     server

  .  inadequate encryption technology

  .  the aggregation of merchant transactions on the Internet by
     intermediaries, such as commerce service providers, resulting in
     confusion regarding the name of the merchant for a particular charge
     presented on the cardholder's monthly bill

                                       38
<PAGE>

   Netscape developed a standard for the transmission of information over the
Internet known as SSL. SSL is currently the most prevalent Internet security
solution as a result of being embedded in the Netscape and Microsoft web-
browsers. The SSL standard provides a limited level of encryption security and
only generic digital certificates for users.

   Digital certificates are specially prepared software files that uniquely
identify an on-line entity such as a cardholder, payment card, merchant, bank
or e-mail account. However, the digital certificates embedded in the Microsoft
and Netscape web browsers are generic and thus do not provide a unique
identification of each individual user. We believe that the lack of unique
digital certificates has resulted in a high level of repudiated e-payment
transactions.

   In a typical SSL transaction, a cardholder's payment card number and other
payment information is encrypted and transferred to the merchant who, in turn,
decrypts this information to process the transaction. The decrypted payment
card number is stored on the merchant's computer, where it is vulnerable to
theft by either a merchant's employee or an outside computer user who
infiltrates the merchant's computer. The stolen payment card number may then be
fraudulently used. This is one of the recognized security limitations of the
SSL standard when used for e-payment transactions over the Internet.

   In response to the deployment of non-unique certificates and the security
limitations of SSL, VISA and MasterCard developed the SET standard. SET is a
comprehensive security standard which is specifically designed for payment card
transactions over the Internet. In contrast to SSL, the SET standard increases
the security of e-payment transactions by:

  .  keeping the payment card number encrypted while it is handled by the
     merchant by employing multiple levels of encryption between the
     cardholder, the merchant and the bank or financial transaction processor

  .  providing unique digital certificates to all parties to an e-payment
     transaction, thus authenticating all parties and reducing repudiation

  .  providing stronger encryption, further enhancing the security of the
     transaction

   Using SET, a cardholder's payment card number, unique digital certificate
and other payment information is encrypted and transferred to the merchant.
Because this information is bundled in separate packets, the merchant can only
decrypt the information necessary to process the transaction and cannot decrypt
the cardholder's payment card number. Instead, the encrypted payment card
number is forwarded to the merchant's bank. The merchant's bank decrypts the
payment card number and, together with the transaction information, requests an
authorization from the cardholder's bank. In addition, the merchant's bank
authenticates the digital certificates of both the cardholder and the merchant,
verifies their identities and confirms that the goods the cardholder has
ordered match those that the merchant plans to deliver. Based on the outcome of
these authorizations and authentications, the transaction is approved and
settled.

   To encourage use of the SET standard, VISA and MasterCard announced in July
1998 the adoption of the following incentives:

  .  network transaction fees would not be imposed on the cardholders' or
     merchants' banks for SET transactions

  .  SET transactions would qualify for the lowest offered interchange rates;
     in contrast, SSL transactions are charged at a rate equivalent to mail
     order and telephone transactions--typically twice that of transactions
     in the physical world

  .  merchants would be relieved of liability if cardholders repudiate
     purchases for which they are being billed

                                       39
<PAGE>

   We believe that the e-payment industry will continue to be influenced and
shaped by the strategies and initiatives of VISA and MasterCard, along with
other industry and technology leaders. Furthermore, we believe that the
continued growth in number and complexity of e-payment transactions, together
with the emergence of the Internet and wireless networks as a channel for e-
commerce, will continue to drive the need for secure, flexible and trusted
e-payment solutions. Currently the SSL standard remains the predominant
standard for secure e-payment transactions. The SET standard has not yet been
broadly adopted, nor is this adoption certain. We believe that the key
participants in the e-payment industry, such as banks, card associations and
merchants, will continue to demand software solutions and services from
focused, responsive and innovative vendors who are able to deliver products
that support all standards that are adopted by the marketplace over time.

The Trintech Solution

   We are a leading provider of secure e-payment solutions for payment card
transactions. We develop, market and sell a comprehensive suite of software and
electronic PoS systems that enable card-based electronic payments in the
physical world and over the Internet. Our solution consists of software and
electronic PoS systems for use with a variety of operating systems, databases,
merchant web servers and networked and standalone computers. This product suite
consists of more than 20 modules designed to perform authorization, data
capture and settlement for e-payment transactions, as well as management of
merchant e-payment systems. These modules can be deployed as an end-to-end
solution or integrated with modules of other vendors. Our software products are
configurable to satisfy a broad range of secure e-commerce payment needs.

   The following elements of our solution enable us to deliver key competitive
advantages to our customers:

   Secure Encryption Technology. Our products have been developed using
innovative, robust, cryptographic technologies. All of our e-commerce software
products support both the SET and SSL standards. We were the first software
company to implement a SET transaction. Our SET software products provide 1,024
bit data encryption and handle all of the cryptographic processing and
messaging management required by the SET standard. Our SSL software products
provide up to 128 bit data encryption. Our Internet software products can
incorporate digital certificates to authenticate all parties to an e-payment
transaction, which can reduce fraud and repudiation. We have also developed
software applications to enhance the security of smart card e-payment
transactions. In addition, our electronic PoS system products support the DES,
Triple DES and RSA Security public key security algorithms to meet the security
standards required by our customers.

   Flexible Range of Solutions. Our suite of products provides flexible e-
payment solutions for each participant in a transaction: banks and financial
transaction processors, merchants and cardholders. Our products are designed to
be modular, permitting them to interoperate with e-payment products of other
vendors. Alternatively, by offering our products as an integrated end-to-end
payment solution, we also provide a complete solution for our customers.

   Comprehensive Functionality. Our software products have been designed for
scalability and operate in multi-currency, multi-taxation, multi-payment
protocol and complex communication environments. We are one of the few vendors
to offer integrated secure e-payment solutions that allow customers to process
transactions in the physical world and over the Internet.

                                       40
<PAGE>

   Open Systems Architecture. Our open architecture design supports a wide
variety of operating systems, databases and merchant commerce servers. Our
software solutions for banks, financial transaction processors and merchants
have been developed for Windows NT and UNIX client/server platforms. Our
approach is to develop once only solutions to run on multiple platforms. This
approach facilitates integration with existing hardware and software systems,
including mainframe systems. In addition, our software products are vendor
neutral and are designed to interface with e-payment hardware and software
products of third-party vendors, including IBM, Oracle, Verifone, Microsoft,
SAP and Intershop.

   Expertise in Secure E-Payment Industry. Since our inception, we have focused
on developing secure e-payment solutions for payment card transactions. We
believe our 13 years of experience in this industry has enabled us to develop
sophisticated e-commerce solutions for payment card transactions over the
Internet. We also believe that this industry focus has enabled us to develop
strong and close relationships with the card associations and banks that can
influence the structure and development of the e-payment industry.

Trintech's Growth Strategy

   Our mission is to become the leading worldwide provider of secure e-payment
solutions for payment card transactions. The key elements of our strategy to
achieve this mission are the following:

   Leverage Technology Expertise. Using our 13 years experience in developing
secure e-payment solutions, we have leveraged our technology expertise to
develop advanced solutions for this market. For example, our merchant software
product runs on multiple platforms, including personal computers located in
merchant call centers, third-party PoS systems, such as electronic cash
registers, and our own electronic PoS system products. In addition, we continue
to develop innovative electronic PoS system products. We intend to continue to
invest significant resources to further develop our product suite.

   Extend Early Lead in Internet E-Payment Software. We were one of the first
software companies to adopt both the SET and SSL standards, and we were the
first software company to implement a SET transaction. We intend to continue to
extend our range of SET and SSL products and support new e-payment standards
and Internet technologies, including wireless access technologies, as they
emerge. For example, in February 2000, we jointly announced with Motorola the
availability of e-payment software applications for mobile commerce
transactions using mobile phones.

   Continue to Build Strategic Relationships with Key Industry Leaders. We have
strategic relationships with VISA, MasterCard, Compaq, SAP America, Intershop
and RSA Security. These relationships have provided a number of competitive
advantages, including access to product development plans, joint marketing
opportunities and lead-generation for our direct sales force. We intend to
continue to enter into development and marketing alliances with key industry
leaders to produce and distribute custom-tailored e-payment solutions for
specific market segments.

   Expand Channels of Distribution Globally. We have relied primarily on our
direct sales force to market our products to banks and financial transaction
processors, card associations, card companies and other major U.S. and
international financial institutions. With the expansion of our e-commerce
product line, we are increasingly targeting large merchants, Internet service
providers and commerce service providers. To reach organizations that cannot
otherwise be effectively targeted by our direct sales force and to increase
worldwide market penetration, we have begun to use indirect sales channels,
including resellers providing additional services, systems integrators and
consultants.

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<PAGE>

   Target Fast-Growing Markets. We believe that fast-growing markets can
provide significant marketing opportunities for e-payment applications. We have
recently begun to target Internet service providers, commerce service
providers, and telecommunications companies, including service and equipment
providers. Our goal is to begin to target cable-based providers of high-speed
Internet access to homes and businesses, and financial services companies
within the next 12 months.

   Build Strong Brand Recognition. We are a leading brand name in the e-payment
industry and believe that we are benefiting from our early industry presence.
Our strategy is to promote, advertise and build our brand equity and visibility
through excellent service and a variety of marketing and promotional campaigns.
We plan to continue to invest significant resources in our on-line marketing
programs, such as epaynews.com, an award-winning site for information and
trends related to e-payments in the e-commerce industry.

Trintech Products

   Our products are designed to provide flexible, vendor neutral, secure e-
payment solutions for banks, financial transaction processors, merchants,
businesses and cardholders. Our products can be deployed on a standalone basis,
or combined with each other to provide an end-to-end secure e-payment solution
or integrated with third party products. In addition, our products support a
broad range of communication protocols and security standards. Our products
also support multiple currencies, languages and payment protocols. In
connection with the license of our products, we provide a range of support
services to our customers including preventive maintenance, compliance,
upgrades, site inspections and 24-hour telephone and on-line support.

   The following table summarizes our product lines, product functionality and
the end-users of our products:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                       Product
  Product Line      Functionality       End-user      End-user Profile    End-user Need
  ------------      -------------       --------      ----------------    -------------
<S>               <C>               <C>               <C>               <C>
    PayGate       Captures,         Banks, financial  Any business      Pay merchants
                  authorizes,       transaction       that processes    and bill
                  settles and       processors,       and settles       cardholders
                  bills payment     Internet or       payment card      while minimizing
                  card              commerce service  based             fraud and
                  transactions and  providers         transactions or   transaction
                  issues on-line                      issues on-line    costs in the
                  payment cards                       payment cards     physical world
                                                                        and over the
                                                                        Internet

    PayWare       Enables           Merchants         Any business      Receive payment
    Compact       merchants to                        selling goods or  for goods or
                  capture payment                     services that     services in a
                  card and                            accepts payment   secure,
                  transaction                         cards             guaranteed form
                  information from                                      with minimal
                  cardholders, and                                      fraud over
                  send this                                             multiple
                  information to                                        channels,
                  the merchant's                                        including
                  bank for payment                                      physical retail
                  processing                                            outlets and over
                                                                        the Internet

     EzCard       Enables           Cardholders       On-line           Pay for goods or
   NetWallet      cardholders to                      purchasers        services with
                  securely pass                                         payment cards in
                  details of their                                      a secure manner
                  payment cards to                                      over the
                  merchants over                                        Internet
                  the Internet
</TABLE>

Bank and Financial Transaction Processor Products: PayGate

   PayGate is an e-payment transaction software suite primarily used by banks
and financial transaction processors. PayGate supports the payment card
transaction processing needs for

                                       42
<PAGE>

both the merchant's bank and the cardholder's bank. It uses a scalable and
interoperable payment architecture for Windows NT and UNIX platforms and
supports modular payment components for specific financial instruments and
operating environments. This product provides financial transaction processors
and banks with the ability both to issue on-line payment cards and to capture
and process card-based e-payment transactions in both the physical world and
over the Internet. The PayGate product line is designed to interface with
third-party products, including many banks' mainframe systems. The following
are the principal products in the PayGate product suite:

  .  PayGate Acquirer provides e-payment processing capabilities. PayGate
     Acquirer consists of a suite of payment modules that can be purchased
     individually or as part of an integrated suite. It provides banks and
     financial transaction processors with the functionality required to
     capture, authorize, settle and bill payment card transactions. PayGate
     Acquirer was first released in May 1995. Core capabilities include:

    -- transaction authorization functionality using a choice of protocols,
       including certified interfaces to the VISA, MasterCard and EuroPay
       networks, as well as a majority of the proprietary bank networks

    -- data capture functionality using a choice of protocols, including
       enhanced data formats for applications such as fuel and fleet card,
       corporate and purchase card item detail, and loyalty schemes

    -- automatic detection of the SSL and SET standards

    -- smart card PoS device management, allowing the downloading of funds,
       personal identification number verification and data capture for
       off-line electronic purse transactions

    -- remote deployment, update and configuration of merchant applications

  .  PayGate NetIssuer is designed to support the needs of payment card
     issuers by enabling the distribution and management of electronic
     payment cards and wallets. PayGate NetIssuer was first released in April
     1999. PayGate NetIssuer provides the following functionality:

    -- it can be deployed in a variety of configurations, with the majority
       of the functionality residing on a bank's or financial transaction
       processor's server or in a distributed manner with functionality
       residing on a client's personal computer or within a smart card

    -- it helps to reinforce the brand identity of the issuing bank by
       providing dynamic delivery of up-to-date marketing and advertising
       messages to issued wallets while the wallets are being used

    -- it interacts with existing bank certificate authorities to pre-
       generate authentication certificates while simultaneously supporting
       SSL and SET payment options

   Sales prices for PayGate licenses range from $50,000 to $500,000, depending
on the product licensed, the number of modules and the number of transactions
that can be processed.

Merchant Products: PayWare and Electronic PoS Systems

 Payware

   PayWare is an e-payment transaction software suite primarily used by
merchants. It can be deployed as a standalone merchant e-payment system or can
be integrated with third-party

                                       43
<PAGE>

products. PayWare consists of a suite of payment modules that can be purchased
individually or as part of an integrated suite. It offers a range of modules
designed to meet merchant requirements for e-commerce over the Internet or in a
variety of retail environments in the physical world, including large
department stores, grocery chains, call centers, mail order and telephone
order. PayWare runs on multiple computing platforms, including the following:
computers running on Windows and UNIX operating systems located in merchant
businesses and call centers; third-party PoS systems, such as electronic cash
registers; and our own electronic PoS system products. For e-commerce
transactions over the Internet, PayWare processes secure e-payment transactions
using SSL or SET standards or a combination of both. We recently introduced
PayWare ERP, our enterprise product that operates seamlessly with SAP's R/3
enterprise resource planning system.

   Our Payware suite of products includes:

  .  PayWare Net is our primary e-commerce solution for Internet merchants.
     It supports SSL and SET payment options. It is designed to interoperate
     with commerce servers from Microsoft, Intershop and other third-parties.
     We released PayWare Net in December 1998.

  .  PayWare NetHost is an e-commerce solution for Internet service
     providers, commerce service providers and portals that provide hosting
     services for Internet merchants. PayWare NetHost is designed to enable
     these providers to manage e-payment transactions for multiple merchants
     and to provide browser-based, remote administration facilities for
     hosted merchants. We released PayWare NetHost in May 1999.

  .  PayWare SmartCard supports a variety of smart card-based payment options
     for merchants. These payment options include small-value purchases over
     the Internet and digital certificate-based identification and
     authentication. We released PayWare SmartCard in June 1998.

  .  PayWare PurchaseCard is our business-to-business e-payment solution.
     PayWare PurchaseCard allows businesses to define and implement corporate
     purchase card policies and guidelines. This can significantly reduce the
     administration cost of low-value procurement transactions. We released
     PayWare PurchaseCard in April 1999.

  .  PayWare ERP seamlessly integrates our e-payment merchant functionality
     into the SAP R/3 system for physical world and e-commerce payment card
     transactions. We released PayWare ERP in September 1998.

  .  PayWare Call Center is our e-payment solution for call centers and mail
     order centers. It is designed to integrate with third party software
     systems and provide the e-payment functionality for telephone order and
     mail order purchases. We released PayWare Call Center in March 1998.

   Sales prices for PayWare licenses range from $500 to $250,000, depending on
the product licensed, the number of modules and the number of transactions that
can be processed.

 Electronic PoS systems

   Our electronic PoS system product line, Compact, contains the features and
functions required by merchants to manage card-based e-payments in the physical
world. The Compact product line is comprised of point of sale devices, high-
security personal identification number pads, and a software development
toolkit for merchant e-payment transactions in the physical world. This product
line has historically been the foundation of our sales and long-term
relationships with banks and financial transaction processors.

                                       44
<PAGE>

  .  Compact 9000i is a range of card acceptance PoS devices for merchants to
     process payment card transactions, including smart card transactions, in
     large department stores, grocery chains, restaurants, hotels and service
     businesses. These countertop devices deliver e-payment transactions in a
     secure electronic format to the payment networks for authorization and
     data capture for onward settlement. The software configurations of these
     products are modular and can be varied to meet the needs of a wide range
     of merchants. We recently introduced the eVia 2000 which provides secure
     payment mobility for merchants through the use of wireless standards,
     including DECT and GSM, and IP-Protocols. We released our first
     electronic PoS device in October 1989.

  .  Compact 950-PP is a high security cardholder interface device for a
     cardholder using a debit or credit card to enter his personal
     identification number. This product then encrypts the personal
     identification number for forwarding in a secure message format to an
     authorization center for verification. The Compact 950-PP contains alarm
     security electronics to prevent unauthorized access to customer card and
     personal identification number data. It is also used for viewing and
     deducting value from smart cards. Secure payment applications and
     payment encryption keys can be securely and remotely downloaded to the
     device. This product supports DES, Triple DES and RSA public key
     encryption standards. We released the Compact 950-PP in February 1997.

  .  Compact 9000i SDK is a software development toolkit that allows our
     distributors and partners in local markets to develop and test diverse
     software modules for custom-tailored payment card applications. The SDK
     includes a license for foundation software libraries, development and
     test tools, as well as documentation. We released the Compact 9000i SDK
     in March 1999.

   Compact PoS devices and pin pads range from $325 each to $750 each,
depending on the functionality and the software modules included. Licenses of
the software development toolkit commence at approximately $50,000.

Cardholder Products: EzCard and NetWallet

   EzCard is an e-payment transaction software product primarily used by on-
line cardholders. It provides secure storage and transfer of payment data to
the merchant. It also manages card accounts, digital certificates, delivery
address information and purchase history details. EzCard complies with the new
electronic commerce modeling language standard, developed by companies
including Visa, MasterCard, Trintech, Microsoft and America-On-Line, and,
supports both SSL and SET payment options. This product automatically completes
the merchants' purchasing data web page for merchants that comply with this new
standard. EzCard also allows payment card issuers to perform risk management by
monitoring on-line purchases and managing fraudulent card activity. In
addition, payment card issuers can advertise and market directly to EzCard
holders through PayGate NetIssuer, which manages messages to and from the
EzCard. Payment card issuers can also create on-line branding through
customizing EzCards for their customers. To promote the use of payment cards
for e-commerce, we have in the past and intend to continue to distribute EzCard
bundled with PayGate NetIssuer. We released EzCard in July 1999.

   NetWallet is the precursor to our EzCard product. We released NetWallet in
October 1998 to promote the use of payment cards for e-commerce. Historically,
we have distributed NetWallet on a standalone basis at a minimal charge or
bundled with PayGate NetIssuer.

                                       45
<PAGE>

Services

   To complement and support our product offerings, we provide our customers
with the following services:

  .  Consulting services. Our consulting team provides comprehensive project
     management, using sophisticated methodologies and tools to identify
     customers' business objectives and requirements for e-payment solutions.
     We implement these solutions with our customers according to mutually
     agreed plans and milestones. We also provide in-house product
     consultation, and provide technical services to design or enhance our
     customers' existing information technology infrastructure.

  .  Educational and training services. We offer educational and training
     programs targeted specifically at users and administrators of our
     customers' information technology systems. These programs are tailored
     to provide customers with the technical knowledge to operate our e-
     payment solutions. Additionally, seminars and other educational
     initiatives are available on an ongoing basis to assist our customers in
     staying current with advances in the e-payment industry.

  .  Customization and implementation services. We provide customization
     services to customize or configure our solutions to meet our customers'
     particular needs and to integrate our products into their other
     processing, accounting and communications systems. Our experienced
     professional services engineers also perform on-site implementation
     services to manage, in conjunction with our customers' information
     technology resources, the implementation of their new systems through
     the testing and acceptance phases of the overall implementation plan.

Technology

   Our software solutions incorporate advanced technologies to address user
requirements in today's highly distributed networking environments. Our
products support high volumes of transactions. Our recently released e-payment
software products are browser based to take advantage of client operating
system portability.

   Our software is developed using C, C++, Java and web programming languages
and standards, and incorporates the following features:

  .  System Architecture. Our products are modular in design and flexible in
     implementation, so that they can be rapidly adapted to address specific
     customer requirements. We employ an object oriented systems
     architecture, allowing us to add and re-use functionality across
     existing and new products, lowering our product development costs. Our
     modular design can improve our time to market for new products,
     including emerging applications for products such as personal digital
     assistants, advanced mobile telephones and set top boxes.

  .  Security and encryption. Due to the sensitive nature of the data handled
     by our products, we have developed significant expertise in encryption
     technology. We employ a dedicated team of cryptography specialists who
     focus on the development of advanced cryptography algorithms and
     software products. This team includes nine professionals with doctorate
     degrees in mathematics, physics or related fields. These professionals
     are responsible for implementing the security infrastructure that forms
     the basis of our products. This infrastructure incorporates advanced
     security algorithms including DES, Triple DES and RSA private/public key
     and other advanced proprietary algorithms.

                                       46
<PAGE>

  .  Protocols and infrastructure. It is critical that our products be
     interoperable with a wide range of payment networks and customer
     information technology systems. Our products therefore feature advanced
     application programming interfaces, or APIs, to facilitate
     interoperability with payment systems and applications. Our products
     also support a variety of communications protocols, including Internet
     and telecommunications protocols such as X.25, ISDN and ATM, as well as
     specific bank authorization and settlement protocols.

  .  Support of widely accepted technologies. Our products are configured to
     run on operating systems and to support databases widely adopted by the
     e-payment industry. This includes the Windows and UNIX operating
     systems. They are also designed to integrate easily with enterprise
     resource planning software systems, such as the SAP R/3 system.

Customers

   We have a customer base of over 100 banks, financial transaction processors,
card associations, card companies, Internet service providers and technology
companies. As of January 31, 2000, we had shipped over 60,000 electronic PoS
systems and over 5,000 licenses of secure e-payment software. A representative
sample of our customers is as follows:


 Banks, Card Associations and Card Companies   Financial Transaction Processors
 -------------------------------------------   --------------------------------
     Bank of Ireland                              Allcash
     Boland Bank                                  B+S Card Services
     S-E Banken                                   EasyCash
     MasterCard                                   GRK
     VISA International                           Lufthansa Air Plus Card
     Discover Financial Services                  Services
     VISA USA                                     Post Girot
                                                  Which/Tyco International

  Internet Service Providers                    Technology Companies
  --------------------------                    --------------------
     Big Planet                                     Cap Gemini
     Open Market Inc.                               Galileo
     [email protected] (a subsidiary of Deutsche Bank)    SAP
     Fort Nocs                                      Siemens


Sales and Marketing

   Our sales and marketing efforts are targeted at three principal regions:

     .  Europe, Middle East and Africa,

     .  North and South America, and

     .  the Asia-Pacific region

   Our principal market is Germany, which represented 60% of our total revenue
in fiscal 2000. Our sales strategy is to use our direct sales force in
conjunction with indirect distribution channels such as regional distributors
and co-marketing relationships with established leaders in the e-payment
industry. In Europe, we plan to continue to market our electronic PoS systems
and e-payment software through our direct sales force and strategic
partnerships. Consistent with our historical strategy, we plan to continue to
focus our electronic PoS systems marketing in Europe, primarily in Germany. In
North and South America, we intend to

                                       47
<PAGE>

continue to use a direct sales approach together with alliances and
partnerships to develop this market for our Internet software products. In the
Asia-Pacific region, we plan to continue to rely primarily on independent
distributors to market our Internet software products.

 Direct Sales Channel

   We have direct sales offices in Dublin, Ireland; Frankfurt, Germany; San
Mateo, California and Miami, Florida. We also have a direct sales and product
marketing office in Austin, Texas. These offices coordinate direct sales and
manage indirect sales channels in the various regions. Due to the technical
nature of our products, members of the direct sales force are accompanied by
pre-sales technical support staff who are key to closing sales contracts and
winning customer confidence.

   Our direct sales accounted for approximately 96% of our total revenues in
fiscal 2000. At January 31, 2000, we employed 27 direct sales people who
primarily target card associations and card companies such as VISA, MasterCard,
Discover and American Express, as well as banks, financial transaction
processors and large merchants. Our direct sales group has also begun to target
Internet service providers and commerce service providers as customers of our
Internet software products.

 Indirect Sales Channel Strategy

   To further facilitate worldwide market penetration and complement our direct
sales efforts, we have begun to establish a range of indirect sales channels.
We expect these indirect channels to account for an increasing percentage of
our total revenue as we implement this strategy and e-commerce becomes more
widely adopted. These indirect channels include:

  .  Resellers Providing Additional Services. Since 1998, we have used
     regional resellers trained and certified by us to develop customer
     relationships and expand our global branding. We provide resellers such
     as Prism in South Africa and Scopus Tecnologia in Brazil with our
     software technology and implementation expertise.

  .  Systems Integrators and Consultants. We leverage our relationships with
     systems integrators and consultants to market our e-payment solutions
     while in turn providing them with the opportunity to make a highly
     functional, vendor-independent solution available to their customers.

  .  Emerging Distribution Channels. We continually evaluate new methods and
     opportunities to market and sell our products, including through on-line
     Internet sales or branding opportunities with banks and other financial
     institutions.

Strategic Relationships

   We intend to expand our position in the e-payment market by forming
additional strategic technology and marketing relationships with key industry
players. To date, we have established strategic relationships with VISA,
MasterCard, RSA Security, Compaq, SAP and Intershop. We believe our technology
and marketing alliances offer us a number of competitive advantages, which vary
with each relationship. These advantages include sales lead generation, early
access to the partner's engineering plans and technical personnel for
assistance in developing new product offerings. The following describes our
current strategic relationships:

   VISA. We initially developed a strategic relationship with VISA
International in Europe and have since extended this relationship to the United
States, Latin America and the Asia-Pacific region. VISA currently markets
PayWare Net in different regions throughout the world.

                                       48
<PAGE>

In addition, VISA exclusively recommends our PayGate software to replace its
proprietary data capture software used by over 30 of its member banks. In
August 1997, we entered into agreements with VISA LAC relating to the marketing
and distribution of NetWallet in Latin America, including the customization of
software to provide e-payment solutions for VISA's smart card customers. In
August 1998, VISA International became a shareholder in us. In May 1999, VISA
USA entered into a strategic alliance with us to provide one-stop e-commerce
solutions for VISA's member banks and Internet merchants, incorporating our
PayWare and PayGate technology.

   MasterCard. In 1999, we entered into a technology and strategic alliance
agreement with MasterCard International. Under the terms of this agreement,
MasterCard has agreed to license our PayGate NetIssuer product, to host and
operate a pilot site demonstrating PayGate NetIssuer, and to actively market
this product to MasterCard's member financial institutions and refer business
to us. We have agreed to provide sales materials to MasterCard and to provide
support for their marketing programs for PayGate NetIssuer. In addition, we and
MasterCard have jointly agreed to publicize this relationship, to maintain
links in a prominent position on each other's websites and to meet quarterly to
discuss product development.

   RSA Security. In 1998, we entered into a technology license agreement with
RSA and also established a continuing strategic relationship. The technology
licensing agreement provides us with royalty-free access to source and object
code for cryptography functionality that we have incorporated into our e-
payment software products. In addition, we and RSA have entered into a joint
marketing agreement to publicize the relationship and encourage the sales of
our products that incorporate RSA's cryptographic technology. RSA also provides
us with sales leads and a link on their web site. RSA has made a strategic
equity investment in us, and its vice chairman sits on our board of directors.

   Compaq. We are collaborating with Compaq to develop and provide Compaq and
its customers a secure e-payment software module that integrates with Compaq's
ActiveAnswers Internet solution, a product targeted to e-commerce needs. This
module is being designed to include the functionality of PayGate and PayWare.
Upon completion, our module will offer Compaq's customers with highly reliable,
secure Internet e-payment functionality running on Compaq ProLiant and
AlphaServer platforms.

   SAP. We are a member of the SAP's complementary software program. As part of
the alliance, we have provided a secure e-payment module, PayWare ERP, for the
SAP R/3 system release 4.0 enterprise business software solution. SAP also
provides us with sales leads and a link on their web site.

   Intershop. We work with Intershop to integrate our PayWare Net e-payment
product with Intershop's merchant server solutions to jointly provide complete
payment and hosting solutions to on-line merchants offering goods and services
on the Internet using SSL or SET security standards. Our enhanced version of
PayWare Net supports multiple currencies and payment types, complementing
Intershop's technology.

Research and Development

   We believe that our future success will depend in large part on our ability
to enhance and expand our technologies. We intend to continue to develop new
and innovative e-payment solutions to respond to the needs of our customers in
this rapidly changing industry. We intend to offer products that interoperate
with a variety of new and emerging acceptance channels and communication and
security protocols. We have developed our e-payment products both
independently, through our research and development team, and through

                                       49
<PAGE>

funded development projects, such as the development of certain modules of
PayWare SmartCard for VISA International. From time to time, we have acquired
or licensed technology from third parties, including encryption technology from
RSA Security.

   Each of our development centers has been chosen for its combination of
access to global markets and the availability of skilled personnel. The
following lists our research and development centers and their primary
concentration:

     .  Dublin, Ireland: Electronic PoS systems and e-payment software

     .  Princeton, New Jersey: Encryption and authentication

     .  San Mateo, California: E-commerce payment solutions

     .  Frankfurt, Germany: Smart card applications

   As of Feburary 29, 2000 we had a total of 161 employees dedicated to
research and development. Research and development expenses were $1.7 million
in fiscal 1998, $3.7 million in fiscal 1999 and $8.9 million in fiscal 2000.

Manufacturing

   We outsource the fabrication, testing and packaging of our electronic PoS
system products to Keltek and Fujitsu, enabling us to concentrate our resources
on product design and software development. We believe this eliminates the high
cost of owning and operating a manufacturing facility. The manufacturing
facilities for Keltek are located in the United Kingdom and for Fujitsu are
located in Ireland.

   We maintain a five-person quality control team that oversees the manufacture
of the products by Keltek and Fujitsu to ensure that our specifications are
met. These quality assurance engineers have both extensive knowledge of our
products and expertise in software quality assurance techniques. Members of the
team conduct on-site inspections of the manufacturing facilities of our
subcontractors as well as periodic assessments of products shipped by our
subcontractors to us. The members also participate on all beta release teams
and provide initial training materials for customer support and service.

Competition

   The card based e-payment industry is highly competitive, and we expect
competition to increase as other e-payment companies introduce electronic PoS
system products and e-payment software. In the electronic PoS systems market,
we principally compete with Verifone, a subsidiary of Hewlett-Packard, Giesecke
& Devrient, Dassault, Hypercom and Ingenico. Indirectly, we also compete with
local firms that offer country-specific alternatives. In addition, several of
our electronic PoS system products compete with software solutions designed by
our customers' in-house engineering departments. Competition has in the past
caused us to reduce the average selling prices of our electronic PoS systems,
and we expect this trend to continue.

   In the e-payment software market for payment card transactions in the
physical world, we principally compete with Verifone, CyberCash and Transaction
Systems Architects. In the e-payment software market for payment card
transactions over the Internet, we principally compete with IBM, Verifone,
GlobeSet and CyberCash. Additionally, we experience significant competition
from existing and potential customers that develop, implement and maintain
their own proprietary e-payment solutions relating to our e-payment software
solutions for both the physical world and the Internet. These existing and
potential customers are primarily banks, financial transaction processors and
merchants.

                                       50
<PAGE>

   In each of the electronic PoS systems and e-payment software markets, we
compete primarily on the basis of the following factors:

     .  product capabilities and technical features

     .  product performance and effectiveness

     .  price

     .  support of industry standards

     .  ease of use

     .  customer technical support and service

   We believe that we compete favorably in each of these markets based on these
factors. However, in particular cases, our competitors may offer electronic PoS
system products or e-payment software with functionality that is sought by our
prospective customers and which differs from that offered by us. Several of our
competitors have also in the past, and may in the future, distribute products
in pilot programs at low-cost or below-market prices or, in the case of
electronic wallets, at no cost.

   Additionally, several of our competitors have significantly greater
financial, technical and marketing resources and larger installed customer
bases than us. Also, a number of our competitors have been acquired by, or
formed strategic alliances with, industry leaders with significant resources.
We may not be able to compete successfully against current and future
competitors. In addition, our current and future competitors may develop
products comparable or superior to those developed by us or adapt more quickly
than us to new technologies, evolving industry standards or customer
requirements. Increased competition could result in price reductions, reduced
margins and loss of market share, any or all of which could have a material
adverse effect on our business, financial condition, results of operations and
prospects.

Intellectual Property and Proprietary Rights

   Our success is dependent on our proprietary software technology. We rely on
a combination of patents, contractual rights, trade secrets, copyright law,
non-disclosure agreements and trademarks to establish and protect our
proprietary rights in our products and technologies. Our patents include the
following:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
    Field of Application             Regions Issued                Regions Pending
    --------------------             --------------                ---------------
<S>                           <C>                           <C>
                                 Ireland, U.S., Canada,     European Union, Ireland,
Electronic field of point-             Australia,           U.S., Australia, Brazil, and
 of-sale security system        South Africa, U.K., Japan   Japan
 incorporated in Compact               and Germany

Secure merchant transaction              Ireland            European Union, U.S.,
 software incorporated in                                   Australia, Brazil, and Japan
 PayWare

Secure bank/financial                    Ireland            European Union, U.S.,
 transaction processor                                      Australia, Brazil, and Japan
 software incorporated in
 PayGate

Secure card issuing software               --               European Union and U.S.
 incorporated in PayGate
 NetIssuer
</TABLE>

   These issued patents and the pending patent applications cover key areas of
our e-payment software for payment card transactions in the physical world and
over the Internet, as well as our electronic PoS system products.


                                       51
<PAGE>

   Our registered trademarks include the following:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
         Trademark                   Regions Issued                Regions Pending
         ---------                   --------------                ---------------
<S>                           <C>                           <C>
Trintech logo                              --               Ireland

Trintech the Secure Way to                 --               Ireland
 Pay logo

NetWallet                                  --               United States

                                 European Union, United     --
PayWare                                  States

                                 European Union, United     Ireland
PayGate                                  States

PayPurse                         European Union, Ireland    United States

PayLet                                     --               United States, Ireland

S/PAY                                      --               United States
</TABLE>

   On March 31, 1998, we licensed the source code for S/PAY and J/PAY from RSA.
S/PAY and J/PAY are security toolkit products which enable the user to add
cryptography functionality to other software products for securing e-payment
transactions. The license is exclusive for that portion of the source code that
implemented and provided the functionality of parts of the SET 0.0 standard.
Under the terms of the agreement, we also received a royalty-free sublicensable
license to the object code of the licensed software. Our rights under the
license are subject to pre-existing rights of third-party licensees. In
exchange for receiving the rights under the license, we paid RSA a one-time
payment of $2.5 million in cash.

   In addition to our patents, trademarks and technology licenses, we have
developed a significant portfolio of copyrights, know-how and trade secrets
during our 13 years of experience developing solutions for the e-payment
industry.

   Except for the intellectual property described above, we are not currently
dependent on any intellectual property that is of material importance to our
business or profitability.

Employees

   We employed the following numbers of employees as of January 31, 1998, 1999
and 2000:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                  As of January
                                                                       31,
                                                                  --------------
     Category                                                     1998 1999 2000
     --------                                                     ---- ---- ----
     <S>                                                          <C>  <C>  <C>
     Research and development....................................  63  103  155
     Professional and support services...........................  19   39   35
     Sales and marketing.........................................  13   46   54
     Administration..............................................  23   34   42
                                                                  ---  ---  ---
       Total..................................................... 118  222  286
                                                                  ===  ===  ===
</TABLE>

   Of our total number of employees, as of January 31, 2000, 156 are located in
Ireland, 32 are located in Europe outside Ireland and 98 are located in North
America.

   None of our employees are represented under collective bargaining
agreements. We have never experienced a work stoppage, and we believe that our
relations with our employees are good.

                                       52
<PAGE>

Investments

   Our investments were as follows as of January 31, 1998, 1999 and 2000:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                             As of January 31,
                                                             ------------------
                                                             1998  1999   2000
                                                             ---- ------ ------
                                                              (in thousands of
                                                               U.S. dollars)
<S>                                                          <C>  <C>    <C>
Intangible assets--Capitalized software cost................ $--  $2,500 $1,250
Property, plant and equipment...............................  739  2,058  3,190
                                                             ---- ------ ------
  Total..................................................... $739 $4,558 $4,440
                                                             ==== ====== ======
</TABLE>

   Our capital expenditure budget for fiscal 2001 is currently $3.0 million of
which approximately $206,000 has been used as of February 29, 2000. The amount
that we actually spend on capital expenditures in the remainder of fiscal 2001
may be higher or lower, perhaps materially, depending on several variables,
including the rate of our growth, general economic conditions and changes in
our markets.

Facilities

   Our principal development center and our principal European executive and
administrative offices are located in a 22,500 square foot leased office
facility in Dublin, Ireland. Our principal executive and administrative offices
for North and South America are located in a 11,300 square foot leased facility
in San Mateo, California. We also have offices for development, sales and
marketing personnel which total an aggregate of approximately 11,700 square
feet in Frankfurt, Germany; Miami, Florida; Austin, Texas; and Princeton, New
Jersey.

Legal Proceedings

   From time to time, we may become involved in various lawsuits and legal
proceedings which arise in the ordinary course of business. For example, in
September 1999, a former employee filed a complaint against us alleging
wrongful termination and breach of contract. While we believe this claim is
without merit, we cannot predict the outcome of this dispute. Neither we nor
any of our consolidated subsidiaries are a party to any litigation or
arbitration proceedings which could have, or during the last two fiscal years
has had, a material adverse effect on our business, financial condition and
results of operations.

Corporate Structure

   We were incorporated as a limited liability company under the laws of the
Republic of Ireland in 1987. Our registered number is 119798. On August 23,
1999, our shareholders resolved by special resolution to re-register us as a
public limited company. We are not subject to any restrictions on the length of
time for which we can continue to exist. Public limited companies are defined
by the Irish Companies (Amendment) Act, 1983 as companies which are limited by
shares, which state in their memorandum of association that they are to be
public and which comply with the requirements of the Irish companies acts as to
registration. Additionally, the share capital of a public limited company
stated in the company's memorandum of association cannot be less than
IR(Pounds)30,000. Our principal statutory objective is to carry on the business
of investment and to act as a holding company for our other businesses and
companies.

                                       53
<PAGE>

   We have illustrated below our corporate structure including our voting
equity ownership percentages in each of our subsidiaries:

[GRAPHIC OF CORPORATE STRUCTURE OF TRINTECH SETTING FORTH THE NAMES OF TRINTECH
  AND ITS WHOLLY-OWNED SUBSIDIARIES AS WELL AS THE COUNTRIES IN WHICH EACH IS
                                   ORGANIZED]

   The following is a list and brief description of our significant
subsidiaries:

   Trintech Technologies Limited, a wholly-owned subsidiary, is a limited
liability company having a share capital incorporated under the laws of the
Republic of Ireland. Its registered address is Trintech Building, South County
Business Park, Leopardstown, Dublin 18, Ireland. The principal activity of
Trintech Technologies Limited is the sale of electronic PoS system products and
e-payment software. As of January 31, 2000, Trintech Technologies Limited had
158 employees. For fiscal 2000, Trintech Technologies Limited had revenues of
approximately $20.6 million and a net loss of approximately $13.1 million. As
of January 31, 2000, Trintech Technologies Limited's subscribed share capital
was $528,632. As of January 31, 2000, our net book value of our interest in
Trintech Technologies Limited was ($20,505,631), our receivables from Trintech
Technologies Limited was $22,793,327 and our liabilities to Trintech
Technologies Limited was $0.

   Trintech Limited is a limited liability company having a share capital
incorporated under the laws of the Republic of Ireland. Its registered address
is Trintech Building, South County Business Park, Leopardstown, Dublin 18,
Ireland. All of the voting securities of Trintech Limited are owned by us.
Trintech Limited has issued shares of a special non-voting class to Huttoft
Company, an unlimited liability company owned by four of our executive
officers. The shares held by Huttoft Company do not entitle it to any share of
the assets of Trintech Limited on a winding up. The amount of any dividends
paid to Huttoft Company will be determined by our board of directors. The
principal activity of Trintech Limited is research and development. Trintech
Limited subcontracts research and development employees from Trintech
Technologies Limited to conduct its research and development programs. For
fiscal 2000, Trintech Limited had revenues of approximately $2.3 million and a
net income of approximately $1.3 million. As of January 31, 2000 Trintech
Limited's subscribed share capital was $2,319. As of January 31, 2000, our net
book value of our interest in Trintech Limited was $3,913,354, our receivables
from Trintech Limited was $0 and our liabilities to Trintech Limited was
$199,560.

   Trintech GmbH, a wholly-owned subsidiary, is a limited liability company
incorporated in the Federal Republic of Germany. Its registered address is
Siemensstrasse 20, 63263 Neu Isenburg, Germany. The principal activity of
Trintech GmbH is the sale of electronic PoS system products and e-payment
software. As of January 31, 2000, Trintech GmbH had 30 employees. For fiscal
2000, Trintech GmbH had revenues of approximately $18.0 million and a net
income of approximately $0.4 million. As of January 31, 2000, Trintech GmbH's
share capital was $23,329. As of January 31, 2000, our net book value of our
interest in

                                       54
<PAGE>

Trintech GmbH was ($183,453), our receivables from Trintech GmbH were $707,169
and our liabilities to Trintech GmbH were $0.

   Trintech Inc., a wholly-owned subsidiary, is a California corporation. Its
registered address is 2105 South Bascom Avenue, Campbell, California, 95008.
The principal activity of Trintech Inc. is the sale of e-commerce software. As
of January 31, 2000, Trintech Inc. had 98 employees. For fiscal 2000, Trintech
Inc. had revenues of approximately $12.5 million and a net income of
approximately $0. As of January 31, 2000, Trintech Inc.'s subscribed share
capital was $10,000. As of January 31, 2000, the net book value of our interest
in Trintech Inc. was ($2,650,191), our receivables from Trintech Inc. was $0
and our liabilities to Trintech Inc. was $2,213.

Enforcement of Civil Liabilities under United States Federal Securities Laws

   We are a public limited company incorporated under the laws of the Republic
of Ireland. Several of our directors and officers, and experts named in this
prospectus are non-residents of the United States, and these persons and a
significant portion of our assets are located outside the United States. As a
result, it may not be possible for investors to effect service of process
within the United States upon these persons or to enforce against them in U.S.
courts judgments predicated upon the civil liability provisions of the laws of
the United States, including the federal securities laws. We have been advised
by A&L Goodbody, Solicitors, our Irish corporate counsel, that there is doubt
regarding the enforceability against these persons in the Republic of Ireland,
whether in original actions or in actions for the enforcement of judgments in
U.S. courts, of civil liabilities predicated solely upon the laws of the United
States, including the federal securities laws.

                                       55
<PAGE>

                                   MANAGEMENT

Executive Officers and Directors

   The following table presents information regarding our directors and
executive officers as of April 12, 2000:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
             Name            Age                     Position
             ----            --- -------------------------------------------------
   <S>                       <C> <C>
   Executive Directors
     John F. McGuire.......   38 Chief Executive Officer and Director
     Cyril P. McGuire......   40 Executive Chairman and Director(1)
     Kevin C. Shea.........   49 Chief Operating Officer and Director
     R. Paul Byrne.........   35 Chief Financial Officer and Director
     Chris P. Meehan.......   40 Executive Vice President, Operations and Director
   Non-executive Directors
     D. James Bidzos.......   45 Director
     Wolfgang H. Heinrich..   51 Director(1)(2)
     Robert M. Wadsworth...   39 Director(1)(2)
     Trevor D. Sullivan....   63 Director
   Other Executive Officers
     George L. Burne.......   37 Vice President, Technology
     John Harte............   55 Executive Vice President, Sales and Marketing
     Donald Marcotte.......   43 Vice President, Sales
     Noel Ryan.............   34 Controller
</TABLE>
- --------
(1) Member of the Compensation Committee
(2) Member of the Audit Committee

   John F. McGuire, one of our co-founders, has served as a director since
1987, the year of our incorporation, and has been our chief executive officer
since 1987. During his studies at Trinity College, Dublin, Mr. McGuire
developed an encrypted electronic PoS device, which provided our original
business concept. Mr. McGuire has received a bachelors of arts in mathematics,
a bachelors of engineering in electronics and a diploma of business management
from Trinity College, Dublin. Mr. McGuire is a member of Institute of Engineers
of Ireland. Mr. McGuire currently resides in Dublin, Ireland.

   Cyril P. McGuire, one of our co-founders, has served as a director since
1987 and as our executive chairman since August 1999. From 1991 to August 1999,
Mr. McGuire served as our president, and from 1987 to 1991, Mr. McGuire served
as our managing director. Before co-founding us, Mr. McGuire worked with the
Industrial Credit Corporation plc, a leading Irish commercial bank, from 1982
to 1987, where his responsibilities included the appraisal of electronic
industry investment projects. Mr. McGuire received a bachelors of commerce and
masters of business studies from University College Dublin. Mr. McGuire is a
member of the Marketing Institute of Ireland. Mr. McGuire currently resides in
Dublin, Ireland.

   Kevin C. Shea has served as a director and Chief Operating Officer since
January 2000. Prior to joining us, Mr. Shea was Chief Financial Officer of
National Data Corporation from May 1998 to December 1999. Mr. Shea was
Executive Vice President of corporate strategy and business development from
June 1996 until May 1998 and was General Manager of the Integrated Payment
Systems division of National Data Corporation from 1992 to 1996. Prior to
joining National Data Corporation, he held senior executive positions at
Citicorp and First Interstate Bank Corporation. Mr. Shea received a bachelors
of social science from the State University of New York. Mr. Shea currently
resides in the United States.

                                       56
<PAGE>

   R. Paul Byrne has been our chief financial officer since January 1996. Since
February 1997, Mr. Byrne has also served as a director and secretary. Before
joining us, Mr. Byrne was group financial controller and publisher at Lafferty
Publications Limited, a publishing company located in Dublin, from September
1989 to December 1995. From 1985 through 1989, Mr. Byrne was an accountant with
Price Waterhouse, a large accounting firm. Mr. Byrne received a bachelors of
commerce and a diploma in professional accounting from University College
Dublin and is a fellow of the Institute of Chartered Accountants in Ireland.
Mr. Byrne currently resides in Dublin, Ireland.

   Chris P. Meehan has been our executive vice president, operations and a
director since January 1996. Before joining us, Mr. Meehan was group finance
director at Mentec Limited, a computer software company, from February 1983 to
December 1995. From 1979 through 1983, Mr. Meehan was an accountant with KPMG,
a large accounting firm. Mr. Meehan received a bachelors of commerce from
University College Dublin and is a fellow of the Institute of Chartered
Accountants in Ireland. Mr. Meehan currently resides in Dublin, Ireland.

   Trevor D. Sullivan has served as a director since 1990. From 1990 to August
1999, Mr. Sullivan was the chairman of our board of directors. From 1987 to
1990, Mr. Sullivan was managing director of Memorex Ireland, a computer
products company, and, from 1985 until 1987, Mr. Sullivan was vice president,
customer operations of Memorex International, a computer products company. From
1981 until 1985, Mr. Sullivan held other senior management positions at Memorex
International, a computer products company. Before 1981, Mr. Sullivan held
several senior management positions at IBM, a computer company. Mr. Sullivan
currently resides in Dublin, Ireland.

   D. James Bidzos has served as a director since February 1999. Since its
founding in April 1995, Mr. Bidzos has served as chairman of the board of
directors of VeriSign, Inc., a public key infrastructure company, and, from
April 1995 to July 1995, as its chief executive officer. Between 1986 and
February 1999, Mr. Bidzos also served as the president and chief executive
officer of RSA Security, Inc., a security encryption company. Additionally, Mr.
Bidzos is a director and vice chairman of RSA Securities, Inc., formerly
Security Dynamics Technologies, Inc., a data security company and the parent of
RSA.

   Wolfgang H. Heinrich has served as a director since June 1999. From February
2000 to date, he has served as president, EMEA region of Oasis Technology Ltd.
From 1997 to February 2000, he has served as executive vice president, global
customer support, Visa International, a card association company, and, from
1995 to 1997, he served as executive vice president in charge of developing
strategies for domestic processing, international standardization, chip
technology developments and electronic commerce infrastructure developments.
From 1990 to 1995, he served as managing director of B+S Card Service, a
payment card service provider. From 1985 to 1990, he served as head of the
Frankfurt branch and member of the executive team of IKOSS GmbH, Frankfurt, a
banking software company.

   Robert M. Wadsworth has served as a director since September 1998. Since
1986, Mr. Wadsworth has been a general partner of HarbourVest Partners LLC, a
private investment company. Before 1986, Mr. Wadsworth worked for Booz, Allen &
Hamilton, an international consulting company, specializing in the areas of
operations strategy and manufacturing productivity. Mr. Wadsworth currently
serves on the advisory boards of several US venture firms and on the board of
directors of Banyan Systems, Inc., Coil S.A., Communication Systems Technology,
Inc., Concord Communications, Inc., Nuera Communications, Inc. and Outsourcing
Services Group, Inc. Mr. Wadsworth received his bachelor of science degree,
magna cum laude, in systems engineering and computer science from the
University of Virginia, and his masters in business administration, with
distinction, from Harvard Business School.


                                       57
<PAGE>

   George L. Burne has been our vice president, technology since September
1989. Before joining us, Mr. Burne was a senior software design
engineer/project leader at PCAS, a European technology company, from September
1987 to September 1989. Mr. Burne received a bachelors of science in English,
first class honors and a higher diploma in English from Trinity College,
Dublin. Mr. Burne is a member of the Institute of Electrical Engineers.

   John M. Harte joined us in July 1999 as our executive vice president for
sales and marketing. From 1993 to 1999, Mr. Harte served as president and chief
executive officer of NeoVista Software Inc., a provider of data mining services
and a developer of solutions for knowledge discovery in databases. From 1987 to
1992, Mr. Harte held senior management positions in Alliant Computer Systems
Inc., a manufacturer of standards based parallel supercomputers. From 1989 to
1992, Mr. Harte served as vice president, worldwide sales, marketing and
services, and from 1987 to 1989 he served as president european operations.
Between 1987 and 1988, Mr. Harte held various sales and marketing positions in
Floating Point Systems Inc., a systems integration and software supplier. Mr.
Harte holds a bachelors of science in physics degree from Exeter University,
United Kingdom.

   Donald J. Marcotte joined us in January, 1999 and is our vice-president,
sales. Before joining us, Mr. Marcotte worked at Syncsort Inc., a maker of
client server performance software from 1990 until 1999. From 1995 through
1999, Mr. Marcotte served as Syncsort's director of North American sales. From
1990 through 1995, Mr. Marcotte was director for international operations where
he managed distributor operations. Mr. Marcotte also spent eleven years from
1979 to 1990 with Wang Laboratories, a computer services company, and IBM, a
computer company, where he held a number of management positions including
sales management. Mr. Marcotte received his bachelor in business administration
from the University of Notre Dame and his masters in business administration in
finance from Fordham University.

   Noel Ryan has served as our controller since March, 1999. From January 1997
until March 1999, Mr. Ryan was our management accountant. Before joining us,
Mr. Ryan was a senior financial analyst in Dataproducts, a subsidiary of the
Hitachi Corporation, Japan, from June 1990 until January 1997. Mr. Ryan has
received a bachelor of business studies from Dublin City University and is a
member of the Chartered Institute of Management Accountants.

   John McGuire and Cyril McGuire are brothers. There are no other family
relationships among any of our directors or executive officers.

Board of Directors

   Our decision-making responsibility is divided between our shareholders in
general meeting and our board of directors. Our shareholders are entitled to
determine the form of our memorandum and articles of association in the manner
provided under Irish law and our memorandum and articles of association. Our
shareholders have delegated the power to manage our day to day business to the
board of directors. However, our shareholders may subsequently amend our
articles of association by special resolution to reserve to themselves the
power to manage our day to day business. Alternatively, our shareholders may
change the composition of our board of directors.

   Our memorandum and articles of association authorize no fewer than three nor
more than fifteen directors. Our shareholders may, from time to time, increase
or reduce the number of directors by ordinary resolution. We presently have
nine directors.

                                       58
<PAGE>

   Generally, directors are elected by our shareholders at an annual general
meeting by ordinary resolution, a resolution adopted by a majority of the votes
cast on the resolution by our shareholders entitled to vote on the matter. Our
shareholders may also, by ordinary resolution, appoint persons at extraordinary
meetings to fill vacancies created by retirement or by the increasing of the
size of the board. Our shareholders may also determine the retirement rotation
for any additional directors. Additionally, our shareholders may by ordinary
resolution at any shareholders' meeting remove any director and appoint another
person in his place, subject to compliance with the relevant statutory and
notice provisions and to the rights of the removed director to compensation or
damages arising from the removal.

   Our directors may also, at any time and from time to time, appoint any
person to the board to fill a vacancy or as an additional director. Any
director so appointed will serve until the next annual general meeting of the
shareholders and will be subject to re-election by the shareholders at that
meeting.

   Our directors are subject to retirement by rotation. At each annual meeting
of the shareholders, one third of the directors, rounded down to the next whole
number if it is a fractional number, are required to retire from office. The
retiring directors are those who have been in office for the longest period of
time. Retirement for persons who became directors or were reappointed on the
same day is determined by lot, unless otherwise agreed. Any director who
retires at an annual meeting may be immediately reappointed by the
shareholders.

   Under our current board composition, two of our directors are required to
retire at each annual general meeting of the shareholders. John and Cyril
McGuire will be required to retire at our annual general meeting in 2000.
Messrs. Sullivan and Meehan will be required to retire at our annual general
meeting in 2001. Messrs. Byrne and Wadsworth will be required to retire at our
annual general meeting in 2002. Messrs. Heinrich and Bidzos will be required to
retire at our annual general meeting in 2003. Mr. Shea will be required to
retire at our annual general meeting in 2004. The number of directors obligated
to retire at any annual general meeting could change if we appoint additional
directors.

   A director must resign from office if he is required to do so under the
Irish Companies Acts or other applicable law, is adjudged bankrupt or makes any
arrangement or composition with his creditors generally, or in the opinion of a
majority of his co-directors, he becomes incapable by reason of mental disorder
of discharging his duties as a director, or not being a director holding for a
fixed term an executive office in his capacity as a director, he resigns his
office by notice to us. Additionally, a director must resign from office if he
becomes of unsound mind or is convicted of an indictable offense, unless the
other directors otherwise determine. Also, a director may resign upon written
notice or may be removed by the other directors if that director is absent from
meetings of the board, without permission of the directors, for more than six
months or for any other reason by notice in writing and signed by all the other
directors in the case of a director holding office for a fixed term, upon
expiration of the term or upon receipt by that director of a notice in writing
delivered to him by us automatically terminating his appointment, or if we or
that director serves a notice for termination or appointment by giving the
requisite notice under the terms of the agreement under which he was appointed,
upon the expiration of the requisite period of notice under that agreement.

Board Committees

   Our board of directors may delegate aspects of its responsibilities to
committees of the board. Our board of directors has established an audit
committee and a compensation committee. The audit committee oversees actions
taken by our independent auditors, recommends the engagement of auditors and
reviews our internal audits. The compensation

                                       59
<PAGE>

committee establishes compensation policies and is responsible for determining
cash and equity compensation for executive officers, including the granting of
options under our share option schemes.

Executive Officers

   Our executive officers are responsible for managing our day-to-day business.
Our executive officers are appointed by the board of directors on terms and for
periods determined by the board. Subject to any contractual obligations with an
officer, the board of directors may revoke any appointment at any time.

Directors and Executive Officers Compensation

   The aggregate compensation paid by us and our subsidiaries to our directors
and executive officers as a group of 13 persons in the year ended January 31,
2000 totaled $1,150,535. All of the $1,150,535 was paid by our subsidiaries.
Amounts paid include salary and pension, retirement and other similar benefits.

   We do not have any currently outstanding loans to any of our directors. In
addition, we do not currently have any outstanding guarantees for the benefit
of any of our directors.

Our Advisory Board

   In March 1999, we established an advisory board consisting of members from
the banking, smart card and Internet industries. The role of the advisory board
is to provide insight and consultation on industry developments and trends that
affect us. The members of the advisory board also provide us with valuable
international contacts and profile in the e-payment industry. The advisory
board has no corporate authority under our memorandum or articles of
association. The members of the advisory board are as follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
       Name                                                         Age Position
       ----                                                         --- --------
       <S>                                                          <C> <C>
       Edward Jensen...............................................  62 Chairman
       Robert Schneider............................................  51 Member
       Magdalena Yesil.............................................  41 Member
</TABLE>

   Edward Jensen has served as the chairman of our advisory board since May
1999. From 1994 until 1999, he was the president and chief executive officer of
Visa International, a card association. From 1974 until 1994, he held various
positions at US Bancorp. Mr. Jensen served as vice president of corporate
planning and development of US Bancorp from 1974 until 1991, as chief operating
officer from 1991 until 1993 and as vice-chairman from 1993 until 1994.

   Robert Schneider has served as a member of our advisory board since June
1999. Mr. Schneider founded SCM Microsystems, Inc., a provider of smart-card
products and technologies, as its president, chief executive officer, general
manager and chairman of the board in 1990. Mr. Schneider currently serves as
chairman of the board and managing director of SCM Microsystems GmbH, a German
subsidiary of SCM Microsystems, Inc. Mr. Schneider holds a degree in
engineering from HTBL Salzburg and a B.A. degree from Akademie for business
administration in Uberlingen.

   Magdalena Yesil has served as a member of our advisory board since June
1999. Since 1998, Ms. Yesil has been a general partner in U.S. Ventures, a
venture capital firm. From August 1996 until April 1997, Ms. Yesil was the
chief executive officer of MarketPay, an e-commerce software company, and from
1994 until August 1996, Ms. Yesil was a co-founder

                                       60
<PAGE>

and vice-president of marketing and technology of CyberCash, a software
company. Ms. Yesil has received a B.A. in engineering from Stanford University.

   We currently do not provide cash compensation to persons for their services
as members of our advisory board. However, each advisory board member is
granted an option to acquire up to 60,000 ordinary shares (120,000 equivalent
ADSs) under our directors and consultants share option scheme in return for
service which he provides as a member of the advisory board.

   We do not have any currently outstanding loans to any members of our
advisory board. In addition, we do not have any currently outstanding
guarantees for the benefit of any members of our advisory board.

Employment Agreements

   We have entered into indefinite term employment agreements with each of John
McGuire, Cyril McGuire, Christopher Meehan, R. Paul Byrne, John Harte and Kevin
Shea under which each receives an annual base salary, an annual bonus and all
standard benefits accorded our other executives. In addition, each of these
executives will be entitled to participate in and receive options from our
employee share option schemes.

Employee Benefit Plans

 Share Issue Limits under Our Plans

   The aggregate number of shares which may be issued pursuant to our employee
benefit plans is 5,000,000 ordinary shares (10,000,000 equivalent ADSs). For
each plan, the 5,000,000 ordinary share limit will be reduced by the number of
shares authorized for issuance in accordance with options granted or rights
acquired under the other plans. The aggregate share limit of 5,000,000 ordinary
shares can only be altered by an ordinary resolution approved by a majority of
our shareholders.

 Trintech Group Limited share option 1990 scheme

   In January 1990, we established the Trintech Group Limited share option 1990
scheme. The 1990 scheme was created for the benefit of our directors, executive
officers and employees as well as those of our subsidiaries which participated
in it. We terminated the 1990 scheme on October 22, 1997, and no further
options to acquire ordinary shares may be granted under it. As of January 31,
2000, there were no outstanding options to acquire ordinary shares under this
plan.

 Trintech Group Limited share option 1997 scheme

   We established the Trintech Group Limited share option 1997 scheme on May
28, 1997. The 1997 scheme was approved by our shareholders on November 21,
1997. The purpose of the 1997 scheme is to attract and retain the best
available personnel to promote the success of our business. We are required to
keep available sufficient authorized but unissued shares to satisfy our
obligations under the plan. The 1997 scheme will terminate on May 27, 2007,
unless previously terminated by the board of directors.

   Under the 1997 scheme, all of our employees and executive directors as well
as those of our subsidiaries are eligible to receive grants of nonstatutory
options. Employees are also eligible to receive grants of incentive stock
options intended to qualify under Section 422 of

                                       61
<PAGE>

the U.S. Internal Revenue Code of 1986. The 1997 scheme is administered by the
compensation committee, which selects the persons to whom options will be
granted, determines the number of shares to be made subject to each grant and
prescribes other terms and conditions, including the type and amount of
consideration to be paid upon exercise and the vesting schedules in connection
with each grant.

   If we are a party to a merger, takeover or other reorganization, the
compensation committee may exercise discretion. The compensation committee
could request that participants exercise their outstanding options, agree to
assume outstanding options, agree to substitute options of a successor
corporation or make a cash settlement payment.

   The exercise price of all incentive stock options must be equal to the fair
market value of an ordinary share on the day preceding the date of grant. The
exercise price of non-statutory options is determined by the compensation
committee but must be at least equal to the par value of an ordinary share and,
for non-statutory stock options intended to qualify as performance based
compensation within the meaning of Section 162(m) of the U.S. Internal Revenue
Code of 1986 the exercise price must be at least equal to the fair market value
of an ordinary share on the day preceding the date of grant. For any
participant who owns stock possessing more than 10% of the voting power of all
of our classes of outstanding share capital, the exercise price of any
incentive stock option granted must be at least equal to 110% of the fair
market value of an ordinary share on the grant date, and the term of the
incentive stock option must not exceed five years. Options must be exercised
within a period specified at the date of grant, which is generally seven years.

   The board of directors may amend or modify the 1997 scheme at any time.
Shareholder approval is necessary to increase the aggregate number of ordinary
shares which may be issued under the 1997 scheme.

   As of January 31, 2000, 57,244 ordinary shares (114,488 equivalent ADSs)
have been issued upon the exercise of share options granted under the 1997
scheme, 3,310,827 ordinary shares (6,621,654 equivalent ADSs) are subject to
outstanding options, and 389,173 ordinary shares (778,346 equivalent ADSs)
remain available for future grant. The weighted exercise price for all
outstanding options to purchase equivalent ADSs under the 1997 scheme is $5.94,
or approximately (Euro)6.19, per ADS.

 Trintech Group PLC directors and consultants share option scheme

   On April 22, 1998, we established the Trintech Group Limited directors and
consultants share option scheme. The purpose of the scheme is to attract and
retain the best available directors and consultants and to promote the success
of our business. The directors and consultants scheme will terminate on April
21, 2008, unless previously terminated by the board of directors.

   Under the directors and consultants scheme, all of our non-executive
directors and consultants as well as those of our subsidiaries are eligible to
receive grants of nonstatutory options. The directors and consultants scheme is
administered by the compensation committee, which selects the persons to whom
options will be granted, determines the number of shares to be made subject to
each grant and prescribes other terms and conditions, including the type and
amount of consideration to be paid upon exercise and the vesting schedules in
connection with each grant.

   If we are a party to a merger, takeover or other reorganization, the
compensation committee may exercise discretion. The compensation committee
could request that participants exercise their outstanding options, agree to
assume outstanding options, agree to substitute options of a successor
corporation or make a cash settlement payment.


                                       62
<PAGE>

   The exercise price of all incentive stock options must be equal to the fair
market value of an ordinary share on the day preceding the date of grant. The
exercise price of non-statutory options is determined by the compensation
committee but must be at least equal to the par value of an ordinary share and,
for non-statutory stock options intended to qualify as performance based
compensation within the meaning of Section 162(m) of the U.S. Internal Revenue
Code of 1986 the exercise price must be at least equal to the fair market value
of an ordinary share on the day preceding the date of grant. For any
participant who owns stock possessing more than 10% of the voting power of all
of our classes of outstanding share capital, the exercise price of any
incentive stock option granted must be at least equal to 110% of the fair
market value of an ordinary share on the grant date, and the term of the
incentive stock option must not exceed five years. Options must be exercised
within a period specified at the date of grant, which is generally seven years.

   The board of directors may amend or modify the directors and consultants
scheme at any time. Shareholder approval is necessary to increase the aggregate
number of ordinary shares which may be issued under the directors and
consultants scheme.

   As of January 31, 2000, no ordinary shares have been issued upon the
exercise of share options granted under the directors and consultants scheme,
300,500 ordinary shares (601,000 equivalent ADSs) are subject to outstanding
options, and 299,500 ordinary shares (599,000 equivalent ADSs) remain available
for future grant. The weighted exercise price for all outstanding options to
purchase equivalent ADSs under the directors and consultants scheme is $6.50,
or approximately (Euro) 6.78, per equivalent ADS.

 Trintech savings related share option scheme 1999

   On August 23, 1999, we obtained shareholder approval for the establishment
of the Trintech employee savings related share option scheme 1999 for our Irish
employees. The scheme will be adopted by the board shortly following the
receipt of approval by the Irish Revenue Commissioners. The savings related
share option scheme applies to all of our qualifying Irish employees and is
intended to be an approved scheme under Schedule 12A to the Taxes Consolidation
Act 1997 of the Republic of Ireland. The eligible employees may apply for an
option to purchase ordinary shares at a discount of 15% to the market value of
ordinary shares on the last day on which the ordinary shares were traded before
grant. Participants must enter into approved savings arrangements the purpose
of which is to fund the cost of the exercise of the option.

   The savings related share option scheme is open to our employees and
executive directors. Grants of options under the savings related share option
scheme may vary as between participants according to level of remuneration,
length of service or other factors relating to their position.

   The savings related share option scheme provides that, in the event of a
merger, take-over or other re-organization, any subsisting options may be
exercised within a specified time period not to exceed six months of the date
of the merger, take-over, or reorganization. There is also an alternative for
participants, with the agreement of any company which may acquire us, to
release their rights under the savings related share option scheme in
consideration for equivalent rights in the acquiring company or its parent.

   Rights granted under the savings related share option scheme are not
transferable. These rights may only be exercised by the participant or, in the
event of his death, his personal representative. The savings related share
option scheme will terminate ten years after its adoption by the board of
directors unless otherwise terminated before that date by the board

                                       63
<PAGE>

of directors. The board of directors has power to amend the savings related
share option scheme except that no amendment will be made which would adversely
affect the subsisting rights of participants.

 1999 employee share purchase plan

   On August 23, 1999, we obtained shareholder approval for the establishment
of the Trintech 1999 employee share purchase plan for our U.S. employees. We
may issue an aggregate of 350,000 ordinary shares (700,000 equivalent ADSs)
under the 1999 share purchase plan.

   The 1999 share purchase plan is intended to qualify under Section 423 of the
Code and contains consecutive, overlapping, twenty-four month offering periods.
Each offering period includes four six-month purchase periods. The offering
periods generally start on the first trading day on or after March 1 and
September 1 of each year.

   Our U.S. employees are eligible to participate if they are customarily
employed by us or any participating subsidiary for at least 20 hours per week
and more than five months in any calendar year. However, any employee who
immediately after grant owns stock with 5% or more of the total combined voting
power or value of all classes of our capital shares, or holds rights to
purchase shares under our employee share purchase plans that accrue at an
annual rate exceeding $25,000 worth of shares for each calendar quarter may be
not be granted an option to purchase shares under the 1999 share purchase plan.
The 1999 share purchase plan permits participants to purchase common stock
through payroll deductions of up to 15% of the participant's compensation.
Compensation is defined as the participant's base straight time gross earnings,
bonuses and commissions but is exclusive of payments for overtime, shift
premium payments, incentive compensation, incentive payments and other
compensation.

   The total amounts deducted and accumulated from the participant's pay are
used to purchase ordinary shares at the end of each purchase period. The price
of ordinary shares purchased under the 1999 share purchase plan is generally
85% of the lower of the fair market value of the ordinary shares at the
beginning of the offering period or at the end of the purchase period. If the
fair market value at the end of a purchase period is less than the fair market
value at the beginning of the offering period, the participants will be
withdrawn from the current offering period following exercise and automatically
enrolled in a new offering period. The new offering period will use the lower
fair market value as of the first date of the new offering period to determine
the purchase price for future purchase periods. Participants may end their
participation at any time during an offering period, and they will be paid
their payroll deductions to date. Participation ends automatically upon
termination of employment with us.

   Rights granted under the 1999 share purchase plan are not transferable by a
participant other than by will, the laws of descent and distribution, or as
otherwise provided under the 1999 share purchase plan. The 1999 share purchase
plan provides that, in the event of a merger of with or into another
corporation or a sale of substantially all of our assets, each outstanding
option may be assumed or substituted for by the successor corporation. If the
successor corporation refuses to assume or substitute for the outstanding
options, the offering period then in progress will be shortened and a new
exercise date will be set. The 1999 share purchase plan will terminate in 2009.
The board of directors has the authority to amend or terminate the 1999 share
purchase plan, except that no board action may adversely affect any outstanding
rights to purchase shares under the 1999 share purchase plan.


                                       64
<PAGE>

Limitations on Liability and Indemnification Matters

   In general, Section 200 of the Irish Companies Act, 1963 prohibits us from
exempting any of our officers or auditors from, or indemnifying any of them
against, any liability arising from any negligence, default, breach of duty or
breach of trust of which he may be guilty in relation to us. Section 200 does,
however, provide that we may indemnify any of our officers or auditors against
any liability incurred by him in defending proceedings, whether civil or
criminal, if judgment is given in his favor or the officer or auditor is
acquitted. Additionally, upon our election, we can provide an indemnity under
Section 200 where an officer or auditor is granted relief by a court under
either Section 391 of the Irish Companies Act of 1963 or Section 42 of the
Irish Companies (Amendment) Act, 1983. Our articles of association contain a
provision for this indemnity.

   Our subsidiary, Trintech, Inc., has agreed to indemnify each of its
directors and officers and each of the officers and directors serving at the
request of Trintech, Inc. as our directors and officers against liabilities and
expenses incurred by them in connection with claims made by reason of their
being a director or officer.

   We have obtained directors and officers insurance for some of our directors,
officers, affiliates, partners or employees for liabilities relating to the
performance of their duties.

   At present, there is no pending material litigation or proceeding involving
any of our officers or directors where indemnification will be required or
permitted. We are not aware of any threatened material litigation or proceeding
which may result in a claim for indemnification of an officer or director.

                                       65
<PAGE>

                       PRINCIPAL AND SELLING SHAREHOLDERS

   The following table presents information regarding the beneficial ownership
of our ordinary shares as of January 31, 2000 for

  .  our chief executive officer and each of our other four most highly
     compensated executive officers at the end of our last completed fiscal
     year,

  .  each of our directors,

  .  each person who beneficially owns 5% or more of our outstanding ordinary
     shares,

  .  each selling shareholder, and

  .  our officers and directors as a group.

   The applicable percentage ownership of each shareholder identified in the
table is based on 50,281,444 equivalent ADSs outstanding at January 31, 2000. A
person is considered to be the beneficial owner of securities that can be
acquired by that person within 60 days of January 31, 2000 upon the exercise of
options or warrants. Calculations of percentage of beneficial ownership also
assume the exercise by only the named shareholder of all options and warrants
for the purchase of ordinary shares held by that shareholder which are
exercisable within 60 days of January 31, 2000. Unless otherwise noted in the
footnotes to the table, we believe that the persons named in the table have
sole voting and investing power for all shares indicated as being beneficially
owned by them.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                   Equivalent ADSs
                             Equivalent ADSs                        Beneficially
                           Beneficially Owned                      Owned After the
                          Prior to the Offering       Number of       Offering
                          -------------------------     ADSs      -----------------
    Beneficial Owner        Number       Percent    Being Offered  Number   Percent
    ----------------      -------------  -------    ------------- --------- -------
<S>                       <C>           <C>         <C>           <C>       <C>
John F. McGuire (1)(2)..      9,300,017      17.7%      90,000    9,210,017  16.6%
 c/o Trintech Building
 South County Business
  Park
 Leopardstown
 Dublin 18, Ireland

Cyril P. McGuire
 (1)(3).................      9,300,017      17.7       90,000    9,210,017  16.6%
 c/o Trintech Building
 South County Business
  Park
 Leopardstown
 Dublin 18, Ireland

Kevin C. Shea...........         40,000       0.0            0       40,000   0.0
R. Paul Byrne (4).......        109,614       0.2       50,000       59,614   0.1
Christopher P. Meehan
 (5)....................        691,608       1.3       90,000      601,608   1.1
George L. Burne (6).....        535,320       1.0       50,000      485,320   0.9
John Harte (7)..........         42,187       0.0            0       42,187   0.0
Don Marcotte (8)........         56,250       0.1       15,000       41,250   0.0
Trevor D. Sullivan (9)..          4,090       0.0            0        4,090   0.0
James Bidzos (10).......      2,087,670       4.2            0    2,087,670   3.5
Wolfgang H. Heinrich
 (11)...................          3,750       0.0            0        3,750   0.0
Robert Wadsworth (12)...      2,003,750       4.0            0    1,803,750   3.3

Instove Limited (13)....      7,701,466      15.3      842,500    6,858,966  12.6
 P.O. Box 437 14
 14 Conway Street
 St. Helier
</TABLE>

                                       66
<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                           Equivalent ADSs                     Equivalent ADSs
                          Beneficially Owned                  Beneficially Owned
                        Prior to the Offering     Number of   After the Offering
                        -------------------------   ADSs      ------------------
   Beneficial Owner        Number      Percent  Being Offered   Number   Percent
   ----------------     -------------  -------  ------------- ---------- -------

<S>                     <C>           <C>       <C>           <C>        <C>
Enterprise Ireland
 (14)..................     2,779,196      5.5      250,000    2,529,196   4.7
 Wilton Park House
 Wilton Place
 Dublin 2, Ireland

HarbourVest
 International (12)....     2,000,000      4.0      300,000    1,700,000   3.1
 One Financial Center,
  44th Floor
 Boston, MA 02111

RSA Security, Inc.
 (15)..................     1,917,254      3.8            0    1,917,254   3.5
 36 Crosby Drive
 Bedford, MA 01730

Pilgrim Baxter.........     1,000,000      2.0      150,000      850,000   1.6
 Hybrid Partners I (17)
 825 Dupportail Road
 Wayne, PA 19087

Dr. Hasso Plattner
 (18)..................       333,334      0.7       50,000      283,334   0.5
 c/o Lowenthal Capital
  Mgmt.
 110 Solano Street
 Tiburon, CA 94920

Galba Anstalt (19).....        83,332      0.2       12,500       70,832   0.1
 4 Boulevard Du Theatre
 1204 Geneva,
  Switzerland

Algonquin Trust (20)...        66,666      0.1       10,000       56,666   0.1
 Cour Dumoulin
 5-9 Rte De L'etat
 1380 Lasne, Belgium

Total number of ADSs
 being offered by
 selling shareholders..            --       --    2,000,000           --    --

Officers and directors
 as a group
 (13 persons) (16).....    24,141,938     45.9      685,000   23,456,938  42.0
</TABLE>
- --------

 (1) Jayness Limited and Vanspur Limited, which are owned by two Jersey
     discretionary trusts, Jayness Trust and Vanspur Trust, have the option to
     acquire up to 2,890,750 equivalent ADSs, representing approximately 5.6%
     of the equivalent ADSs before the offering, currently owned by John
     McGuire and have the option to acquire up to 2,890,750 equivalent ADSs,
     representing approximately 5.6% of the equivalent ADSs before the
     offering, currently owned by Cyril McGuire. Neither John McGuire, Cyril
     McGuire nor any of their family members are trustees or beneficiaries of
     these trusts and John and Cyril McGuire disclaim any beneficial interest
     in the securities held by Jayness Limited, Vanspur Limited or the trusts.
     For shares held by Instove Limited, see note (12) below.

 (2) Includes 133,333 equivalent ADSs subject to options that are exercisable
     currently or within 60 days of January 31, 2000. If the underwriters'
     overallotment option is exercised in full, these 9,210,017 equivalent ADSs
     would represent approximately 16.5% of the equivalent ADSs outstanding
     after the offering.

 (3) Includes 133,333 equivalent ADSs subject to options that are exercisable
     currently or within 60 days of January 31, 2000. If the underwriters
     allotment option is exercised in full, these 9,210,017 equivalent ADSs
     would represent approximately 16.5% of the equivalent ADSs outstanding
     after the offering.

 (4) Includes 106,214 equivalent ADSs subject to options that are exercisable
     currently or within 60 days of January 31, 2000. If the underwriters'
     overallotment option is exercised in full, these 59,614 equivalent ADSs
     would represent approximately 0.1% of the equivalent ADSs outstanding
     after the offering.

                                       67
<PAGE>


 (5) Includes 79,678 equivalent ADSs subject to options that are exercisable
     currently or within 60 days of January 31, 2000. If the underwriters'
     overallotment option is exercised in full, these 601,608 equivalent
     ADSs would represent approximately 1.1% of the equivalent ADSs outstanding
     after the offering.

 (6) Includes 94,000 equivalent ADSs subject to options that are exercisable
     currently or within 60 days of January 31, 2000. If the underwriters'
     overallotment option is exercised in full, these 485,320 equivalent
     ADSs would represent approximately 0.9% of the equivalent ADSs outstanding
     after the offering.

 (7) Represents 42,187 equivalent ADSs subject to options that are exercisable
     currently or within 60 days of January 31, 2000. If the underwriters'
     overallotment option is exercised in full, these 42,187 equivalent
     ADSs would represent approximately 0.0% of the equivalent ADSs outstanding
     after the offering.

 (8) Includes 56,250 equivalent ADSs subject to options that are exercisable
     currently or within 60 days of January 31, 2000. If the underwriters'
     over-allotment option is exercised in full, these 41,250 equivalent
     ADSs would represent approximately 0.0% of the equivalent ADSs outstanding
     after the offering.

 (9) Includes 3,750 equivalent ADSs subject to options that are exercisable
     currently or within 60 days of January 31, 2000. If the underwriters'
     overallotment option is exercised in full, these 4,090 equivalent
     ADSs would represent approximately 0.0% of the equivalent ADSs outstanding
     after the offering.

(10) Includes 1,917,254 equivalent ADSs held by RSA Security, of which Mr.
     Bidzos is a director and vice chairman, 3,750 equivalent ADSs subject to
     options that are exercisable currently or within 60 days of January 31,
     2000, and 166,666 equivalent ADSs held by Tolmi L.L.C. in trust for Mr.
     Bidzos personally. Mr. Bidzos may be considered to have or share
     investment and voting control over the equivalent ADSs owned by RSA
     Security. Mr. Bidzos disclaims any beneficial interest in the equivalent
     ADSs held by RSA Security. If the underwriters' overallotment option is
     exercised in full, these 2,087,670 equivalent ADSs would represent
     approximately 3.4% of the equivalent ADSs outstanding after the offering.

(11) Includes 3,750 equivalent ADSs subject to options that are exercisable
     currently or within 60 days of January 31, 2000. If the underwriters'
     overallotment option is exercised in full, these 3,750 equivalent ADSs
     would represent approximately 0.0% of the equivalent ADSs outstanding
     after the offering.

(12) Includes 2,000,000 equivalent ADSs held by HarbourVest International
     Private Equity Partners III L.P., of which Mr. Wadsworth is a general
     partner, and 3,750 equivalent ADSs subject to options that are exercisable
     currently or within 60 days of January 31, 2000. HarbourVest Partners, LLC
     is the managing member or the general partner of HarbourVest
     International. Mr. Wadsworth is the general partner of HarbourVest
     Partners. Mr. Wadsworth may be considered to have or share investment and
     voting control over the equivalent ADSs owned by this entity.
     Mr. Wadsworth disclaims any beneficial interest in the equivalent ADSs
     held by HarbourVest International Private Equity Partners III L.P. in
     excess of his pecuniary interest as a general partner. If the
     underwriters' overallotment option is exercised in full, these 1,803,750
     equivalent ADSs would represent approximately 3.3% of the equivalent ADSs
     outstanding after the offering.

(13) Equivalent ADSs are held by Instove Limited, which in turn is owned by two
     Jersey discretionary trusts, Hacke Trust and Belte Trust. Neither John
     McGuire nor Cyril McGuire nor any of their family members are trustees or
     beneficiaries of these trusts, but the trustees may, in their sole
     discretion, select any beneficiaries. John McGuire and Cyril McGuire both
     disclaim any beneficial interest in the equivalent ADSs held by Instove
     Limited or the trusts. Instove Limited has granted the underwriters the
     option to purchase up to 450,000 ADSs to cover over-allotments, if any. If
     the underwriters' over-allotment option is exercised in full, after the
     offering, Instove Limited will hold 6,408,966 equivalent ADSs,
     representing 11.8% of the equivalent ADSs outstanding after the offering.

(14) If the underwriters' over-allotment option is exercised in full, after the
     offering, Enterprise Ireland will hold 2,529,196 equivalent ADSs,
     representing 4.6% of the equivalent ADSs outstanding after the offering.

(15) If the underwriters' over-allotment option is exercised in full, after the
     offering, RSA Security, Inc. will hold 1,917,254 equivalent ADSs,
     representing 3.1% of the equivalent ADSs outstanding after the offering.

(16) Includes 659,995 equivalent ADSs subject to options that are exercisable
     currently or within 60 days of January 31, 2000. If the underwriters'
     overallotment option is exercised in full, these 23,456,938 equivalent
     ADSs would represent approximately 42.0% of the equivalent ADSs
     outstanding after the offering.

(17) If the underwriters' over-allotment option is exercised in full, after the
     offering, Pilgrim Baxter Hybrid Partners I will hold 850,000 equivalent
     ADSs, representing 1.6% of the equivalent ADSs outstanding after the
     offering.

(18) If the underwriters' over-allotment option is exercised in full, after the
     offering, Dr. Hasso Plattner will hold 283,334 equivalent ADSs,
     representing 0.5% of the equivalent ADSs outstanding after the offering.

(19) If the underwriters' over-allotment option is exercised in full, after the
     offering, Galba Anstalt will hold 70,832 equivalent ADSs, representing
     0.1% of the equivalent ADSs outstanding after the offering.

(20) If the underwriters' over-allotment option is exercised in full, after the
     offering, Algonquin Trust will hold 56,666 equivalent ADSs, representing
     0.1% of the equivalent ADSs outstanding after the offering.

                                       68
<PAGE>

                           RELATED PARTY TRANSACTIONS

   On March 31, 1998, we licensed the source code for S/PAY and J/PAY from RSA
Security. S/PAY and J/PAY are security toolkit products which enable the user
to add cryptography functionality to other software products for securing e-
payment transactions. The license is exclusive for that portion of the source
code that implements and provides the functionality of the SET standard. Under
the terms of the agreement, we also received a royalty-free sublicensable
license to the object code of the licensed software. Our rights under the
license are subject to pre-existing rights of third-party licensees to license
portions of the tool kit products. In exchange for receiving the rights under
the license, we paid RSA Security a one-time payment of $2.5 million in cash.
In connection with the execution of this license, we and RSA Security also
entered into an agreement that specified joint marketing activities to be
undertaken by us and RSA Security.

   On March 31, 1998, RSA Security, purchased 482,765 of our ordinary shares.
As part of the equity investment, we granted RSA Security the right to appoint
one member to our board of directors. James Bidzos, a director and vice
chairman of RSA Security, was initially appointed by RSA Security and currently
serves on our board. RSA Security's right to appoint one member to our board of
directors terminated upon the closing of our initial public offering.

   On June 30, 1998, we closed the sale of 2,750,000 of our redeemable
convertible preference shares at a price of $6.00 per share. HarbourVest
Partners LLC purchased 1,000,000 redeemable convertible preference shares and
RSA Security purchased 500,000 redeemable convertible preference shares in this
transaction. As part of this transaction, we granted the investors the right to
appoint one member to our board of directors. Robert M. Wadsworth, a general
partner of HarbourVest Partners LLC, was initially appointed by the investors
and currently serves on our board. The investors' right to appoint one member
to our board of directors terminated upon the closing of our initial public
offering.

   In August 1998, we entered into an agreement with VISA International. The
agreement confirmed and summarized the intentions of both parties concerning
the development of a strategic relationship to pursue opportunities in the
Internet marketplace. In connection with this agreement, we issued to VISA
International a warrant to purchase 250,000 ordinary shares, exercisable for a
two-year period. As part of this transaction, we granted VISA International the
right to appoint one member to our board of directors. Wolfgang Heinrich was
initially appointed by VISA International and currently serves on our board.
VISA International's right to appoint a board member terminate upon the closing
of this offering. Concurrent with the closing of the transactions with VISA
International, VISA International purchased 250,000 of our redeemable
convertible preference shares at a price of $6.00 per share.

   From time to time, we have entered into development and marketing agreements
with Visa International and some of its affiliated entities. Under these
arrangements, we have developed products to meet the specific needs of Visa and
its members. In return, Visa has paid us development and services fees and has
agreed to promote these products to its members. Additionally, once we have
developed these products, we have entered into licensing arrangements with Visa
in which we have provided Visa licenses to use these products and additional
technical and support services.

   In April 1999, we entered into a development and marketing agreement with
Visa International to develop a product meeting Visa's cash payment server
specifications.


                                       69
<PAGE>

   In May 1999, we entered into a license agreement with Visa USA in which we
agreed to license one copy of PayGate Enterprise Gateway to Visa International.
The purpose of the license was to develop and test the product for merchants.
Visa paid us license and support fees plus additional royalties. Under the
agreement, we are required to place in escrow the current version of RSA S-Pay
source code and documentation. If we fail to provide a modification to the
source code to meet Visa's modified SET specifications within 90 days of Visa's
publication of these specifications or if we suffer a bankruptcy during the
term of the agreement, Visa will have access to the source code solely for use
under the license.

   Effective September 1, 1998, we entered into a lease agreement with John and
Cyril McGuire under which we currently lease approximately 22,500 square feet
of space in a building located in Dublin, Ireland which is owned by John and
Cyril McGuire. The term of the lease is for a period of 25 years. Our rent
under the lease is IR(Pounds)401,514, or approximately $539,795 per year, which
was determined by a fair assessment of the local rental market by an
independent appraisal firm. The rent is to be reviewed by an independent
appraiser every five years and may be increased based on the independent
appraiser's assessment of the current rental market using rental rates for
similar properties in comparable locations. This lease agreement may be amended
from time to time by agreement among us and John and Cyril McGuire. We have the
right to terminate the lease on September 1, 2007.

   Trintech Limited, one of our Irish subsidiaries, has issued shares of
special non-voting class to Huttoft Company, an unlimited company. Huttoft
Company is wholly-owned by John McGuire, Cyril McGuire, R. Paul Byrne and
Christopher Meehan, four of our executive officers, but is otherwise unrelated
to us. We own all of the voting securities of Trintech Limited. The shares held
by Huttoft Company do not entitle it to any share of the assets of Trintech
Limited in the event of a winding-up. We and Huttoft Company own all of the
outstanding securities of Trintech Limited. Trintech Limited has in the past
and may in the future declare and pay dividends to Huttoft Company, and Huttoft
Company may pay dividends to its shareholders out of these amounts. The amount
of any dividends paid to Huttoft Company will be determined by our board of
directors, subject to Irish law, in its discretion. We treat any dividends paid
by Trintech Limited to Huttoft Company as compensation expense for accounting
purposes. Any dividends which are declared and paid by Trintech Limited to
Huttoft Company would result in a reduction in profits available to us.

   In March 1991, we entered into an agreement with some of our then existing
shareholders. This agreement was subsequently supplanted by a shareholders'
agreement entered into in September 1993 and again in November 1993. Enterprise
Ireland, John and Cyril McGuire were the only parties to this agreement who
remain shareholders in us. Under this agreement, each of John and Cyril McGuire
agreed to restrictions on his ability to compete with us for a period of one
year after their employment with us has been terminated for any reason.
Additionally, John McGuire, Cyril McGuire and Enterprise Ireland agreed to
provide each other with rights to participate in any sale of their shares to a
third party.

   On January 31, 1997, we entered into a shareholders' agreement with John
McGuire, Cyril McGuire and Enterprise Ireland. This shareholders' agreement
provides Enterprise Ireland with the right to appoint one person to serve on
our board of directors for so long as it is a shareholder. This agreement also
requires that we provide Enterprise Ireland with information rights. Under a
letter agreement between Enterprise Ireland, John and Cyril McGuire and us
dated June 11, 1999, each of the amended March 1991 agreement and the January
1997 agreement terminated on the closing date of our initial public offering.


                                       70
<PAGE>

   From time to time since December 1996, Enterprise Ireland has provided us
with grants in support of some of our projects for the purpose of increasing
employment in Ireland. These grants have totaled an aggregate of
IR(Pounds)942,320. These grants must be repaid if we fail to maintain the
projected employment for a period of five years from the date of receipt of the
grant.

   We believe that the terms of all transactions with related parties are
comparable to those that would be attainable by us in the ordinary course of
business from unaffiliated third parties under similar circumstances.

   As of January 31, 2000, we had granted share options to the following
directors and officers:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                      Number of
                                                                     Options (in
                                                                      equivalent
                                   Name                                 ADSs)
                                   ----                              -----------
       <S>                                                           <C>
       Kevin C. Shea................................................   840,000
       R. Paul Byrne................................................   512,170
       John Harte...................................................   450,000
       Donald Marcotte..............................................   300,000
       Christopher P. Meehan........................................   294,556
       John F. McGuire..............................................   200,000
       Cyril P. McGuire.............................................   200,000
       George L. Burne..............................................   141,000
       Noel Ryan....................................................    24,000
       Trevor Sullivan..............................................    20,000
       Robert Wadsworth.............................................    20,000
       Wolfgang H. Heinrich.........................................    20,000
       D. James Bidzos..............................................    20,000
</TABLE>

                                       71
<PAGE>

                          DESCRIPTION OF SHARE CAPITAL

General

   Upon the completion of this offering, our authorized share capital will be
US$297,000, divided into 100,000,000 ordinary shares, nominal value US$0.0027
per share, and 10,000,000 Series B preference shares, nominal value US$0.0027
per share. Our authorized capital is the number of shares available for
issuance by us under our memorandum and articles of association. As of January
31, 2000, 50,281,444 equivalent ADSs representing 25,140,722 ordinary shares
were issued and outstanding. None of our ordinary shares are currently held in
treasury. All of the ordinary shares issued and outstanding are registered
shares and not bearer shares, and are fully paid, duly authorized and validly
issued.

   The following summarizes rights of holders of our ordinary shares and is
based upon the memorandum and articles of association which were approved by a
special resolution of our shareholders in a general meeting passed on August
23, 1999 and under applicable Irish corporate law. The summary does not purport
to be complete and is qualified in its entirety by reference to our memorandum
and articles of association, a copy of which has been filed as an exhibit to
the registration statement of which this prospectus forms a part.

   In the following description, a shareholder or a holder of ordinary shares
is the person registered in our register of members as the holder of the
relevant ordinary share. The Bank of New York, as depositary, will be the
registered holder for those ordinary shares represented by ADSs.

Rights on a Liquidation or Winding-Up

   Upon liquidation, dissolution or winding up, the assets remaining for
distribution to the holders of ordinary shares after payment of liabilities and
after provision has been made for each class of shares, if any, having
preference over the ordinary shares would be divided, equally, among the
holders of ordinary shares in proportion to the amounts paid up on the shares
held by them. A liquidator may, with the sanction of a special resolution of
our shareholders and any other sanction required by the Irish Companies Acts,
1963 to 1999, divide equally among the shareholders in cash or property the
whole or any part of our assets and may vest any assets in trustees upon trusts
for the benefit of contributories. However, no shareholders may be compelled to
accept any assets upon which there is a liability.

Dividends

   Shareholders are entitled to receive dividends as may be recommended by the
board of directors and approved by our shareholders or any interim dividends
the board of directors may decide to pay. No dividends have been paid on the
ordinary shares in any of the five fiscal years immediately preceding the date
of this prospectus.

   Under Irish law, we may only pay dividends out of profits legally available
for that purpose. Available profits are defined as our accumulated realized
profits, to the extent not previously distributed or capitalized, less our
accumulated realized losses, to the extent not previously written off in a
reduction or reorganization of capital. In addition, we may make a distribution
only if and to the extent that, at the time of the distribution, the amount of
our net assets is not less than the aggregate of our paid up share capital and
undistributable reserves.

   If in the future dividends are, subject to Irish law, approved by our board
or by our shareholders, the dividends will be paid to the persons who hold our
securities on the date determined by our board. However, under our articles of
association, our directors may

                                       72
<PAGE>

resolve that we will not be required to pay dividends to a shareholder who has
not claimed these dividends within twelve years of their declaration if
resolved by the board of directors. Unclaimed dividends will be used by us as
decided by our board of directors.

Voting Rights

   Each holder of ordinary shares is entitled to one vote for each share held
on all matters submitted to a vote of the shareholders. Under Irish law, a
majority of votes cast is required to pass ordinary resolutions; however, a 75%
majority of the votes cast is required to pass special resolutions. Examples of
special resolutions are resolutions to approve any amendment to our memorandum
or articles of association or to change our name. Variation of the rights
relating to any class of shares requires the approval of a special resolution
by the class in question. Shareholders do not have cumulative voting rights for
the election of directors. Holders of a majority of the ordinary shares
entitled to vote in any election of directors may therefore elect all of the
directors standing for election.

Shareholder Meetings

   An annual general meeting of shareholders must take place in the Republic of
Ireland unless either the shareholders entitled to attend and vote at the
meeting unanimously consent in writing to the meeting being held elsewhere or a
resolution has been passed at the preceding annual general meeting providing
that the meeting be held elsewhere. Extraordinary general meetings of the
shareholders may be held either in the Republic of Ireland or outside the
Republic of Ireland. Annual and extraordinary general meetings may be called by
either the board of directors or at the request of shareholders holding not
less than one-tenth of our then outstanding voting share capital. Annual
general meetings must be held once every calendar year. However, not more than
fifteen months may elapse between these meetings. The Minister for Enterprise,
Trade and Employment for the Republic of Ireland may, on the application of any
shareholder, call or direct the calling of an annual general meeting if the
meeting is not held within the required time period.

   Irish company law requires at least 14 days' written notice of a meeting,
except that an annual general meeting or a meeting convened for the passing of
a special resolution requires at least 21 days' written notice. In limited
circumstances, general meetings can be called on shorter notice. Further, in
circumstances prescribed by law, extended, or 28 days, notice must be given for
a general meeting. Shareholders' notices will be published in one German
national newspaper approved for official notices by the Frankfurt Stock
Exchange as long as ADRs are listed in Germany.

   Three or more shareholders present in person or by proxy entitled to vote
upon the business to be transacted and, together holding not less than one
third of our outstanding voting shares, constitute a quorum at shareholders
meetings. A vote which takes into account all votes which may be cast at that
meeting by shareholders attending as opposed to a show of hands at any
shareholders meeting may be demanded by any of the following:

  .  the chairman of the meeting

  .  at least three shareholders present, in person or by proxy, who are
     entitled to vote at the meeting

  .  any shareholder or shareholders present, in person or by proxy,
     representing not less than one-tenth of the total voting rights of all
     the shareholders entitled to vote at the meeting

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<PAGE>

  .  any shareholder or shareholders present, in person or by proxy, holding
     shares conferring the right to vote at the meeting being shares on which
     there have been paid up sums in the aggregate equal to not less than
     one-tenth of the total sum paid up on all the shares conferring that
     right.

Issuance of Shares

   Under our articles, our board of directors may issue ordinary shares up to
the authorized but unissued share capital without obtaining shareholder
approval. However, Irish company law requires that this authority expire after
five years unless once again extended by our shareholders. Also, our
shareholders may at any time by ordinary resolution renew, alter or revoke this
authority. Our articles provide that the authority of our board expires on
August 22, 2004 unless extended by our shareholders. These authorized but
unissued ordinary shares may be utilized for a variety of corporate purposes,
including future public offerings to raise additional capital, corporate
acquisitions and employee benefit plans.

Preemptive Rights

   In general, Irish company law prohibits companies from issuing any shares or
rights to subscribe for or to convert any securities into shares for any
consideration without first offering those shares, on a pro rata basis, to the
existing shareholders. These requirements may be disapplied for a period of up
to five years under a company's articles of association or by a special
resolution passed by a company's shareholders. Our articles contain a provision
disapplying these preemptive rights for all of our authorized but unissued
shares for the five year period ending on August 22, 2004. This disapplication
may be renewed, varied or revoked at any time by a special resolution of our
shareholders.

   In addition, due to the restrictions on the offer and sale of securities in
the United States under U.S. securities laws and regulations, any offer of new
ordinary shares to existing shareholders on the basis of their preemptive
rights might not be opened to holders of ADRs.

Share Certificates

   Shareholders are entitled to certificates within two months of the date of
issuance of their shares, in a form as may be prescribed by law and by the
board of directors, certifying the number and class of shares owned by the
shareholder. Each certificate shall have our corporate seal affixed to it.

Transfers of Ordinary Shares

   Except as otherwise established by rules adopted by the board of directors,
and subject to applicable law, ordinary shares may be transferred on our books
by the surrender to us or to our transfer agent, of a properly stamped and duly
executed stock transfer form, a duly executed certificate representing the
ordinary shares and, if executed under a power of attorney, a properly executed
written power of attorney, together with any proof of authority or the
authenticity of signature as we or our transfer agent may otherwise reasonably
request.

Registration Rights

   Under the terms of two investors' rights agreements, as of April 7, 2000,
the holders of an aggregate of 6,000,000 equivalent ADSs have the right to
require us on no more than two occasions to register all or a portion of their
ordinary shares. These holders may also require us on no more than two
additional occasions to register all or a portion of their ordinary

                                       74
<PAGE>


shares on a Form S-3 registration statement when that form becomes available to
us. Additionally, as of April 7, 2000, these holders, plus the holders of up to
an additional 917,254 equivalent ADSs, are entitled to piggyback registration
rights in connection with any registration under the U.S. Securities Act of our
securities for our own account or the account of other security holders. If we
propose to register any ordinary shares under the U.S. Securities Act, the
holders of these piggyback registration rights are entitled to receive notice
of the registration and to include their shares in the registration.

   These registration rights are subject to conditions and limitations
including the right of the underwriters in any underwritten offering to limit
the number of shares held by security holders with registration rights to be
included in the registration. The registration rights for any holder terminate
when the shares held by the holder represent less than one percent of our
outstanding shares and may be sold under Rule 144 promulgated under the U.S.
Securities Act, during any three-month period. We are generally required to
bear all of the expenses of all the registrations under these investor rights
agreements, except underwriting discounts and commissions. Registration of any
of the ordinary shares held by security holders with registration rights would
result in these shares becoming freely tradable without restriction under the
U.S. Securities Act immediately upon effectiveness of the registration. The
investors' rights agreements also contain commitments by us to indemnify the
holders of registration rights, subject to specified limitations.

Derivative Action Suits

   Under Irish company law, our shareholders do not generally have standing to
maintain proceedings arising from wrongs suffered by us. There are, however,
exceptions available under equitable principles on a case-by-case basis. For
example, controlling shareholders cannot perpetrate fraud on the minority
shareholders or commit an act that is illegal or outside the scope of corporate
authority. Additionally, if we attempt to act on the strength of a decision by
a simple majority, where particular decisions call for more than a simple
majority, an individual shareholder may bring suit. In cases where controlling
shareholders do not institute proceedings in our name, one or more of the
aggrieved minority shareholders may apply to the court to bring a derivative
action. A minority shareholder may also initiate proceedings in our name in
limited circumstances.

Class Action Suits

   In contrast to a derivative action, Irish company law permits an action by a
shareholder in his own right on the basis of the infringement of his personal
rights. A shareholder may commence a suit in a representative capacity for
himself as well as other similarly affected consenting shareholders.
Additionally, under Irish company law, any shareholder who claims that our
affairs are being conducted, or that the powers of our directors are being
exercised, in a manner oppressive to his interests as a shareholder, may apply
to the Irish courts for an appropriate order.

Interlocking and Interested Directors

   Irish company law requires each of our directors to declare the nature of
any direct or indirect interest which the director may have in a proposed
contract with us at a meeting of the directors before the board votes to
approve the contract. An interested director must generally abstain from a vote
on any contract or arrangement or any other proposal in which he has an
interest. Our articles allow the shareholders, by ordinary resolution, to
suspend or relax these provisions to any extent either generally or for any
particular contract, arrangement or transaction.

                                       75
<PAGE>

   If any question arises at any directors' meeting regarding the materiality
of a director's interest in a proposed transaction or the right of a director
to vote on the proposal and the question is not resolved by the director
voluntarily agreeing to abstain from voting, the chairman of the relevant
meeting has the authority to decide the matter. Additionally, our shareholders
may, by ordinary resolution, ratify any transaction not duly authorized by
reason of a contravention of our articles of association.

   Irish law also regulates various types of transactions between us and our
directors or any person connected with any of our directors. These provisions
require shareholder approval for long-term employment contracts with directors
and for the purchase or sale by us of assets from or to a director or any
person connected with any of our directors. Additionally, we may not make loans
to, or enter into credit transactions as creditors for, a director or persons
connected to directors or give guarantees or provide security in connection
with these matters, except in limited circumstances.

Irish Mergers and Competition Legislation and Other Anti-Takeover Provisions

   Irish Mergers and Competitive Legislation. Irish law requires prospective
purchasers of our voting securities to provide advance notice of an acquisition
of our shares to the minister for Enterprise, Trade and Employment of Ireland
if, after an acquisition, that person would control more than 25% of our voting
securities and specific financial thresholds are exceeded. Subject to several
exceptions, the person must also notify the minister of any subsequent
acquisition of voting securities. Under Irish law, title to the shares
concerned will not pass unless either clearance for an acquisition is obtained
from the minister or the prescribed statutory period following notification of
the acquisition lapses without the minister having made an order.

   In addition, under Irish competition legislation, proposed mergers and
acquisitions which might be anti-competitive in nature may require prior
notification to, and approval of, the Irish Competition Authority. Further,
third parties may file a complaint with the Irish Competition Authority or
institute court proceedings seeking relief, including injunctions and exemplary
damages, for a merger or acquisition which would be prohibited under the
relevant legislation.

   For purposes of the Irish mergers and competition legislation described
above, the acquisition of ADSs would generally be treated in the same manner as
an acquisition of ordinary shares.

   Provisions of our Memorandum and Articles of Association Concerning
Control. Several provisions of our memorandum and articles of association,
which are described in these paragraphs, may have an anti-takeover effect and
may delay, defer or prevent a tender offer or takeover attempt that a
shareholder might consider in its best interests, including those attempts that
might result in a premium over the market price for the ADSs.

   German Antitakeover Law. In compliance with the admission regulations of the
Neuer Markt segment of the Frankfurt Stock Exchange, we have adopted the
takeover code recommended by the Stock Exchange Expert Commission at the German
Federal Ministry of Finance. This takeover code, while not having the force of
law, is complied with by those companies listed on the Neuer Markt segment of
the Frankfurt Stock Exchange which acknowledge it.

Presentation of Financial Statements to Shareholders

   Our board of directors is required to present to our shareholders at each
annual general meeting our statutory financial statements and a report by the
directors on our state of affairs.

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<PAGE>

Purchase of Own Shares

   Under our articles, we may purchase our own shares, including redeemable
shares, only out of distributable profits. Additionally, in the case of a
purchase other than on a stock exchange, as recognized under the Irish company
law, the purchase must first be authorized by special resolution of our
shareholders and, in the case of a purchase on a stock exchange, the purchase
must first be authorized by ordinary resolution.

Irish Stamp Duty

   For a discussion of the tax imposed on the transfer of ordinary shares, see
"Taxation--Irish Stamp Duty."

Prohibition on Financial Assistance to Purchase Shares

   Irish company law prohibits us from giving any direct or indirect financial
assistance to any person, whether by means of a loan, guarantee, the provision
of security or other form of financial assistance, for the purpose of
purchasing or subscribing for any of our shares.

Options and Warrants

   As of January 31, 2000, options to purchase up to 3,611,327 ordinary shares
(7,222,654 equivalent ADSs) were outstanding, with exercise prices ranging from
$0.78 to $30.00 per equivalent ADS. Of these outstanding options, 3,310,827
ordinary shares (6,621,654 equivalent ADSs) are subject to options under the
1997 scheme and 300,500 ordinary shares (601,000 equivalent ADSs) are subject
to options under the directors and consultants scheme. In addition, as of
January 31, 2000, a warrant to purchase up to 250,000 ordinary shares (500,000
equivalent ADSs) at an exercise price of $3.00 per equivalent ADS was
outstanding.

Listing

   The ADSs representing the previous ordinary shares have been approved for
quotation on the Nasdaq National Market and approved for listing on the
regulated market of the Frankfurt Stock Exchange with trading on the Neuer
Markt. Application has been made to have the ADSs representing the ordinary
shares to be registered in this offering admitted for listing on both the
Nasdaq National Market and the regulated market of the Frankfurt Stock Exchange
with trading on the Neuer Markt. The ADSs will officially be traded beginning
on or about May 8, 2000 on the Neuer Markt.

Transfer Agent, Registrar and Paying Agent

   The transfer agent and registrar for our ordinary shares is IRG Registrars,
Dublin, Ireland. The transfer agent and registrar for the ADSs will be The Bank
of New York. The paying agent for the ADSs in Germany is Deutsche Bank
Aktiengesellschaft, who will coordinate with The Bank of New York to fulfill
its obligations as paying agent.

Deliverability and Clearing

   The ADSs will be represented by one or more ADRs deposited with The
Depository Trust Company. On or about May 9, 2000, the ADRs will be deposited
with The Depository Trust Company. The ADSs are expected to be accepted for
clearance through The Depository Trust Company and Clearstream Banking AG
(formerly "Deutsche Borse Clearing AG"). The ADSs may be credited at the option
of investors either to the Depository Trust Company or the Clearstream Banking
account or to the accounts of participants with The Depository Trust Company or
Clearstream Banking.

                                       77
<PAGE>

   The German securities identification number of the ADSs is 925534. The
international securities identification code of the ADSs is US8966821014. The
CUSIP number of the ADSs is 896682101.

Rights of Dissenting Shareholders

   The Irish Companies Acts require that any arrangements or compromises
between us and a class of our shareholders, or class of our creditors, relating
to types of reconstructions, amalgamations, capital reorganizations or
takeovers be approved at a meeting of our shareholders and by the sanction of
the courts. Once approved and sanctioned, all shareholders of the relevant
class are bound by the terms of the scheme and a dissenting shareholder would
have no dissenters rights. The Irish Companies Acts also provide that where a
takeover offer is made for our shares and, within four months of the date of
the offer, the person making the offer has acquired or contracted to acquire
not less than 80% in value of our shares, the person may, before the expiration
of six months after the date of the offer, by notice compulsorily require our
shareholders who have not accepted the offer to transfer their shares on the
terms of the offer. A dissenting shareholder may apply to court within one
month of the date on which a notice was given to object to the compulsory
transfer or its terms. However, in the absence of a showing of fraud or
oppression, the court is unlikely to prevent the compulsory transfer from
taking effect, but it may vary the terms of the transfer. Irish law does not
generally provide for appraisal rights.

Series B Preference Shares

   Following the closing of this offering, our board of directors will, subject
to the normal resolution on the issuances of shares, have the authority,
without further action by our shareholders, to issue up to 10,000,000 shares of
preference shares in one or more series. The board also will have the authority
subject to Irish law to fix the designations, powers, preferences, privileges
and relative, participating, optional or special rights and the qualifications,
limitations or restrictions of any preference shares issues, including dividend
rights, conversion rights, voting rights, terms of redemption and liquidation
preferences, any or all of which may be greater than the rights of the ordinary
shares. Our board of directors, without shareholder approval, will be able to
issue preference shares with voting, conversion or other rights that could
adversely affect your voting power and other rights. These preference shares
could thus be issued quickly with terms that could delay or prevent a change in
control of us or make removal of our management more difficult. Additionally,
the issuance of these preference shares may decrease the market price of the
ADSs. We have no present plans to issue any preference shares.

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<PAGE>

                   DESCRIPTION OF AMERICAN DEPOSITARY SHARES

   To facilitate ownership of interests in our ordinary shares and trading in
the United States and Germany, ADSs relating to the ordinary shares shall be
issued by a depositary in New York to you and to other persons who deposit the
ordinary shares with the depositary. The ADSs will be represented by ADRs.

   The ADR is the receipt which represents the number of ADSs to which you are
entitled. You will not own our ordinary shares directly unless you withdraw the
ordinary shares that you deposit. As a holder of ADRs, your rights will be
governed by the deposit agreement between us, The Bank of New York, as
depositary, and the registered holders of ADRs and the owners of a beneficial
interest in ADSs. The following is a summary of the material provisions of the
deposit agreement. For more complete information, you should read the entire
agreement and the ADR. The deposit agreement has been filed as an exhibit to
the registration statement of which this prospectus is a part. Copies of the
deposit agreement and our articles of association are also available for
inspection at the corporate trust office of The Bank of New York, currently
located at 101 Barclay Street, New York, New York 10286, and at the principal
office of Allied Irish Bank, as the custodian, currently located at Carrisbrook
House, Ballsbridge, Dublin 4, Ireland. The Bank of New York's principle
executive office is located at 101 Barclay Street, New York, New York 10286.

American Depositary Receipts

   The Bank of New York, as depositary, will issue the ADRs. Each ADR will
represent ownership interests in, or the right to receive, one-half of one
ordinary share which we will deposit with Allied Irish Bank, as the custodian,
in Ireland. Each ADR will also represent securities, cash or other property
deposited with the depositary, as a result of a distribution we may make on the
ordinary shares, but which are not distributed to ADR holders. The
circumstances in which the depositary will deliver to you distributions we make
on the ordinary shares are described below.

   You may hold ADRs either directly or indirectly through your broker or other
financial institution. If you hold ADRs directly, you are an ADR holder. The
ADR will be in physical form if held by you directly, and may be in book-entry
or electronic form if held by a broker or other financial institution on your
behalf. This description assumes you hold your ADRs directly. If you hold your
ADRs indirectly, you must rely on the procedures of your broker or other
financial institution to assert your rights described in this section. You
should consult with your broker or financial institution to find out what those
procedures are.

   Because the depositary will actually own the ordinary shares, you must rely
on it to exercise the rights of a shareholder. The obligations of the
depositary are described in the deposit agreement.

   The deposit agreement and the ADRs are generally governed by New York law.

Dividends and Other Distributions

   The depositary has agreed to pay to you the cash dividends or other
distributions it or the custodian receives on shares or other deposited
securities, after deducting its fees and expenses. You will receive these
distributions in proportion to the number of shares your ADRs represent. You
must hold the ADRs on the date established by us to be eligible for dividends
and other distributions. If we do not establish the date, the depositary may
establish it to determine who is eligible.

                                       79
<PAGE>

   For a discussion of the cash dividends or other distributions we may make on
the ordinary shares, including distributions as a result of our liquidation,
dissolution or winding-up, see "Description of Share Capital--Rights on a
Liquidation or Winding-Up," and "--Dividends."

   Cash. The depositary will convert any cash dividend or other cash
distribution we pay on the shares into U.S. dollars or euro, if it can do so on
a reasonable basis and can transfer the U.S. dollars to the United States or
euro to Germany. If that is not possible or if any approval from the government
of the Ireland is needed and cannot be obtained, the agreement allows the
depositary to distribute U.S. dollars or euro only to those ADR holders to whom
it is possible to do so. It will hold the currency it cannot convert into U.S.
dollars or euro for the account of the ADR holders who have not been paid. It
will not invest the currency it cannot convert and it will not be liable for
any interest.

   Before making a distribution, the depositary will deduct any withholding
taxes that must be paid under Irish law. For U.S. holders, it will distribute
only whole U.S. dollars and cents and will round fractional cents down to the
nearest whole cent, and for German holders, it will distribute only whole euro
and cents and will round fractional cents down to the nearest whole cent. If
the exchange rates fluctuate during a time when the depositary cannot convert
the Irish currency, you may lose some or all of the value of the distribution.

   Ordinary shares. The depositary may distribute new ADRs representing any
ordinary shares which we distribute as a dividend or free distribution, if we
furnish it promptly with satisfactory evidence that it is legal to do so. The
depositary will distribute new ADRs in proportion to the number of ADRs you
already own. The depositary will only distribute whole ADRs. It will sell
ordinary shares which would require it to issue a fractional ADR and distribute
the net proceeds in the same way as it does with cash. If the depositary does
not distribute additional ADRs, each ADR will also represent the new ordinary
shares.

   Rights to receive additional shares. If we offer holders of our securities
any rights to subscribe for additional ordinary shares or any other rights, the
depositary has discretion to determine how these rights become available to you
as a holder of ADRs. We must first instruct the depositary to do so and furnish
it with satisfactory evidence that it is legal to do so. The depositary could
decide it is not legal or practical to make the rights available to you, or it
could decide that it is only legal or practical to make the rights available to
some but not all holders of the ADRs. The depositary may decide to sell the
rights. If the depositary decides it is practical to sell the rights, the
depositary will sell the rights and distribute the proceeds in the same way as
it does with cash. If the depositary decides that it is not legal or practical
to make the rights available to you or to sell the rights, the rights that are
not distributed or sold could lapse. In that case, you will receive no value
for them. The depositary is not responsible for a failure in determining
whether or not it is legal or practical to distribute the rights. However, the
depositary is liable for damages if it acts negligently or in bad faith.

   If the depositary makes rights available to you, it will exercise the rights
and purchase the ordinary shares on your behalf. The depositary will then
deposit the ordinary shares and issue ADRs to you. It will only exercise rights
if you pay it the exercise price and any other charges the rights require you
to pay.

   U.S. or German securities laws may restrict the sale, deposit, cancellation,
and transfer of the ADRs issued after exercise of rights. For example, you may
not be able to trade the new ADRs freely in the United States. In this case,
the depositary may issue the new ADRs under a separate restricted deposit
agreement which will contain the same provisions as the deposit agreement,
except for changes needed to put the restrictions in place.

                                       80
<PAGE>

   Other Distributions. The depositary will send to you anything else we
distribute on deposited securities by any means it thinks is legal, fair and
practical. If it cannot make the distribution in that way, the depositary has a
choice. It may decide to sell what we distributed and distribute the net
proceeds, in the same way as it does with cash. Or, it may decide to hold what
we distributed, in which case ADRs will also represent the newly distributed
property.

   The depositary is not responsible if it decides that it is unlawful or
impractical to make a distribution available to any ADR holders. We have no
obligation to register ADRs, ordinary shares, rights or other securities under
the U.S. Securities Act or the German securities laws. We also have no
obligation to take any other action to permit the distribution of ADRs,
ordinary shares, rights or anything else to ADR holders. This means you may not
receive the distributions we make on our ordinary shares or any value for them
if it is illegal or impractical for us to make them available to you.

Deposit, Withdrawal and Cancellation

   Method for the depositary to issue ADRs. The depositary will issue ADRs if
you or your broker deposit ordinary shares or evidence of rights to receive
ordinary shares with the custodian. Upon payment of its fees and expenses and
of any taxes or charges, such as stamp taxes or stock transfer taxes or fees,
the depositary will register the appropriate number of ADRs in the names you
request and will deliver the ADRs at its office to the persons you request.

   Method for an ADR Holder to cancel ADRs and obtain ordinary shares. You may
turn in your ADRs at the depositary's office. Upon payment of its fees and
expenses and of any taxes or charges, such as stamp taxes or stock transfer
taxes or fees, the depositary will deliver (1) the underlying ordinary shares
to an account designated by you to the extent legally permissible and (2) any
other deposited securities underlying the ADR at the office of the custodian.
Or, at your request, risk and expense, the depositary will deliver the ordinary
shares at its office.

Voting Rights

   You do not have the right as an ADR holder to attend our meetings. You may
instruct the depositary to vote the shares underlying your ADRs. You could
exercise your right to vote directly if you withdraw the ordinary shares.
However, you may not know about the meeting enough in advance to withdraw the
ordinary shares.

   When we notify the depositary of an upcoming vote, the depositary will
notify you of the upcoming vote and arrange to deliver our voting materials to
you. The materials will describe the matters to be voted on, explain how you,
if you hold the ADRs on a date specified by the depositary, may instruct the
depositary to vote the ordinary shares or other deposited securities underlying
your ADRs as you direct and to request a poll for each matter for which you
gave directions. The materials will also include a statement that, if you do
not give the depositary instructions, the depositary may give a discretionary
proxy to a person that we designate. For your instructions to be valid, the
depositary must receive them in writing on or before a date specified by the
depositary. The depositary will try, as far as practical, subject to Irish law
and the provisions of our articles of association, to vote or to have its
agents vote the ordinary shares or other deposited securities as you instruct.
The depositary will only vote or attempt to vote as you instruct.


                                       81
<PAGE>

   If you do not give the depositary instructions, you will be considered to
have instructed the depositary to give a discretionary proxy to a person
designated by us. However, no instruction will be deemed to have been given,
and the depositary will not give a discretionary proxy, if the matter to be
voted upon:

  .  is a matter not submitted to shareholders by means of a proxy statement
     comparable to that specified in the U.S. proxy rules;

  .  is the subject of a counter-solicitation, or is part of a proposal made
     by a shareholder which is being opposed by our management;

  .  is related to a merger or consolidation, except in limited circumstances
     involving a merger between us and a wholly-owned subsidiary;

  .  authorizes mortgaging of property;

  .  authorizes or creates indebtedness or increases the authorized amount of
     indebtedness;

  .  authorizes or creates preference shares or increases the authorized
     amount of existing preference shares;

  .  alters the terms or conditions of any shares then outstanding or
     existing indebtedness;

  .  involves waiver or modification of preemptive rights, except when our
     proposal is to waive these rights for shares being offered under share
     option or purchase plans involving the additional issuance of not more
     than 5% of our outstanding ordinary shares;

  .  alters voting provisions or the proportionate voting power of a class of
     shares, or the number of its votes per share, except where cumulative
     voting provisions govern the number of votes per share for election of
     directors and our proposal involves a change in the number of its
     directors by not more than 10% or not more than one;

  .  changes existing quorum requirements for shareholder meetings;

  .  authorizes issuance of ordinary shares, or options to purchase ordinary
     shares, to our directors, officers, or employees in an amount which
     exceeds 5% of the total amount of the class outstanding. However, when
     no plan is amended to extend its duration, we shall factor into the
     calculation the number of ordinary shares that remain available for
     issuance, the number of ordinary shares subject to outstanding options
     and any ordinary shares being added. Should there be more than one plan
     being considered at the same meeting, all ordinary shares will be
     aggregated;

  .  authorizes (a) a new profit-sharing or special remuneration plan, or a
     new retirement plan, the annual cost of which will amount to more than
     10% of average annual income before taxes for the preceding five years,
     or (b) the amendment of an existing plan which would bring its costs
     above 10% of the five-year average annual income before taxes. Should
     there be more than one plan being considered at the same meeting, all
     costs are aggregated; exceptions may be made in cases of: (a) retirement
     plans based on agreement or negotiations with labor unions or which have
     been or are to be approved by labor unions, and (b) any related
     retirement plan for benefit of non-union employees having terms
     substantially equivalent to the terms of a union-negotiated plan, which
     is submitted for action of shareholders concurrently with a union-
     negotiated plan;


                                       82
<PAGE>

  .  changes our purposes or powers to an extent which would permit us to
     change to a materially different line of business and it is our stated
     intention to make such a change;

  .  authorizes the acquisition of property, assets, or a company, where the
     consideration to be given has a fair value of 20% or more of the market
     value of our previously outstanding ADSs and ordinary shares;

  .  authorizes the sale or other disposition of assets or earning power of
     20% or more of those existing before the transaction;

  .  authorizes a transaction not in the ordinary course of business in which
     an officer, director or substantial security holder has a direct or
     indirect interest; or

  .  reduces earned surplus by 51% or more, or reduces earned surplus to an
     amount less than the aggregate of three years' ordinary share dividends
     computed at the current dividend rate.

   We cannot assure you that you will receive the voting materials in time to
ensure that you can instruct the depositary to vote your shares. In addition,
the depositary and its agents are not responsible for failing to carry out
voting instructions or for the manner of carrying out voting instructions. This
means that you may not be able to exercise your right to vote and there may be
nothing you can do if your ordinary shares are not voted as you requested.

Fees and Expenses

  ADR holders must pay:              For:

  $ 5.00 or less per 100 ADSs        Each issuance of an ADR,
                                     including as a result of a
                                     distribution of ordinary shares
                                     or rights or other property

                                     Each cancellation of an ADR,
                                     including if the deposit
                                     agreement terminates

  $ 0.02 or less per ADS             Any cash payment

  Registration or transfer fees      Transfer and registration of
                                     ordinary shares on the share
                                     register of the foreign
                                     registrar from your name to the
                                     name of the depositary or its
                                     agent when you deposit or
                                     withdraw ordinary shares

  Expenses of the depositary         Conversion of Irish pounds to
                                     U.S. dollars or euros

  Expenses of the depositary         Cable, telex and facsimile
                                     transmission expenses, if
                                     expressly provided in the
                                     deposit agreement

  Taxes and other governmental       As necessary
  charges the depositary or
  custodian have to pay on any
  ADR or ordinary share
  underlying an ADR, for
  example, stock transfer
  taxes, stamp duty or
  withholding taxes


                                       83
<PAGE>

Payment of Taxes

   The depositary may deduct the amounts of taxes owed from any payments to
you. It may also sell deposited securities, by public or private sale, to pay
any taxes owed. You will remain liable if the proceeds of the sale are not
enough to pay the taxes. If the depositary sells deposited securities, it will,
if appropriate, reduce the number of ADRs to reflect the sale and pay to you
any proceeds, or send to you any property remaining after it has paid the
taxes.

Reclassifications, Recapitalizations and Mergers

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
   If we:                               Then:
   <S>                                  <C>
   .  Change the nominal or par         The cash, shares or other securities
      value of our ordinary shares      received by the depositary will become
                                        deposited securities.

   .  Reclassify, split up or           Each ADR will automatically represent
      consolidate any of the            its equal share of the newly deposited
      deposited securities              securities.

   .  Distribute securities on the      The depositary will, when we ask them
      ordinary shares that are not      to, distribute some or all of the
      distributed to you                securities it received, or cash or
                                        other consideration in lieu of the
                                        securities.
</TABLE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
   If we:                               Then:
   <S>                                  <C>
   .  Recapitalize, reorganize,         It may also issue new ADRs or ask you
      merge, liquidate, sell all or     to surrender your outstanding ADRs in
      substantially all of our          exchange for new ADRs representing the
      assets, or take any similar       new deposited securities.
      action
</TABLE>

Amendment and Termination

   Amendment of the Deposit Agreement. We may agree with the depositary to
amend the deposit agreement and the ADRs without your consent for any reason.
If the amendment adds or increases fees or charges, except for taxes and other
governmental charges or expenses of the depositary, or prejudices an important
right of ADR holders, it will only become effective 30 days after the
depositary notifies you of the amendment. At the time an amendment becomes
effective, you are considered, by continuing to hold your ADR, to agree to the
amendment and to be bound by the ADRs and the amended deposit agreement.

   Termination of the Deposit Agreement. The depositary will terminate the
deposit agreement if we ask to do so. The depositary may also terminate the
deposit agreement if it has told us that it would like to resign and we have
not appointed a new depositary bank within 90 days. In both cases, the
depositary must notify you at least 30 days before termination.

   After termination, the depositary and its agents will be required to do only
the following under the deposit agreement:

     (1) advise you that the deposit agreement is terminated,

     (2) collect distributions on the deposited securities, and

     (3) deliver ordinary shares and other deposited securities upon
cancellation of ADRs.

                                       84
<PAGE>

   One year after termination, the depositary will, if practical, sell any
remaining deposited securities by public or private sale. After that, the
depositary will hold the money it received on the sale, as well as any other
cash it is holding under the deposit agreement for the pro rata benefit of the
ADR holders that have not surrendered their ADRs. It will not invest the money
and has no liability for interest.

Limitations on Obligations and Liability to ADR Holders

   Limitations on our Obligations and the Obligations of the Depositary;
Limitations on Liability to Holders of ADRs. The deposit agreement expressly
limits our obligations and the obligations of the depositary. It also limits
our liability and the liability of the depositary. We and the depositary:

  .  are only obligated to take the actions specifically described in the
     deposit agreement without negligence or bad faith;

  .  are not liable if either of us is prevented or delayed by law or
     circumstances beyond our control from performing our obligations under
     the deposit agreement;

  .  are not liable if either of us exercises discretion permitted under the
     deposit agreement;

  .  have no obligation to become involved in a lawsuit or other proceeding
     related to the ADRs or the deposit agreement on your behalf or on behalf
     of any other party; and

  .  may rely upon any documents we believe in good faith to be genuine and
     to have been signed or presented by the proper party.

   In the agreement, we agree to indemnify the depositary from any liability
which may arise out of acts performed or omitted by the depositary other than
those arising out of the depositary's bad faith or negligence.

Requirements for Depositary Actions

   Before the depositary will issue or register transfer of an ADR, make a
distribution on an ADR, or permit withdrawal of ordinary shares, the depositary
may require:

  .  payment of stock transfer or other taxes or other governmental charges
     and transfer or registration fees charged by third parties for the
     transfer of any ordinary shares or other deposited securities;

  .  production of satisfactory proof of the identity and genuineness of any
     signature of other information it considers necessary; and

  .  compliance with regulations it may establish, from time to time,
     consistent with the deposit agreement, including presentation of
     transfer documents.

   The depositary may refuse to deliver, transfer or register transfers of ADRs
generally when the transfer books of the depositary, our transfer books or
those of The Depository Trust Company, Clearstream Banking or the foreign
registrar are closed or at any time if the depositary or we think it is
advisable to do so.

                                       85
<PAGE>

Your Right to Receive the Shares Underlying your ADRs

   You have the right to cancel your ADRs and withdraw the underlying ordinary
shares at any time except:

  .  When temporary delays arises because: (1) the transfer books are closed
     by us or the depositary; (2) the transfer of ordinary shares is blocked
     to permit voting at a shareholders' meeting; or (3) we are paying a
     dividend on the ordinary shares;

  .  When you or other ADR holders seeking to withdraw ordinary shares owe
     money to pay fees, taxes and similar charges; or

  .  When it is necessary to prohibit withdrawals to comply with any laws or
     governmental regulations that apply to ADRs or to the withdrawal of
     ordinary shares or other deposited securities.

   This right of withdrawal may not be limited by any other provision of the
deposit agreement.

Pre-Release of ADRs

   In limited circumstances, subject to the provisions of the deposit
agreement, the depositary may issue ADRs before deposit of the underlying
ordinary shares. This is called a pre-release of the ADR. The depositary may
also deliver ordinary shares upon cancellation of pre-released ADRs, even if
the ADRs are cancelled before the pre-release transaction has been closed out.
A pre-release is closed out as soon as the underlying ordinary shares are
delivered to the depositary. The depositary may receive ADRs instead of
ordinary shares to close out a pre-release. The depositary may pre-release ADRs
only under the following conditions:

     (1) before or at the time of the pre-release, the person to whom the
  pre-release is being made must represent to the depositary in writing that
  it or its customer owns the ordinary shares or ADRs to be deposited;

     (2) the pre-release must be fully collateralized with cash or other
  collateral that the depositary considers appropriate; and

     (3) the depositary must be able to close out the pre-release on not more
  than five business days' notice. In addition, the depositary will limit the
  number of ADRs that may be outstanding at any time as a result of pre-
  release, although the depositary may disregard the limit from time to time,
  if it thinks it is appropriate to do so.

Disclosure of Interests

   By purchasing ADRs, you agree to comply with our articles of association and
the laws of the Republic of Ireland regarding any disclosure requirements
regarding ownership of ordinary shares, all as if the ADRs were, for this
purpose, the ordinary shares they represent. By purchasing ADRs, you also agree
to be bound by provisions of the deposit agreement mandating compliance with
the disclosure requirements of Irish company law.

   As a public company, the Irish Companies Act, 1990, and our memorandum and
articles of association will permit us and our directors to request information
from you related to your ownership of the ADRs issued by us. Irish law and our
memorandum and articles of association impose penalties for failing to comply
with the disclosure requirements, including the possibility of having the
voting rights of the ordinary shares underlying the ADSs withdrawn, losing the
right to distributions or criminal penalties.

                                       86
<PAGE>

   To facilitate compliance with the notification requirements, ADR holders may
deliver any notification to the depositary, and the depositary will, as soon as
practicable, forward the notification to us and, to the extent practicable and
as permitted by applicable law, any authorities in the Republic of Ireland as
specified by the ADR holder.

Information Regarding the Depositary

   The depositary is The Bank of New York, a New York banking corporation
established in 1784. It does not have a limited life. It does not have a
registration number or a registered office. Its principal executive and
administrative offices are located at 101 Barclay Street, New York, New York
10286.

   If the depositary becomes insolvent, the deposited securities which are
represented by ADSs would be distributed to the ADR holders entitled to them
after surrender of the holders' ADRs, payment of the fees of the depository,
and payment of any applicable taxes or governmental charges, as permitted by
the terms of the ADRs. Under those circumstances, the deposited securities are
not subject to the claims of the depositary's creditors.

                                       87
<PAGE>

                        SHARES ELIGIBLE FOR FUTURE SALE

   Future sales of substantial amounts of our ADSs in the public market could
adversely affect prevailing market prices from time to time. In particular,
after legal restrictions on resale described below expire, a substantial amount
of our ADSs will be able to be sold in the public market. Sales of substantial
amounts of our ADSs also could adversely affect our ability to raise equity
capital in the future.

   Upon completion of the offering, we will have outstanding an aggregate of
54,281,444 equivalent ADSs, assuming no exercise of the underwriters' over-
allotment option and no exercise of outstanding options or warrants after
January 31, 2000. Of these shares, the 6,000,000 ADSs sold in this offering are
freely tradable, unless they are purchased by any of our affiliates. In
general, our affiliates include our directors, officers and 10% shareholders.
These affiliates may generally only resell our shares in compliance with the
limitations of Rule 144 described below.

   Restricted securities may be sold in the public market in the United States
only if registered or if they qualify for an exemption from registration under
Section 4(1) of the Securities Act or under Rules 144 or 701 under the
Securities Act. The restricted securities also may be sold in the public market
outside the United States under Rule 904 under the Securities Act. These rules
are summarized below. As a result of the agreements describe below, these
restricted securities are eligible for sale in the public market as follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                            Approximate
                               ADSs
                             eligible
           Date              for sale                  Comment
           ----             ----------- --------------------------------------
<S>                         <C>         <C>
Upon effectiveness......... 25,223,930  Freely tradable shares and shares
                                        eligible for sale under Rule 144,
                                        144(k) or 701 that are not subject to
                                        the 90 day lockup (including ADSs sold
                                        in the offering)

91 days after the date of
 the
prospectus................. 29,056,848  Lockup released; freely tradable
                                        shares and shares eligible for sale,
                                        under Rule 144, 144(k) or 701
</TABLE>

   In addition, as of January 31, 2000, there were outstanding options to
purchase up to 3,611,327 ordinary shares (7,222,654 equivalent ADSs) which will
be eligible for sale in the public market following the offering from time to
time, subject to becoming exercisable and, in the case of the options mentioned
in the following paragraph, the expiration of agreements with the underwriters
described in the following paragraph.

   Our officers and directors and the selling shareholders in this offering,
holding in the aggregate 14,528,424 ordinary shares (29,056,848 equivalent
ADSs), have entered into agreements with the underwriters. Under these
agreements, our officers and directors and most of our shareholders holding 5%
or more of the outstanding ordinary shares have agreed not to offer, sell,
contract to sell or dispose of, or enter into any transaction having a similar
economic effect similar to that of a sale of, any ordinary shares for a period
of 90 days after the date of this prospectus, without the prior written consent
of Deutsche Bank AG. In addition, certain of our shareholders have agreed not
to offer, sell, contract to sell or dispose of, or enter into any transaction
having an economic effect similar to that of a sale of, 50% of the ordinary
shares held by such shareholders for a period of 90 days after the date of the

                                       88
<PAGE>


prospectus, without the prior consent of Deutsche Bank AG. In either case, this
consent may be given at any time without public notice. We have entered into a
similar agreement, except that we may issue, and grant options or warrants to
purchase, ADSs or ordinary shares or any securities convertible into,
exercisable for or exchangeable for ADSs or ordinary shares, upon the exercise
of outstanding options and warrants and under the existing stock option and
stock purchase plans.

   In general, under Rule 144 shareholders who have beneficially owned
restricted shares for at least one year, including the holding period of any
prior owner except one of our affiliates, would be entitled to sell within any
three-month period a number of shares that does not exceed the greater of one
percent of the number of outstanding equivalent ADSs, which will equal
approximately 542,814 ADSs immediately after the offering, or the average
weekly trading volume in the shares during the four calendar weeks immediately
preceding the sale. Sales under Rule 144 are also subject to provisions
governing the manner of sale and requiring notice and publicly available
information about us. Under Rule 144(k), a person who has not been one of our
affiliates at any time during the 90 days preceding a sale, and who has
beneficially owned the shares to be sold for at least two years, is entitled to
sell the shares without complying with the manner of sale, public information,
volume limitation or notice provisions of Rule 144. Therefore, unless shares
are otherwise restricted, and subject to the agreements with the underwriters
described above, 144(k) shares may be sold immediately upon the completion of
the offering.

   In general, under Rule 701 of the Securities Act as currently in effect, any
of our employees, consultants or advisors who purchases shares from us under
Rule 701 in connection with a compensatory stock or option plan or other
written agreement is eligible to resell those shares, unless contractually
restricted, 90 days after the effective date of the registration statement in
reliance on Rule 144, but without compliance with some of restrictions,
including the holding period, contained in Rule 144.

   Rule 904 under the Securities Act provides that ADS representing ordinary
shares owned by any person, other than persons deemed to be affiliates by
virtue of their significant shareholdings in us, may be sold without
registration outside of the United States. To do so, the sale generally must be
made to a person outside the United States, effected outside the United States
and without directed selling efforts made in the United States. In general,
this means that the ADSs representing ordinary shares, including restricted
ordinary shares and ordinary shares held by several of our directors and
officers who do not own a significant percentage of the ordinary shares
outstanding, may be sold without registration on the Neuer Markt or outside of
the United States.

   We have filed a Form S-8 registration statement under the Securities Act to
register ordinary shares reserved for issuance under our share option plans.
ADSs represented by ordinary shares issued upon exercise of options are
immediately available for sale in the public market, subject to Rule 144 volume
limitations applicable to affiliates.

   Some of our shareholders have the right to cause us to register their
ordinary shares.

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                            THE GERMAN EQUITY MARKET

The Frankfurt Stock Exchange and the Neuer Markt

   The Frankfurt Stock Exchange is the most significant of the eight German
stock exchanges and accounted for approximately 80% of the turnover in traded
shares in Germany in 1999. The aggregate annual turnover of the Frankfurt Stock
Exchange in 1999 of approximately DM 7.975 trillion for both equity and debt
instruments, made it the fourth largest stock exchange in the world behind the
New York Stock Exchange, London and Tokyo in terms of turnover. The calculation
of the aggregate annual turnover of the Frankfurt Stock Exchange is based on
the Frankfurt Stock Exchange's practice of separately recording the sale and
purchase components involved in any trade. As of December 31, 1999, the equity
securities of 3,265 corporations, including more than 2,000 foreign
corporations, were traded on the Frankfurt Stock Exchange.

   The Neuer Markt segment of the Frankfurt Stock Exchange is a new trading
segment that was launched in March 1997. It is designed for innovative, small
to mid-size companies in high growth industries or in traditional industries
that have an international orientation and that are willing to provide active
investor relations. The Frankfurt Stock Exchange requires that the issuer make
a presentation, and it may reject the issuer if it considers the issuer
inappropriate for the Neuer Markt. Issuers are requested to provide investors
on an ongoing basis with information such as annual and quarterly reports,
including cash flow statements, and a corporate action timetable. This
information is required to be submitted in English and German as well as in
electronic form, thus enabling the stock exchange to disseminate corporate
information over the Internet page entitled "Company Information" at
http://www.neuer-markt.de.

Trading on the Neuer Markt

   Trading of shares listed on the Neuer Markt takes place on the floor of the
stock exchange, but is computer-aided. Shares listed on the Neuer Markt can
also be traded on a computer-aided system called Xetra. Trading takes place on
every business day between 9:00 a.m. and 5:30 p.m., Frankfurt time. Trading
within the Xetra system is done by banks and brokers who have been admitted to
trading on at least one of Germany's stock exchanges. Xetra is integrated into
the Frankfurt Stock Exchange and is subject to its rules and regulations.

   Markets in listed securities are generally of the auction type, but listed
securities also change hands in inter-bank dealer markets off the Frankfurt
Stock Exchange. Price formation is determined by open bid by state-appointed
specialists who are themselves exchange members, but who do not, as a rule,
deal with the public. Prices of shares traded on the Neuer Markt are displayed
continuously during trading hours. At the half-way point of each trading day, a
single standard quotation is determined for all shares. The members'
association of the Frankfurt Stock Exchange publishes a daily list of prices
which contains the standard prices of all traded securities, as well as their
highest and lowest quotations during the past year.

   Transactions on the Frankfurt Stock Exchange, including transactions within
the Xetra system, are settled on the second business day following trading.
Transactions off the Frankfurt Stock Exchange for large volumes or if one of
the parties is foreign are generally also settled on the second business day
following trading, unless the parties have agreed upon a different date.
Following an amendment to the conditions of German banks for securities
trading, customers' orders to buy or sell listed securities must be executed on
a stock exchange, unless the customer instructs otherwise. Trading can be
suspended by the Frankfurt Stock Exchange if orderly stock exchange trading is
temporarily endangered or if a suspension is in the public interest.

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   A specific feature of the Neuer Markt is the introduction of the obligatory
designated sponsor. The designated sponsor is an entity admitted for trading at
the Frankfurt Stock Exchange which provides additional liquidity by quoting
prices for the buying and selling of shares on request. Each issuer on the
Neuer Markt has to nominate at least two designated sponsors which will not
only ensure that there is sufficient liquidity for its shares, but also serve
as consultants on all stock market related matters for the issuer.

   Trading on German stock exchanges is monitored by regulatory agencies
including the Federal Supervisory Office for Securities Trading.

   The previous ADSs have been admitted for listing on the Neuer Markt. Since
September 24, 1999, our ADSs have been traded on the Neuer Markt under the
symbol TTP. The Neuer Markt is still a relatively new market. Therefore, an
active trading market for the ADSs may not develop on the Neuer Markt or the
Neuer Markt may experience problems in settlement or clearance as trading
develops. Any delays or problems could adversely affect the market price of the
ADSs. Persons proposing to trade the ADSs on the Neuer Markt should inform
themselves about the potential costs of trading on this market.

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                                    TAXATION

   The following is a general summary of important tax considerations derived
from the laws of the Republic of Ireland, Germany and the federal law of the
United States relating to the purchase, ownership and disposition of ADSs or
ordinary shares by U.S. holders, German holders and Irish holders. For the
purposes of this discussion, a U.S. holder means an individual citizen or
resident of the United States for U.S. federal income tax purposes, a
corporation or partnership created or organized under the laws of the United
States, or any of the states comprising the United States, an estate the income
of which is subject to U.S. federal income taxation regardless of its source,
or a trust, the administration of which is subject to the primary supervision
of a court within the United States and regarding which one or more U.S.
persons have the authority to control all substantial decisions of the trust.
For purposes of this discussion, a German holder means an individual with his
residence or usual place of stay in Germany as well as a corporation with its
registered seat or management in Germany, or permanent establishment in
Germany, which is maintained by a shareholder not subject to unlimited tax
liability or is usually at the shareholder's disposal, and an Irish holder
means any person who is a resident or is ordinarily resident in Ireland or who
is carrying on a trade in Ireland through a branch or agency.

   This summary is of a general nature only and does not discuss all aspects of
Irish, German and U.S. taxation that may be relevant to a particular investor.
In particular, the following summary does not address the tax treatment of U.S.
holders or Irish holders who own, actually or constructively, 10% or more of
our outstanding voting stock. Nor does this summary address classes of U.S.
holders, such as broker-dealers, insurance companies, tax-exempt organizations,
financial institutions, persons subject to the alternative minimum tax and
persons who do not hold ADSs as capital assets. These particular investors not
addressed in this summary may be subject to special rules.

   Prospective purchasers of ADSs are advised to consult their own tax advisors
regarding the U.S. federal, state and local tax consequences, as well as
regarding the tax consequences in Germany and the Republic of Ireland and other
jurisdictions, of the purchase, sale and ownership of ADSs applicable in their
particular tax situations.

   The statements of Irish, German and U.S. tax laws described below are based
on the laws in force and as interpreted by the relevant taxation authorities as
of the date of this prospectus and are subject to any changes in Irish, German
or U.S. law, or in the interpretation of these laws by the relevant taxation
authorities, or in the double taxation conventions among any two of the
Republic of Ireland, Germany and the United States occurring after that date.
The discussion regarding Irish taxation matters is based on the various Irish
taxes acts, finance acts and other relevant legislation, judicial decisions,
statements of practice and revenue practices in force at this time, all of
which are subject to change, possibly with retrospective effect. The discussion
regarding U.S. federal income taxation matters is based on the provisions of
the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, final, temporary and proposed U.S. treasury
regulations promulgated under the U.S. code and administrative and judicial
interpretations of the U.S. code, all as in effect as of the date of this
prospectus and all of which are subject to change, possibly with retroactive
effect.

   On January 11, 2000, the German Federal Ministry of Finance published the
draft "Business Tax Reform and Tax Reduction Act," or the "Draft Bill". Most of
the proposed changes will be implemented with effect from January 1, 2001.

   According to the Draft Bill, the current split rate of corporate income tax
will be replaced by a flat tax rate of 25%. The top marginal personal income
tax rate on ordinary income of

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currently 51% will be reduced--over several years--to 45% by 2005. Trade tax
and solidarity surcharge will remain unchanged. The cornerstone of the Draft
Bill is a fundamental reform of the structure of German business taxation,
including the transfer from the current corporate full imputation tax system to
a system referred to as "Half Income System" as well as an option for
partnerships to be treated as corporations for tax purposes. Other notable
changes include an unconditional participation exemption for capital gains on
the disposition of shares by a corporation which will come into effect on
January 1, 2002.

   The German Federal Government adopted the Draft Bill on February 9, 2000
with only few changes. It will now be submitted to the German Federal
Parliament and, after having passed the German Federal Parliament, to the
German Federal Council of States. The proposed changes are put into parentheses
in the following sections:

Our Taxation

   Republic of Ireland Taxation. Companies which are resident in the Republic
of Ireland are subject to Irish corporation tax on their total profits wherever
arising and whether or not remitted to the Republic of Ireland. It is the
present intention of our directors to manage and control us from Ireland so
that we will be regarded as resident in Ireland for Irish tax purposes. The
standard rate of Irish corporation tax on trading income is currently 28% but
this is to be reduced by 4% each year until January 1, 2003, with the rate
applying as and from that date being 12.5%. Non-trading income is taxed at the
rate of 25%.

   There is also a reduced rate of corporation tax in Ireland of 10% which
applies to income from the sale of goods manufactured in Ireland and from other
activities considered to be the manufacture of goods in Ireland. The electronic
PoS and software activities of Trintech Technologies, Inc., one of our
subsidiaries, qualifies for the 10% rate of tax until December 31, 2010. After
that date, our income will be taxable at the then current standard rates
appropriate for trading income and non-trading income.

   Irish tax law also provides that a company which is resident in Ireland and
which is not resident elsewhere shall be entitled to have any income from a
qualifying patent disregarded for taxation purposes provided several conditions
are fulfilled. The legislation does not provide a termination date for this
relief. One of our subsidiaries currently has income qualifying for this
exemption.

   Irish capital duty is payable at 1% on our issue of shares.

   United States Taxation. Under the 1997 Convention, we will not be subject to
the U.S. income tax unless we engage in a trade or business in the United
States through a permanent establishment. We currently operate in the United
States through our wholly-owned U.S. subsidiary, Trintech, Inc. We expect to be
able to conduct our business activities in a manner that will not result in our
being considered to be engaged in a trade or business or to have a permanent
establishment in the United States, even though Trintech, Inc. is a U.S.
taxpayer.

   German Taxation. The tax treatment of ADSs includes some unresolved
questions, since ADSs are comparatively new instruments in Germany. Therefore
no court decisions or letters of the fiscal authorities exist in Germany
dealing with special questions of ADSs.

   Potential investors should be aware that for purposes of German law,
ownership of the ADSs is not considered legal ownership of the underlying
ordinary shares. However, the economic and other rights associated with owning
ADSs are similar to those associated with owning the underlying ordinary shares
directly. Therefore, there are no tax benefits associated with, and in
principal no differences regarding the German tax treatment of dividends or
capital gains resulting from, holding ADSs instead of ordinary shares.

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   Foreign companies are subject to German trade tax if trade is established
through a permanent establishment or a representative in Germany. Since 1998,
trade tax has no longer been levied on the capital but only on the profits of
the foreign companies. The applicable tax rate depends on the municipality in
which the permanent establishment or representative is located.

   Foreign companies without a registered seat or place of management in
Germany are also subject to limited corporation tax liability on their domestic
income. The general corporation tax rate amounts to 40% (25%) according to sec.
23 para 1 Corporation Tax Law. A solidarity surcharge of 5.5% is also levied on
the amount of corporation tax, as a result of which the aggregate tax totals
42.2%.

   Profit transferred abroad after the application of trade and corporation tax
are not subject to withholding tax.

   We currently only operate in Germany through our wholly owned subsidiary
Trintech GmbH, Neu-Isenburg. Therefore we believe that Trintech Group, Dublin,
Ireland is not subject to German trade or corporation tax.

Taxation of Dividends

   Republic of Ireland Taxation. We currently intend to retain future earnings,
if any, to fund the development and growth of our business. Should we begin
paying dividends, unless exempted, all dividends paid by us will be subject to
Irish withholding tax at the rate of 24%. The Finance Bill, if enacted as
published, will reduce this rate to 22% with effect from April 6, 2000. An
individual holder of ordinary shares resident in a relevant territory, being a
country with which Ireland has a double tax treaty, which includes the United
States, or in a member state of the European Union other than Ireland, will be
exempt from withholding tax provided he makes the requisite declaration. A
transitional provision permits dividends to be paid free of withholding tax to
investors whose address in our share register is in a relevant territory until
April 6, 2000. Corporate holders of ordinary shares ultimately controlled by
residents of a relevant territory or the principal class of shares of which, or
of a 75% parent, is traded on a stock exchange in a relevant territory will be
exempt from withholding tax provided the appropriate declaration is made. The
Finance Bill contains provisions which if enacted will provide that corporate
holders of ordinary shares resident in a relevant territory which are not
controlled by Irish residents and corporate holders wholly owned by two or more
companies, the shares of each of which are traded on a stock exchange in a
relevant territory will be exempt from withholding tax provided that the
appropriate declaration is made. A holder of ADRs will be exempt from
withholding tax if it is beneficially entitled to the dividend and if its
address on the register of ADRs maintained by the depositary is in the United
States. Additionally, the depositary must be authorized by the Irish Revenue
Commissioners as a qualifying intermediary for this exemption to apply. Where
such a withholding is made it will satisfy the liability to Irish tax of the
shareholder except in circumstances where an Irish resident or ordinarily
resident individual holder of ordinary shares may have an additional liability.

   A charge to Irish social security taxes and other levies can arise for
individuals. An individual who is neither resident nor ordinarily resident in
Ireland can only incur this liability if that individual also carries on a
trade or profession in Ireland. However, under the social welfare agreement
between Ireland and the United States, an individual who is liable for U.S.
social security contributions can normally claim an exemption from these taxes
and levies.


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   United States Taxation. For U.S. federal income tax purposes, the gross
amount, which includes the amount of the tax credit, of any dividend paid to
the extent of our current or accumulated earnings and profits, as determined
based on U.S. tax principles, will be included in a U.S. holder's gross income
and treated as foreign source dividend income. These dividends will not be
eligible for the dividends received deduction allowed to U.S. corporations. The
amount of any distribution that exceeds earnings and profits will be treated
first as a nontaxable return of capital, reducing the U.S. holder's basis in
its shares, and then as capital gain. The amount includable in income will be
the U.S. dollar value of the payment based on the exchange rate on the date of
payment regardless of whether the payment is in fact converted into U.S.
dollars. Generally, gain or loss, if any, resulting from currency fluctuations
during the period from the date any dividend is paid to the date the payment is
converted into U.S. dollars generally will be treated as ordinary income or
loss.

   The U.S. Internal Revenue Service, has ruled privately that a U.S. holder
will be eligible for a U.S. foreign tax credit under Article XIII of the 1949
Convention for the Irish tax imposed on a dividend paid by an Irish company.
The same result should occur under the 1997 Convention. Although private letter
rulings are not binding authority and are directed only to the taxpayer who
requests them, they are considered persuasive in determining the position of
the IRS. The amount of the allowable credit is likely to be determined by
applying a statutorily defined formula. To the extent that any distribution is
made by us out of profits taxed in the Republic of Ireland at the standard
rate, the allowable tax credit amount should be equal to 11/89ths of the net
distribution. To the extent that the distribution is paid out of profits
taxable in the Republic of Ireland at the reduced 10% rate, the allowable tax
credit amount should be equal to 1/18th of the net distribution.

   If the U.S. holder is a U.S. partnership, trust or estate, the allowable tax
credit amount will be available only to the extent that the income derived by
the partnership, trust or estate is subject to U.S. tax as the income of a
resident either in its hands or in the hands of its partners or beneficiaries.

   German Taxation. Dividends paid on ordinary shares or ADSs held as German
business assets are subject to trade tax. German holders of at least 10%
ordinary shares might benefit from a participation exemption for trade tax
purposes.

   Profits distributed by us are subject to German income or corporation tax,
if they are paid to:

  (a) a shareholder or ADS holder subject to unlimited tax liability, including
   individuals with their residence or usual place of stay in Germany as well
   as corporations with their registered seat or management in Germany, or

  (b) a permanent establishment in Germany which is maintained by a shareholder
   not subject to unlimited tax liability or is usually at the shareholder's or
   ADS holder's disposal.

   These dividend payments are subject to German corporation tax at the rate of
40% (25%) or the German progressive income tax, in each case plus a solidarity
surcharge of 5.5%. Profits transferred after the deduction of taxes as
described in clause (b) are not subject to withholding tax. Holders of at least
10% ordinary shares might benefit from a participation exemption for
corporation tax purposes. (Pursuant to the Draft Bill, it is planned that
dividends were tax exempt without any holding periods or participation ratios,
provided that they are derived by a corporation, effective January 1, 2001.
However, 5% of the dividend amount which are deemed to be non tax-deductible
business expenses under current law will still be treated as non tax-
deductible.)

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   As withholding tax is levied in Ireland on dividend distributions paid by
us, Irish withholding tax in an amount of 18% can be credit against that
portion of the German income or corporation tax attributable to the dividend
payment. It is, however, unclear regarding whether ADSs holders may avail
themselves of this tax credit because only the legal shareholder typically has
the right to take a credit for foreign withholding tax. If the withholding tax
amount actually withheld exceeds the German income tax attributable to the
dividend payment, the tax credit is restricted to the latter amount. Instead of
the tax credit, the withholding actually withheld may be deducted from taxable
income.

   German holders who are individuals may, as of the year 2000, claim a tax-
exempt amount for income from capital assets of DM3,000 or, for married couples
filing a joint income tax return, DM 6,000. These German holders can also
deduct from their dividend income costs resulting from the purchase, custody
and ownership of the ordinary shares or ADSs, in particular the fees of custody
and refinancing. These costs may, without evidence, be deducted for tax
purposes from the profits from dividends, to the amount of DM100 per year or
DM200 in the case of married couples filing a joint income tax return.

Taxation of Capital Gains

   Republic of Ireland Taxation. A person who is not an Irish holder will not
be subject to Irish capital gains tax on the disposal of ordinary shares or
ADRs provided that the ordinary shares or ADSs are quoted on a recognized stock
exchange. Nasdaq and the Neuer Markt are recognized stock exchanges. Irish
holders will be liable to Irish tax on capital gains arising on the disposal of
the ordinary shares or ADRs. The capital gain will generally be calculated by
reference to the difference between the purchase price and the sale price of
the ordinary shares or ADRs. The usual indexation relief and other reliefs and
allowances may be available in computing the liability of the shareholder.

   United States Taxation. Subject to the discussion of the passive foreign
investment companies, or PFIC, below, a U.S. holder's sale or exchange of ADSs
generally will result in the recognition of capital gain or loss by the U.S.
holder in an amount equal to the difference between the amount realized and the
U.S. holder's tax basis in the ADSs sold. Gain or loss realized on the sale of
ADSs by non-corporate U.S. holders will be subject to a maximum rate of U.S.
federal income tax of 20%, provided the ADSs were held for more than 12 months.
In general, any capital gain or loss recognized by a U.S. holder upon the sale
or exchange of ADSs will be treated as U.S. source income or loss for U.S.
foreign tax credit purposes. The deductibility of capital losses is subject to
limitations. A U.S. holder's tax basis in its ADSs will generally be the
purchase price paid for its ADSs by the U.S. holder. A U.S. holder that is
liable for both Irish and U.S. tax on a gain on the disposal of the ordinary
shares will generally be entitled, subject to limitations and under the 1997
Convention, to credit the amount of Irish capital gains or corporate tax paid
for the gain on the sale against the U.S. holder's U.S. federal income tax
liability for this gain.

   German Taxation. Capital gains realized from the sale of ordinary shares or
ADSs which were held as business assets by a German holder are subject to
taxation without any special regulations. The conversion of ADSs into ordinary
shares should not be a taxable event for German tax purposes. The conversion
should qualify as a replacement of the sole economic against the legal and
economic ownership. There are no German tax court decisions addressing the
exchange or conversion of foreign depositary receipts into foreign shares.

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   Capital gains deriving from the sale of ordinary shares or ADSs held as
private assets are only subject to taxation if:

  (a) the sale takes place within one year of purchase or, after this period
   has expired, the holder had, at any time during the five years preceding the
   sale, a participation of at least 10% (1%) directly or indirectly in the
   case of ADSs, in us, or

  (b) the ordinary shares or ADSs were received in return for a tax privileged
   contribution in kind.

   The conversion of ADSs into ordinary shares should not be a taxable event in
either case, although there are some uncertainties regarding German tax
treatment of the conversion by private individuals as described above.

Passive Foreign Investment Company Considerations

   We will be classified as a PFIC for U.S. federal income tax purposes if we
satisfy either of the following two tests:

  (a) 75% or more of our gross income for the taxable year is passive income,
   or

  (b) on average for the taxable year, 50% or more of our assets, by value or,
   if we so elect, by adjusted basis, produce or are held for the production of
   passive income.

   We do not believe that we satisfy either of the tests for PFIC status. We
also do not believe that we will satisfy either of the tests for PFIC status
after completion of this offering. If we are a PFIC for any taxable year, U.S.
holders would be required to either

  (a) pay an interest charge together with tax calculated at maximum ordinary
   income rates on particular excess distributions, which is defined to include
   gain on a sale or other disposition of ADSs, or

  (b) if a qualified electing fund election is made by a U.S. holder, to
   include in their taxable income enumerated undistributed amounts of our
   income, or

  (c) if an election is made by the U.S. holder to mark our shares to market,
   to include as ordinary income each year the excess, if any, of the fair
   market value at the end of the year of our shares held by the U.S. holder
   over its adjusted basis in the shares, and to recognize additional gain, if
   any, on the sale or other disposition of the shares as ordinary income for
   that year. The U.S. holder will be allowed to claim a deduction as an
   ordinary loss for the excess, if any, of the adjusted basis of the shares
   over their fair market value at the end of the year or over their final sale
   or disposition price, to the extent of the net amount of previously included
   income resulting from the mark to market election. The U.S. holder's basis
   in our ordinary shares will be adjusted to reflect any income or less
   amounts.

   Each U.S. holder should consult his own tax advisor regarding the
advisability of making the QEF election.

U.S. Information Reporting and Backup Withholding

   Any dividends paid, or proceeds on a sale of, ADSs to or by U.S. holders may
be subject to U.S. information reporting, and the 31% U.S. backup withholding
tax may apply unless the holder (1) is an exempt recipient, or (2) provides a
U.S. taxpayer identification number, certifies that no loss of exemption from
backup withholding has occurred and otherwise complies with any applicable
backup withholding requirements. Any amounts withheld under

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the U.S. backup withholding tax rules will be allowed as a refund or credit
against the U.S. holder's U.S. federal income tax, provided the required
information is furnished to the U.S. IRS.

Irish Capital Acquisition Tax and Probate Tax

   A gift or inheritance of ordinary shares or ADRs will be within the charge
to capital acquisitions tax, regardless of whether the former holder in
relation to the gift or inheritance is domiciled, and if the Finance Bill is
enacted as published resident and ordinarily resident, outside Ireland. Capital
acquisitions tax is charged at a rate of 20% if the Finance Bill is enacted as
circulated without amendment above a tax-free threshold. This tax-free
threshold is determined by the amount of the current benefit and of previous
benefits within the charge to the capital acquisitions tax and the relationship
between the former holder and the successor. Gifts and inheritances between
spouses are not subject to the capital acquisitions tax. There is also a
probate tax which is charged at 2% on the value of the estates of deceased
persons which exceed a specified threshold. To the extent that they pass under
a will or outside of a will, ordinary shares or ADRs would be within the charge
to this tax.

   The Estate Tax Convention between Ireland and the United States generally
provides for Irish capital acquisitions tax paid on inheritances in Ireland to
be credited, in whole or in part, against tax payable in the United States, in
the case where an inheritance of ordinary shares or ADRs is subject to both
Irish capital acquisitions tax and US federal estate tax. The Estate Tax
Convention does not apply to Irish capital acquisitions tax paid on gifts.

Irish Stamp Duty

   It is assumed for the purpose of this paragraph that ADRs are dealt in on a
stock exchange in the United States recognized by the Irish taxing authorities.
Under current Irish law, no stamp duty will be payable on the acquisition of
ADRs by persons purchasing ADRs or on any subsequent transfer of an ADR. A
transfer of ordinary shares, including transfers effected through CREST,
wherever executed and whether on sale, in contemplation of a sale or by way of
a gift, will attract duty at the rate of 1% of the consideration given or, in
the case of a gift or where the purchase price is inadequate or
unascertainable, on the market value of the ordinary shares. Transfers of
ordinary shares which are not liable to duty at the rate of 1%, such as
transfers under which there is no change in beneficial ownership, may attract a
fixed duty of IR(Pounds)10.

   The transfer by a holder to the depositary or custodian of ordinary shares
for deposit in return for ADRs and a transfer of ordinary shares from the
depositary or custodian in return for the surrender of ADRs will be stampable
at the rate of 1% if the transfer of the ordinary shares relates to a sale or
contemplated sale or any other change in the beneficial ownership under Irish
law of the ordinary shares. If, however, the transfer of the ordinary shares is
a transfer under which there is no change in the beneficial ownership under
Irish law of the ordinary shares being transferred, a fixed duty of
IR(Pounds)10 may be payable on the transfer.

   The person accountable for payment of stamp duty is the recipient or, in the
case of a transfer by way of a gift or for a consideration less than the market
value, all parties to the transfer. Stamp duty is normally payable within 30
days after the date of execution of the transfer. Late or inadequate payment of
stamp duty will result in a liability to interest, penalties and fines.

   The Irish Revenue Commissioners are prepared to exempt from Irish stamp duty
the transfer of ADRs dealt in on the Neuer Markt as long as the ADRs are also
dealt in on the Nasdaq National Market.

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Other Taxes in Germany

   Wealth Tax. At present, for assessment periods as of January 1, 1997, there
is no wealth tax levied in Germany.

   Inheritance and Gift Tax. The transfer of ordinary shares or ADSs to another
person as a gift or due to death is only subject to German inheritance and gift
tax if:

  (a) the former holder, or the new holder has, at the time of the passing of
   the assets, his residence or usual place of stay in Germany or before this
   time has been a German citizen not living abroad for more than five years,
   without having a residence in Germany, or

  (b) the ordinary shares or ADSs were part of the former holder's business
   assets, for which a permanent establishment was maintained in Germany or a
   permanent representative was commissioned.

   Other Taxes. If a purchase, sale or other alienation of ordinary shares or
ADSs is executed, no German capital transfer, tax, sales tax, stamp duty or
similar tax will be incurred.

   Real estate transfer tax may be incurred if 95% of the ordinary shares or
ADSs are transferred to one shareholder or if there is a unification of 95% of
the ordinary shares or ADSs at the level of a shareholder, provided we or one
of our direct or indirect subsidiaries hold German real estate.

                          EXCHANGE CONTROL REGULATIONS

   Republic of Ireland. Irish exchange control regulations ceased to apply from
and after December 31, 1992. Except as indicated below, there are no
restrictions on non-residents of the Republic of Ireland dealing in domestic
securities which includes shares or depositary receipts of Irish companies such
as us and dividends and redemption proceeds are freely transferable to non-
resident holders of the securities.

   The Financial Transfers Act, 1992 of Ireland was enacted in December 1992.
This act gives power to the Minister for Finance of Ireland to make provision
for the restriction of financial transfers between the Republic of Ireland and
other countries. Financial transfers are broadly defined and include all
transfers which would be movements of capital or payments within the meaning of
the treaties governing the European Communities. The acquisition or disposal of
ADSs issued by an Irish incorporated company and associated payments may fall
within this definition. In addition, dividends or payments on redemption or
purchase of shares and payments on a liquidation of an Irish incorporated
company would fall within this definition. Currently, orders under this act
prohibit any financial transfer to or by the order of or on behalf of residents
of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, reconstituted in 1991 as Serbia and
Montenegro, or Iraq unless permission for the transfer has been given by the
Central Bank of Ireland.

   We do not anticipate that Irish exchange controls or orders under the
Financial Transfers Act, 1992 will have a material effect on our business.

   For the purposes of the orders relating to Iraq and the Federal Republic of
Yugoslavia, reconstituted in 1991 as Serbia and Montenegro, a resident of those
countries is a person living in these countries, a body corporate or entity
operating in these countries and any person acting on behalf of any one of
these persons.

                                       99
<PAGE>

   Any transfer of, or payment for, an ordinary share or ADS involving the
government of any country which is currently the subject of United Nation
sanctions, any person or body controlled by any government or country under
United Nations sanctions, or any person acting on behalf of these governments
or countries, may be subject to restrictions required under these sanctions as
implemented into Irish law. Angola is currently the subject of United Nation
sanctions.

   Federal Republic of Germany. At present, the Federal Republic of Germany
does not restrict the export or import of capital, except for investments in
countries such as Iraq and Libya as required by resolutions adopted by the
United Nations and the European Union. However, for statistical purposes only,
every individual or corporation residing in Germany, a resident, must report to
the German Federal Central Bank, subject only to several immaterial exceptions,
any payment received from or made to an individual or a corporation resident
outside Germany, or a non-resident, if a payment exceeds DM 5,000 or the
equivalent in a foreign currency. In addition, residents must report any claims
against or any liabilities payable to non-residents if these claims or
liabilities, in the aggregate, exceed DM 3 million or the equivalent in a
foreign currency during any one month.

   Furthermore, residents must periodically report investments which it may
make in a non-resident enterprise if at least 10% of the share capital or of
the voting rights of the non-resident enterprise is attributable to the
resident or any of its non-resident affiliates. However, this reporting
requirement does not apply if the total assets of the non-resident enterprise
do not exceed DM 1.0 million or, if less than 50% of the share capital or
voting rights of the non-resident enterprise are attributable to the resident
or any of its non-resident affiliates, do not exceed DM 10.0 million.

   A non-resident affiliate is a non-resident entity of which more than 50% of
the share capital or voting rights are attributable to a resident. Moreover,
enterprises resident in Germany must periodically report investments which are
made in them if at least 10% of the share capital or of the voting rights of
the resident enterprise are attributable to one or more non-residents or any of
their resident affiliates. However, this reporting requirement does not apply
if the total assets of the resident enterprise do not exceed DM 1.0 million or,
if less than 50% of the share capital or voting rights of the resident
enterprise are attributable to one or more non-residents or any of their
resident affiliates, do not exceed DM 10.0 million. A resident affiliate is a
resident entity of which more than 50% of the share capital or voting rights
are attributable to a non-resident.

                                      100
<PAGE>

                                  UNDERWRITING

   Subject to the terms and conditions of the underwriting agreement, the
underwriters named below, through their representatives Deutsche Bank
Securities Inc., Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette Securities Corporation,
FleetBoston Robertson Stephens Inc. and Chase Securities Inc. have agreed to
purchase from us the following numbers of ADSs.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                       Number of
                              Underwriters                               ADSs
                              ------------                             ---------
   <S>                                                                 <C>
   Deutsche Bank Securities Inc.......................................
   Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette Securities Corporation................
   FleetBoston Robertson Stephens Inc.................................
   Chase Securities Inc...............................................
                                                                       ---------
     Total............................................................ 6,000,000
                                                                       =========
</TABLE>

   The underwriting agreement provides that the obligations of the underwriters
depend on the satisfaction of the conditions contained in the underwriting
agreement, and that the underwriters will purchase all of the ADSs offered by
us under this prospectus if any of these shares are purchased.

   We have been advised by the representatives that the underwriters propose to
offer the ADSs to the public at the public offering price presented on the
cover page of this prospectus and to dealers at a price less a concession not
in excess of $    , or approximately (Euro)     , per ADS to other dealers.
After the public offering, the offering price and other selling terms may be
changed by the representatives.

   We and one of our shareholders have granted the underwriters an option,
exercisable not later than 30 days after the date of this prospectus, to
purchase up to 900,000 additional ADSs at the public offering price less the
underwriting discount presented on the cover page of this prospectus. To the
extent that the underwriters exercise their option, each of the underwriters
will have a commitment to purchase approximately the same percentage of ADSs
available under the option that the number of ADSs to be purchased by it in the
above table bears to 6,000,000, and we and the selling shareholders will be
obligated under the option to sell the same number of ADSs to the underwriters.
The underwriters may exercise this option only to cover over-allotments made in
connection with the sale of the ADSs offered by us under this prospectus. If
purchased, the underwriters will offer the additional ADSs on the same terms as
those on which the 6,000,000 ADSs are being offered.

   We and the selling shareholders have agreed to indemnify the underwriters
against liabilities, including liabilities under the Securities Act, arising
from breaches of representations.

   All of our officers and directors and the selling shareholders in this
offering have entered into agreements with the underwriters. Under these
agreements, our officers and directors and most of our shareholders holding 5%
or more of the outstanding ordinary shares have agreed not to offer, sell,
contract to sell or dispose of, or enter into any transaction having a similar
economic effect similar to that of a sale of, any ADSs or ordinary shares for a
period of 90 days after the date of this prospectus without the prior written
consent of Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. In addition, certain of our
shareholders have agreed not to offer, sell, contract to sell or dispose of, or
enter into any transaction having an economic effect similar to that of a sale,
of 50% of the ordinary shares held by such shareholders for a period of 90 days
after the date of the prospectus, without the prior written consent of Deutsche
Bank Securities Inc. In either case, this consent may be given at any time
without public notice. We have entered into a similar agreement, except that we
may issue, and grant options or warrants to purchase, ADSs or

                                      101
<PAGE>

ordinary shares or any securities convertible into, exercisable for or
exchangeable for ADSs or ordinary shares, upon the exercise of outstanding
options and warrants and under the existing stock option and stock purchase
plans.

   The representatives have advised us that, under Regulation M of the U.S.
federal securities laws, participants in the offering may engage in
transactions which might stabilize or maintain the market price of the ADSs at
a level above that which might otherwise prevail in the open market. These
transactions include the following:

  .  Stabilizing bids. A stabilizing bid is a bid for or the purchase of the
     ADSs on behalf of the underwriters for the purpose of fixing or
     maintaining the price of the ADSs.

  .  Syndicate covering transaction. A syndicate covering transaction is the
     bid for or the purchase of the ADSs on behalf of the underwriters to
     reduce a short, or over-sold, position incurred by the underwriters in
     connection with the offering.

  .  Penalty bid. A penalty bid is an arrangement permitting the
     representatives to reclaim the selling concession otherwise owed an
     underwriter or syndicate member in connection with the offering if the
     ADSs originally sold by that underwriter or syndicate member is
     purchased by the representatives in a syndicate covering transaction and
     has therefore not been effectively placed by that underwriter or
     syndicate member.

   The representatives have advised us that these transactions may be effected
in different ways, including on the Neuer Markt or the Nasdaq National Market.
These transactions, if commenced, may be discontinued at any time.

   The representatives have also advised us that the underwriters and dealers
may engage in passive market making transactions in the ADSs in accordance with
Regulation M of the U.S. federal securities laws. In general, a passive market
maker may not bid for or purchase the ADSs at a price that exceeds the higher
independent bid. In addition, the net daily purchases made by any passive
market maker generally may not exceed 30% of its average daily trading volume
in the ADSs during a specified two-month prior period or 200 ADSs, whichever is
greater. A passive market maker must identify passive market making bids as
such on the Nasdaq electronic inter-dealer reporting system. Passive market
making may have the effect of stabilizing or maintaining the market price of
the ADSs at a level above that which might otherwise prevail in the open
market. Underwriters and dealers are not required to engage in passive market
making and may discontinue these activities at any time.

                                 LEGAL MATTERS

   The validity of the ordinary shares represented by the ADSs offered by us
under this prospectus will be passed upon by A&L Goodbody, Solicitors, Dublin,
Ireland, our Irish counsel. Some legal matters under United States law
regarding this offering will be passed upon by Wilson Sonsini Goodrich &
Rosati, Professional Corporation, Palo Alto, California, our U.S. counsel. Some
legal matters under the law of the Republic of Germany regarding this offering
will be passed upon by Oppenhoff & Radler, member of Linklaters & Alliance,
Frankfurt, Germany, our German counsel. Legal matters regarding this offering
will be passed upon for the underwriters by Brobeck Hale and Dorr, London,
England. Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati may rely upon A&L Goodbody,
Solicitors regarding matters governed by Irish law, and upon Oppenhoff &
Radler, member of Linklaters & Alliance, regarding matters governed by German
law. As of April 7, 2000, investment partnerships composed of some current and
former members of and persons associated with Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati,
as well as some individual attorneys of Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati,
beneficially owned an aggregate of 16,668 equivalent ADSs.

                                      102
<PAGE>

                                    EXPERTS

   The consolidated financial statements of Trintech Group PLC as of January
31, 1998, 1999 and 2000 and for each of the three years in the period ended
January 31, 2000 appearing in this prospectus have been audited by Ernst &
Young, independent auditors, as stated in their report appearing in this
prospectus. The auditors are located at Harcourt Centre, Harcourt Street,
Dublin, Ireland.

                      WHERE YOU CAN FIND MORE INFORMATION

   We have filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission a
registration statement on Form F-1 under the Securities Act for the ordinary
shares represented by the ADSs offered by this prospectus. This prospectus does
not contain all of the information included in the registration statement and
the exhibits and schedules to the registration statement. For further
information about us and the ordinary shares represented by the ADSs offered by
this prospectus, reference is made to the registration statement and the
exhibits and schedules filed as a part of the registration statement.
Statements made in this prospectus concerning the contents of any contract or
any other document summarize only the material information about the contract
or other document. These statements are qualified in their entirety by
reference to the copy of each these contracts or other document filed as an
exhibit to the registration statement. The registration statement, including
exhibits and schedules attached to the registration statement, may be inspected
without charge at the Commission's principal office in Washington, D.C., and
copies of all or any part of the registration statement may be obtained from
the Public Reference Room of the Commission, 450 Fifth Street, N.W.,
Washington, D.C. 20549, and at the Commission's regional offices located at
Citicorp Center, 500 West Madison Street, Suite 1400, Chicago, Illinois 60661
and at 7 World Trade Center, 13th Floor, New York, New York 10048 after payment
of fees prescribed by the Commission.

   We will furnish the depositary referred to under "Description of American
Depositary Shares" with annual reports in English, which will include a review
of operations and annual audited consolidated financial statements prepared in
conformity with U.S. GAAP. Upon receipt of the reports, the depositary will
promptly mail these reports to all registered holders of ADSs. We will also
furnish to the depositary in English all notices of shareholders' meetings and
other reports and communications that are made generally available to its
shareholders. The depositary will make notices, reports and communications
available to holders of ADSs in the manner we request and will mail to all
record holders of ADSs a notice containing a summary of the information
contained in any notice of a shareholders' meeting received by the depositary.

   We are subject to the reporting requirements of the U.S. Securities Exchange
Act of 1934 applicable to foreign private issuers. In connection with the
Exchange Act, we will file reports, including annual reports on Form 20-F, and
other information with the Commission. In addition, we will submit to the
Commission quarterly reports, which will include unaudited quarterly condensed
consolidated financial information, on Form 6-K for the first three quarters of
each fiscal year and file our annual report on Form 20-F within the time period
prescribed under Section 13 of the Exchange Act for filing domestic issuers of
quarterly reports on Form 10-Q and annual reports on Form 10-K. These reports
and other information may be obtained, upon written request, from The Bank of
New York, as depositary at its corporate trust office located at 101 Barclay
Street, New York, New York 10286. These reports and other information may also
be inspected and copied at prescribed rates at the public reference facilities
maintained by at Public Reference Room of the Commission, 450 Fifth Street,
N.W., Washington, D.C. 20549, and at the Commission's regional offices located
at

                                      103
<PAGE>

Citicorp Center, 500 West Madison Street, Suite 1400, Chicago, Illinois 60661
and at 7 World Trade Center, 13th Floor, New York, New York 10048 after payment
of fees prescribed by the Commission. Although the rules of the Nasdaq National
Market require us to solicit proxies from our shareholders, we are not subject
to the proxy solicitation requirements of Section 14 of the Exchange Act, and
our officers, directors and 10% beneficial owners are not subject to the
beneficial ownership reporting requirements or the short-swing profits recovery
rules of Section 16 of the Exchange Act.


                                      104
<PAGE>

                 INDEX TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                             OF TRINTECH GROUP PLC

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                           Page
                                                                           ----
<S>                                                                        <C>
Report of Independent Auditors............................................ F-2
Consolidated Balance Sheets............................................... F-3
Consolidated Statements of Operations..................................... F-4
Consolidated Statements of Changes in Redeemable Convertible Preference
 Shares and
 Shareholders' Equity (Net Capital Deficiency)............................ F-5
Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows..................................... F-6
Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements............................ F-7
</TABLE>

                                      F-1
<PAGE>

                         REPORT OF INDEPENDENT AUDITORS

The Board of Directors and Shareholders,
 Trintech Group PLC

   We have audited the accompanying consolidated balance sheets of Trintech
Group PLC and subsidiaries as of January 31, 1998, 1999 and 2000 and the
related consolidated statements of operations, changes in redeemable
convertible preference shares and shareholders' equity, and cash flows for the
years then ended. These financial statements are the responsibility of the
Company's management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on these
financial statements based on our audits.

   We conducted our audits in accordance with auditing standards generally
accepted in the United States. Those standards require that we plan and perform
the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements
are free of material misstatement. An audit includes examining, on a test
basis, evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures in the financial
statements. An audit also includes assessing the accounting principles used and
significant estimates made by management, as well as evaluating the overall
financial statement presentation. We believe that our audits provide a
reasonable basis for our opinion.

   In our opinion, the consolidated financial statements referred to above
present fairly, in all material respects, the consolidated financial position
of Trintech Group PLC and its subsidiaries at January 31, 1998, 1999 and 2000,
and the consolidated results of their operations and their cash flows for the
years then ended in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in
the United States.

Ernst & Young
Dublin, Ireland

March 16, 2000

                                      F-2
<PAGE>

                               TRINTECH GROUP PLC

                          CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS
          (U.S dollars in thousands, except share and per share data)

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                           January 31,
                                                     --------------------------
                                                      1998     1999      2000
                                                     -------  -------  --------
<S>                                                  <C>      <C>      <C>
ASSETS
Current assets
Cash and cash equivalents..........................  $   272  $ 1,691  $ 10,862
Marketable securities..............................      --     7,178    48,830
Accounts receivable, net of allowance for doubtful
 accounts of $98, $241 and $330 respectively.......    4,017    4,073     7,799
Inventories (note 4)...............................      893    1,055       840
Value added taxes..................................      420      407       192
Prepaid expenses and other current assets..........      662    1,299     1,332
                                                     -------  -------  --------
 Total current assets..............................    6,264   15,703    69,855
Property and equipment, net (notes 7 and 8)........      739    2,058     3,190
Other assets--software development costs...........      --     2,500     1,250
                                                     -------  -------  --------
 Total assets......................................  $ 7,003  $20,261    74,295
                                                     =======  =======  ========

LIABILITIES AND SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY
Current liabilities
Bank overdraft.....................................  $   --   $   411  $    --
Accounts payable...................................    2,009    1,459     4,082
Accrued payroll and related expenses...............      235      583       871
Other accrued liabilities..........................      512    1,571     2,677
Value added taxes..................................      517      372       460
Warranty reserve...................................      922      876       556
Deferred revenue...................................      620      994     3,406
                                                     -------  -------  --------
 Total current liabilities.........................    4,815    6,266    12,052
                                                     -------  -------  --------
Capital lease due after more than one year (note
 7)................................................       67      142       409
Government grants repayable and related loans (note
 15)...............................................      479      793       718
Series A redeemable convertible preference shares,
 $0.0027 par value nil, 3,000,000 and nil shares
 authorized at January 31, 1998, 1999 and 2000
 respectively nil, 2,960,000 and nil shares issued
 and outstanding at January 31, 1998, 1999 and 2000
 respectively......................................      --    17,760       --
Series B preference shares, $0.0027 par value nil,
 nil and 10,000,000 authorized at January 31, 1998,
 1999 and 2000 respectively
 None issued and outstanding.......................      --       --        --
Shareholders' equity:
Ordinary Shares, $0.0027 par value: 100,000,000
 shares authorized; 15,689,715, 16,227,445 and
 25,140,722 shares issued and outstanding at
 January 31, 1998, 1999 and 2000 respectively......       45       47        71
Additional paid-in capital.........................    4,547    4,781    84,286
Accumulated deficit................................   (2,601)  (9,474)  (21,585)
Accumulated other comprehensive income.............     (349)     (54)   (1,656)
                                                     -------  -------  --------
 Total shareholders' equity (net capital
  deficiency)......................................    1,642   (4,700)   61,116
                                                     -------  -------  --------
 Total liabilities and shareholders' equity........  $ 7,003  $20,261  $ 74,295
                                                     =======  =======  ========
</TABLE>

                             See accompanying notes

                                      F-3
<PAGE>

                               TRINTECH GROUP PLC

                     CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS
          (U.S. dollars in thousands, except share and per share data)

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                Year ended January 31,
                                           ----------------------------------
                                              1998        1999        2000
                                           ----------  ----------  ----------
<S>                                        <C>         <C>         <C>
Revenue:
 Product.................................. $   10,824  $   14,554  $   18,457
 License..................................      4,101       4,477       9,158
 Service..................................      1,721       2,002       2,629
                                           ----------  ----------  ----------
   Total revenue..........................     16,646      21,033      30,244
                                           ----------  ----------  ----------
Cost of revenue:
 Product..................................      8,352      10,851      12,034
 License..................................        334         648       2,981
 Service..................................      1,008       2,414       2,242
                                           ----------  ----------  ----------
   Total cost of revenue..................      9,694      13,913      17,257
                                           ----------  ----------  ----------
Gross margin..............................      6,952       7,120      12,987
Operating expenses:
 Research and development.................      1,729       3,676       8,892
 Sales and marketing......................      2,474       5,921       8,849
 General and administrative...............      2,530       4,347       7,336
 Stock compensation.......................        --          --        2,068
                                           ----------  ----------  ----------
   Total operating expenses...............      6,733      13,944      27,145
                                           ----------  ----------  ----------
Income (loss) from operations.............        219      (6,824)    (14,158)
 Interest income, net.....................         18         272       1,208
 Exchange gain (loss), net................        (12)       (321)        842
                                           ----------  ----------  ----------
Income (loss) before provision for income
 taxes....................................        225      (6,873)    (12,108)
 Provision for income taxes (note 13).....        (50)        --           (3)
                                           ----------  ----------  ----------
Net Income (loss)......................... $      175  $   (6,873) $  (12,111)
                                           ==========  ==========  ==========
Basic net income (loss) per Ordinary
 Share.................................... $     0.01  $    (0.43) $    (0.63)
                                           ==========  ==========  ==========
Shares used in computing basic net income
 (loss) per Ordinary Share................ 15,688,335  16,157,831  19,309,964
                                           ==========  ==========  ==========
Diluted net income (loss) per Ordinary
 Share.................................... $     0.01  $    (0.43) $    (0.63)
                                           ==========  ==========  ==========
Shares used in computing diluted net
 income (loss) per Ordinary Share......... 15,749,161  16,157,831  19,309,964
                                           ==========  ==========  ==========
Basic net income (loss) per equivalent
 ADS...................................... $     0.01  $    (0.21) $    (0.31)
                                           ==========  ==========  ==========
Diluted net income (loss) per equivalent
 ADS...................................... $     0.01  $    (0.21) $    (0.31)
                                           ==========  ==========  ==========
</TABLE>


                             See accompanying notes

                                      F-4
<PAGE>

                              TRINTECH GROUP PLC

CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CHANGES IN REDEEMABLE CONVERTIBLE PREFERENCE SHARES
                                      AND
                 SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY (NET CAPITAL DEFICIENCY)
                (U.S. dollars in thousands, except share data)

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                           Number of                                                                            Total
                          Redeemable   Redeemable                                              Accumulated  Shareholders'
                          Convertible  Convertible Number of           Additional                 Other      Equity (net
                          Preference   Preference   Ordinary  Ordinary  Paid-in   Accumulated Comprehensive    capital
                            Shares       Shares      Shares    Shares   Capital     Deficit      Income      deficiency)
                          -----------  ----------- ---------- -------- ---------- ----------- ------------- -------------
<S>                       <C>          <C>         <C>        <C>      <C>        <C>         <C>           <C>
Balance at January 31,
1997....................         --     $    --    15,685,575   $45     $ 4,543    $ (2,776)     $   (73)     $  1,739
Issuance of Ordinary
Shares on exercise of
options (a).............         --          --         4,140     0           4         --           --              4
Net income..............         --          --           --     --         --          175          --            175
Currency translation
adjustment..............         --          --           --     --         --          --          (276)         (276)
                                                                                                              --------
Comprehensive income
(loss)..................         --          --           --     --         --          --           --           (101)
                          ----------    --------   ----------   ---     -------    --------      -------      --------
Balance at January 31,
1998....................         --          --    15,689,715    45       4,547      (2,601)        (349)        1,642
Issuance of Ordinary
Shares..................         --          --       482,765     2       1,998         --           --          2,000
Issuance of Ordinary
Shares on exercise of
options (a).............         --          --        14,965     0          20         --           --             20
Issuance of Convertible
Redeemable Preference
Shares (b)..............   3,000,000      18,000          --     --         --          --           --            --
Conversion of Redeemable
Convertible Preference
Shares to Ordinary
Shares (b)..............     (40,000)       (240)      40,000     0         240         --           --            240
Issuance of Warrant to
Visa....................         --          --           --     --         163         --           --            163
Expenses of share
issues..................         --          --           --     --      (2,187)        --           --         (2,187)
Net loss................         --          --           --     --         --       (6,873)         --         (6,873)
Currency translation
adjustment..............         --          --           --     --         --          --           295           295
                                                                                                              --------
Comprehensive income
(loss)..................         --          --           --     --         --          --           --         (6,578)
                          ----------    --------   ----------   ---     -------    --------      -------      --------
Balance at January 31,
1999....................   2,960,000      17,760   16,227,445    47       4,781      (9,474)         (54)       (4,700)
Conversion of Redeemable
Convertible Preference
Shares to Ordinary
Shares (b)..............  (2,960,000)    (17,760)   2,960,000     8      17,752         --           --         17,760
Issuance of Ordinary
Shares on exercise of
options (a).............         --          --        65,679     0         145         --           --            145
Issuance of Ordinary
Shares for Cash.........         --          --     5,887,598    16      63,086         --           --         63,102
Expense of share
issues..................         --          --           --     --      (3,546)        --           --         (3,546)
Stock compensation......         --          --           --     --       2,068         --           --          2,068
Net loss................         --          --           --     --         --      (12,111)         --        (12,111)
Currency translation
adjustment..............         --          --           --     --         --          --        (1,602)       (1,602)
                                                                                                              --------
Comprehensive income
(loss)..................         --          --           --     --         --          --           --        (13,713)
                          ----------    --------   ----------   ---     -------    --------      -------      --------
Balance at January 31,
2000....................           0    $      0   25,140,722   $71     $84,286    $(21,585)     $(1,656)     $ 61,116
                          ==========    ========   ==========   ===     =======    ========      =======      ========
</TABLE>
- ----
(a) See note 12 to these statements
(b) See note 10 to these statements

                                      F-5
<PAGE>

                               TRINTECH GROUP PLC

                     CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
                          (U.S. dollars in thousands)

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                    Year ended January 31,
                                                    -------------------------
                                                     1998    1999      2000
                                                    ------  -------  --------
<S>                                                 <C>     <C>      <C>
CASH FLOWS FROM OPERATING ACTIVITIES
Net Income (loss).................................. $  175  $(6,873) $(12,111)
Adjustments to reconcile net income (loss) to net
 cash used in operating activities:
 Depreciation and amortization.....................    339      566     2,277
 Stock compensation................................    --        83     2,148
 (Profit) on disposal of marketable securities.....    --      (159)     (919)
 Purchase of marketable securities.................    --   (64,227) (302,167)
 Sale of marketable securities.....................    --    57,208   261,434
 Effect of changes in foreign currency exchange
  rates............................................   (254)     252    (1,611)
 Changes in operating assets and liabilities:
   Inventories.....................................    (94)    (102)       75
   Accounts receivable............................. (2,292)     151    (4,536)
   Prepaid expenses and other assets...............   (153)    (515)     (252)
   Value added tax receivable......................   (178)      35       181
   Accounts payable................................    794     (647)    2,913
   Accrued payroll and related expenses............     38      331       362
   Deferred revenues...............................    254      333     2,591
   Value added tax payable.........................    317     (175)      148
   Warranty reserve................................    275      (99)     (213)
   Government grants repayable and related loans...    139      283        50
   Other accrued liabilities.......................    (55)     948     1,242
                                                    ------  -------  --------
Net cash (used in) provided by operating
 activities........................................   (695) (12,607)  (48,388)
                                                    ------  -------  --------
CASH FLOWS FROM INVESTING ACTIVITIES:
Purchase of property and equipment.................   (458)  (1,636)   (1,904)
Sale of property and equipment.....................     31       27        14
Purchase of capitalized software development
 costs.............................................    --    (2,500)      --
                                                    ------  -------  --------
Net cash used in investing activities..............   (427)  (4,109)   (1,890)
                                                    ------  -------  --------
CASH FLOWS FROM FINANCING ACTIVITIES:
Principal payments on capital leases...............    (37)     (86)     (127)
Issuance of ordinary shares........................      4    2,020    63,247
Issuance of convertible redeemable preference
 shares............................................    --    18,000       --
Expenses of share issue............................    --    (2,187)   (3,546)
Proceeds (repayments) of loans from directors......   (222)     --        --
Proceed (repayments) under bank overdraft
 facility..........................................   (172)     405      (388)
                                                    ------  -------  --------
Net cash provided by (used in) financing
 activities........................................   (427)  18,152    59,186
                                                    ------  -------  --------
Net increase (decrease) in cash and cash
 equivalents....................................... (1,549)   1,436     8,908
Effect of exchange rate changes on cash and cash
 equivalents.......................................    (78)     (17)      263
Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of period...  1,899      272     1,691
                                                    ------  -------  --------
Cash and cash equivalents at end of period......... $  272  $ 1,691  $ 10,862
                                                    ======  =======  ========
Supplemental disclosure of cash flow information
 Interest paid..................................... $   19  $   --   $      6
                                                    ======  =======  ========
 Taxes paid........................................ $   20  $   --   $      3
                                                    ======  =======  ========
Supplemental disclosure of non-cash flow
 information:
 Acquisition of property and equipment under
  capital leases................................... $  108  $   217  $    434
                                                    ======  =======  ========
</TABLE>

                             See accompanying notes

                                      F-6
<PAGE>

                               TRINTECH GROUP PLC

                 NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

1. Organization and Summary of Significant Accounting Policies

 Organization

   Trintech Group PLC is organized as a public limited company under the laws
of Ireland. Trintech Group PLC and its wholly-owned subsidiaries (collectively,
the "Company") operate in two market segments: electronic PoS systems that
securely process card payment transactions in a physical point-of-sale ("PoS")
environment and e-payment software products that securely process on-line card-
payment transactions over private and public networks, including the Internet.
The Company also provides related development and professional services,
including project management, implementation and training services. The
Company's major customers, based on revenues earned, are banks and other
financial transaction processors in Germany. The Company also earns significant
revenues from similar customers in other European countries, the Americas and
the rest of the world.

   In March 1998 the Company completed a private placement of $2 million in
ordinary shares and in August 1998 the Company completed a private placement of
$18 million in Series A Redeemable Convertible Preference Shares.

   In August 1999, 5,800,000 American Depositary Shares ("ADS") representing
5,800,000 Ordinary shares were sold in an initial public offering (the "IPO").
Simultaneous with that sale, the underwriters elected to exercise their over-
allotment option to purchase an additional 87,598 ADS representing 87,598
Ordinary Shares.

   Trintech converted all its Redeemable Convertible Preferred Shares into
Ordinary Shares on the completion of its IPO.

 Basis of Presentation and Principles of Consolidation

   The accompanying consolidated financial statements are prepared in
accordance with generally accepted accounting principles in the United States
and include the Company and its wholly-owned subsidiaries in Ireland, the
United Kingdom, the Cayman Islands, Germany and the United States after
eliminating all material inter-company accounts and transactions.

 Use of Estimates

   The preparation of financial statements requires management to make
estimates and assumptions that affect the amounts reported in the financial
statements and the accompanying footnotes. Actual results could differ from
those estimates.

 Vulnerabilities due to Certain Concentrations

   A small number of customers have historically accounted for a significant
portion of the Company's revenues. The loss of any of the Company's major
customers or delays in orders by any such customers could have a material
adverse effect on the Company's business and results of operations.

                                      F-7
<PAGE>

                               TRINTECH GROUP PLC

          NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(Continued)
1. Organization and Summary of Significant Accounting Policies (Continued)

   The Company uses two manufacturers for its PoS system products. While the
Company has alternative manufacturing sources, if either manufacturer increased
cost or ceased manufacturing the Company may not be able to rapidly obtain
alternative capacity at a comparable price. Failure to obtain an adequate
supply of products on a timely basis would delay product delivery to customers,
which may have a material adverse effect on the Company's business and results
of operations.

 Companies Acts, 1963 to 1999

   The financial information relating to Trintech Group PLC and its
subsidiaries included in this document does not comprise statutory financial
statements as referred to in Section 19 of the Companies (Amendment) Act, 1986,
copies of which are required by that Act to be annexed to the company's annual
return lodged with the Registrar of Companies. The auditors have made reports
without qualification under Section 193 of the Irish Companies Act, 1990 in
respect of all such financial statements. Copies of statutory financial
statements of the Company as an individual entity for the years ended January
31, 1998 and January 31, 1999 have been so annexed to the relevant annual
returns, and a copy of the group statutory financial statements for the year
ended January 31, 2000 will be annexed to the relevant annual return in due
course.

 Translation of Financial Statements of Foreign Entities

   The Irish pound ("IR(Pounds)") is the functional currency of the Company and
the Company's subsidiaries in Ireland. The US dollar ("US$") is the functional
currency of the Company's subsidiaries in the United States and the Cayman
Islands. The United Kingdom pound sterling (Sterling) is the functional
currency of the Company's UK subsidiary and the Deutsche mark is the functional
currency of the Company's subsidiary in Germany. Transaction gains or losses
arising on changes in the exchange rates between functional currencies and
foreign currencies are included in net income (loss) for the period.

   The Company's assets and liabilities are translated to US dollars, the
reporting currency, at the exchange rate at the balance sheet date. Revenues,
costs and expenses are translated to US dollars at average rates of exchange
prevailing during the periods. Translation adjustments arising are reported as
a component of shareholders' equity.

 Revenue Recognition

   The Company's revenue is derived from product sales, license fees and
charges for services.

   The Company recognizes product revenue from the sale of electronic PoS
system products upon shipment.

   For Fiscal Years 1999 and 2000, the Company followed the revenue recognition
criteria of Statement of Position 97-2 ("SOP 97-2"), as amended by SOP 98-4 and
SOP 98-9 issued by the Accounting Standards Executive Committee of the American
Institute of Certified Public Accountants for its license revenue. The adoption
of SOP 97-2 did not have a material effect on the Company's operating results.

                                      F-8
<PAGE>

                               TRINTECH GROUP PLC

          NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(Continued)
1. Organization and Summary of Significant Accounting Policies (Continued)

   Under the terms of SOP 97-2 where an arrangement to deliver software does
not require significant production, modification or customization, the Company
recognizes license revenue when all of the following criteria are met:

  .  persuasive evidence of an arrangement exists;

  .  delivery has occurred;

  .  vendor's fee is fixed or determinable; and

  .  collectibility is probable.

   For Fiscal Year 1998, the Company followed the revenue recognition criteria
set out in SOP 91-1. Accordingly, the Company recognized license revenue on
shipment, provided that it had no significant related obligations or collection
uncertainties remaining.

   The Company recognizes technical support revenue ratably over the term of
the support agreement, generally twelve months.

   The Company recognizes service revenue when earned. Service revenue is
derived from consultancy, educational and training and customization and
implementation services. Services are provided primarily on a time and
materials basis for which revenue is recognized in the period that the services
are provided. Where contracts for services extend over a number of accounting
periods and are not being provided on a time and materials basis the revenue is
accounted for in conformity with the percentage-of-completion contract
accounting method. Percentage-of-completion is measured using output measures,
primarily arrangement milestones where such milestones indicate progress to
completion, or input measures using the allocation of time spent to date as a
proportion of total time allocated to the contract.

 Cost of Revenue

   Cost of product revenue includes outsourced manufacturing costs, and
packaging, documentation, labor and other costs associated with packaging and
shipping electronic PoS system products. Cost of license revenue includes
shipping, software documentation, labor, third-party license fees and other
costs associated with the delivery of software products from which license
revenue is derived and the cost of providing after-sale support and maintenance
services to customers. Cost of service revenue includes labor, travel and other
non-recoverable costs associated with the delivery of services to customers.

 Cash and Cash Equivalents

   The Company considers all highly liquid investments with insignificant
interest rate risk and purchased with a maturity of three months or less to be
cash equivalents.

 Marketable Securities

   Marketable securities consist of commercial paper, corporate bonds and U.S.
government agency fixed income securities. Marketable securities are stated at
market value, and by policy, the Company invests in high grade marketable
securities. All marketable securities are defined as trading securities under
the provisions of Statement of Financial Account Standards No. 115, "Accounting
for Certain Investments in Debt and Equity Securities" ("SFAS 115"), and
unrealized holding gains and losses are reflected in earnings.

                                      F-9
<PAGE>

                               TRINTECH GROUP PLC

          NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(Continued)
1. Organization and Summary of Significant Accounting Policies (Continued)

 Research and Development

   Research and development expenditures are generally charged to operations as
incurred. Statement of Financial Accounting Standards Number 86, "Accounting
for the Costs of Computer Software to be Sold, Leased or Otherwise Marketed,"
requires capitalization of certain software development costs subsequent to the
establishment of technological feasibility. Based on the Company's product
development process, technological feasibility is established upon completion
of a working model. Development costs incurred by the Company between
completion of the working model and the point at which the product is ready for
general release have been insignificant. Through January 31, 2000, all research
and development costs have been expensed.

   On March 31, 1998, Trintech Technologies Limited, a subsidiary of the
Company purchased technology for US$2.5 million from RSA Data Security, a
wholly owned subsidiary of Security Dynamics, under the terms of the RSA
Technology License Agreement. The technology comprised a license to the source
code and a royalty-free sublicensable license to the object code, for S/PAY and
J/PAY. S/PAY and J/PAY are encryption technology toolkits that implemented and
provided the functionality of certain elements of the SET 0.0 standard, and the
license is exclusive as to the SET portions of the source code. The purchase of
this technology has been accounted for as expenditure on a product enhancement
that has reached technological feasibility and accordingly has been
capitalized. The capitalized costs are being amortized to income on the sales
curve or straight line methods, whichever gives the greater amortization, over
the two year period from February 1, 1999 following the achievement of the SET
mark in January 1999 and the general availability of the enhanced product from
that date.

 Property and Equipment

   Property and equipment is stated at cost. Depreciation and amortization are
computed using the straight-line method over estimated useful lives of the
assets as follows:

<TABLE>
   <S>                                                                <C>
   Motor vehicles, computer and office equipment, furniture and
    fixtures......................................................... 3 years
</TABLE>

 Net Income (Loss) per Ordinary Share

   Basic and diluted earnings per share is calculated in accordance with
statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 128 "Earnings per Share"
("Statement 128"). All earnings per share amounts for all periods have been
presented in conformity with the requirements of Statement 128.

 Concentration of Credit Risk

   The Company sells its products primarily to banks and financial transaction
processors throughout the world. While a small number of customers have
historically accounted for a significant portion of the Company's revenue,
management believes that these customers are credit worthy and, accordingly,
minimal credit risk exists with respect to these customers. The Company
performs ongoing credit evaluations on its customers and maintains reserves for
potential credit losses. To date such losses have been within management's
expectations. The Company had an allowance for doubtful accounts of
approximately US$98,000, US$241,000 and US$330,000 at January 31, 1998, 1999
and 2000 respectively. The Company generally requires no collateral from its
customers.

                                      F-10
<PAGE>

                               TRINTECH GROUP PLC

          NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(Continued)

1. Organization and Summary of Significant Accounting Policies (Continued)

   The Company invests its excess cash in low-risk, short-term deposit accounts
with high credit-quality banks in the United States, Germany and Ireland. At
January 31, 2000 US$48,830,000 was invested in marketable securities held for
trading purposes, comprised of US$19,550,000 in corporate bonds and
US$29,280,000 in U.S. government agency securities, under the management of a
financial institution. The Company performs periodic evaluations of the
relative credit standing of all of the financial institutions dealt with by the
Company, and considers the credit risk to be minimal.

 Employment Grants

   Employment grants are credited to the income statement when earned and
offset against the related payroll expense in two equal installments, the first
on the creation of the job, and the second six months following the creation of
the job.

 Marketing Grants and related loans

   Marketing grants and related loans received are accounted for in accordance
with the terms of the agreement for the specific grant/loan. This is either as
a 50% offset against the relevant expenditure on developing an overseas market
and a 50% loan to be repaid at rates linked to future revenues earned in the
related markets, or as a 100% loan to be repaid at rates linked to future
revenues earned in the related markets. All loan amounts are credited to a
balance sheet liability account as the Company believes they will have to be
repaid in the future.

 Accounting for Income Taxes

   The Company uses the liability method in accounting for income taxes. Under
this method, deferred tax assets and liabilities are determined based on
differences between financial reporting and tax bases of assets and liabilities
and are measured using the enacted tax rates and laws which will be in effect
when the differences are expected to reverse.

 Foreign Exchange Contracts

   From time to time one of the Company's Irish subsidiaries enters into
foreign exchange contracts as a hedge against accounts receivable in currencies
other than its functional currency. Market value gains and losses are
recognized, and the resulting credit or debit offsets foreign exchange losses
or gains included in Exchange gain (loss), net in the statement of operations.

 Stock Compensation

   The Company has elected to follow Accounting Principles Board Opinion Number
25, "Accounting for Stock Issued to Employees", ("APB 25") and related
interpretations in accounting for its stock options. FASB Statement Number 123,
"Accounting for Stock-Based Compensation", ("SFAS 123"), requires that
companies electing to continue using the intrinsic value method make pro-forma
disclosures of net earnings and earnings per share as if the fair value based
method of accounting had been applied. See Note 12 for the fair value
disclosures required under SFAS 123.

                                      F-11
<PAGE>

                               TRINTECH GROUP PLC

          NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(Continued)

1. Organization and Summary of Significant Accounting Policies (Continued)

   Under APB 25, the Company has not recognized compensation expense during the
years ended January 31, 1998, 1999 and 2000 respectively, as the Company
believes the exercise price of the Company's share options at the date of grant
was equal to or greater than the estimated fair value of the underlying shares
on the date of grant.

   The Company has followed the provisions of SFAS 123 and EITF 96-18
"Accounting for Equity Instruments that are Issued to Other Than Employees for
Acquiring, or in Conjunction with Selling, Goods or Services", in accounting
for warrants and options issued to nonemployees. The Company has adopted the
fair value method as prescribed by SFAS 123 in determining the fair value of
the warrants issued and the resultant compensation expense. The Company has
recognized compensation expense of US$0, US$83,000 and US$2,148,000 during the
years ended January 31, 1998, 1999 and 2000 respectively in respect of warrants
issued to nonemployees.

 Advertising and Promotion Expense

   All costs associated with advertising are expensed as incurred. Advertising
and promotion expense was US$215,000, US$919,000 and US$1,125,000 for the years
ended January 31, 1998, 1999 and 2000, respectively.

 Inventories

   Inventories are stated at the lower of cost or market.

 Warranty Reserves

   The Company maintains reserves for future warranty claims arising from past
sales of product. The Company makes provision for such costs when revenue is
recorded from product sales.

 Recent Accounting Pronouncements

   In 1998, The Financial Accounting Standards Board issued SFAS No. 133,
"Accounting for Derivative Instruments and Hedging Activities" ("SFAS 133")
which was originally required to be adopted for fiscal years commencing after
June 15, 1999 but has now been deferred to fiscal years commencing after June
15, 2000. SFAS 133, requires all derivatives to be recorded in the balance
sheet at fair value and establishes "special accounting" for the following
three different types of hedges: hedges of changes in the fair value of assets,
liabilities or firm commitments ("referred to as fair value hedges"), hedges of
the variable cash flows of forecasted transactions ("cash flow hedges") and
hedges of foreign currency exposures of net investments in foreign operations
("forwards"). Forwards that are not hedges must be adjusted to fair value
through income. If the forwards are hedges, depending on the nature of the
hedges, changes in their fair values will either be offset against the change
in the fair value of the hedged assets, liabilities, or firm commitments
through earnings or recognized in other comprehensive income until the hedged
item is recognized in earnings. The Company has not yet determined what the
effect of SFAS 133 will be on the earnings and financial position of the
Company. Because SFAS 133 allows certain foreign currency transactions to be
accounted for as hedges, the Company may change its policies towards the
management of certain foreign currency exposures. Any changes that may occur
would be to reduce the Company's exposure to foreign currency risks.

                                      F-12
<PAGE>

                               TRINTECH GROUP PLC

          NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(Continued)

2. Cash and Marketable Securities

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                   January 31,
                                                                  --------------
                                                                  1998 1999 2000
                                                                  ---- ---- ----
                                                                  (U.S. dollars
                                                                  in thousands)
     <S>                                                          <C>  <C>  <C>
     Restricted Cash............................................. $ -- $ -- $161
                                                                  ==== ==== ====
</TABLE>

   Marketable securities are considered to be trading securities per SFAS 115
and are carried on the balance sheet at their market value.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                             January 31, 1999
                                                           --------------------
                                                                Unrealized
                                                                   Gain  Market
                                                            Cost  (Loss) Value
                                                           ------ ------ ------
                                                             (U.S. dollars in
                                                                thousands)
     <S>                                                   <C>    <C>    <C>
     U.S. Government Agency Securities.................... $3,152  $ 3   $3,155
     Corporate bonds......................................  4,028   (5)   4,023
                                                           ------  ---   ------
       Total.............................................. $7,180  $(2)  $7,178
                                                           ======  ===   ======
</TABLE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                          January 31, 2000
                                                     --------------------------
                                                             Unrealized Market
                                                      Cost      Gain     Value
                                                     ------- ---------- -------
                                                          (U.S. dollars in
                                                             thousands)
     <S>                                             <C>     <C>        <C>
     U.S. Government Agency Securities.............. $29,120    $160    $29,280
     Corporate bonds................................  19,385     165     19,550
                                                     -------    ----    -------
       Total........................................ $48,505    $325    $48,830
                                                     =======    ====    =======
</TABLE>

   The change in unrealized gain (loss) included in net income (loss) is as
follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                  Year ended
                                                                  January 31,
                                                                  ------------
                                                                  1999   2000
                                                                  -----  -----
     <S>                                                          <C>    <C>
     Unrealized (loss) at beginning of period.................... $  --  $  (2)
     Included in income (loss) in the period.....................    (2)   327
                                                                  -----  -----
     Unrealized gain (loss) of end of period..................... $  (2) $ 325
                                                                  =====  =====
</TABLE>

3. Revolving Credit Facility: Bank Overdraft Facility and Overdrafts

   The Company currently has a secured overdraft facility of IR(Pounds)650,000
(approximately US$808,000) from Bank of Ireland. This overdraft is secured by a
debenture over the assets of Trintech Group PLC, Trintech Limited and Trintech
Technologies Limited to a value of IR(Pounds)650,000. Advances under the
facility bear interest at the Bank's AA overdraft rate, 5.94% as at January 31,
2000. As of January 31, 2000 there was US$0 outstanding under the facility. The
facility does not have a stated expiration date, but all amounts drawn
thereunder are repayable on demand.

                                      F-13
<PAGE>

                               TRINTECH GROUP PLC

          NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(Continued)

4. Inventories

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                            January 31,
                                                    -----------------------------
                                                      1998      1999      2000
                                                    ------------------- ---------
                                                    (U.S. dollars in thousands)
     <S>                                            <C>      <C>        <C>
     Raw materials................................. $    398 $      333 $     78
     Finished goods................................      495        722      762
                                                    -------- ---------- --------
       Total....................................... $    893 $    1,055 $    840
                                                    ======== ========== ========
</TABLE>

5. Foreign Exchange Contracts and Fair Value of Financial Instruments

   At January 31, 2000, the Company had a contract maturing in February 2000
and a contract maturing in May 2000 each to sell 1,000,000 US dollars and
receive euro. The fair value of the contracts at January 31, 2000 was
US$100,000 negative. At January 31, 1998, the Company had contracts maturing in
February 1998 to sell 500,000 Deutsche marks and receive Irish pounds. The fair
value of the contract at January 31, 1998 was $2,000 negative.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                               January 31,
                             -------------------------------------------------
                                  1998            1999              2000
                             --------------  ---------------  ----------------
                             Carrying Fair   Carrying  Fair   Carrying  Fair
                              Amount  Value   Amount  Value    Amount   Value
                             -------- -----  -------- ------  -------- -------
                                       (U.S. dollars in thousands)
<S>                          <C>      <C>    <C>      <C>     <C>      <C>
Non Derivatives
Cash and cash equivalents..    $272   $272    $1,691  $1,691  $10,862  $10,862
Marketable Securities
 trading...................    $--    $--     $7,178  $7,178  $48,830  $48,830

Derivatives
Foreign currency forward
 contracts.................    $--    $ (2)   $  --   $   (2) $   --   $  (100)
</TABLE>

   The carrying amounts in the table are included in the statements of
financial position under the indicated captions.

6. Operating Lease Commitments

   The Company's significant operating leases are for the premises in Dublin,
Ireland; Frankfurt, Germany; San Mateo, California; Austin, Texas; and
Princeton, New Jersey. In Dublin, the Company leases the new corporate
headquarters from John and Cyril McGuire, officers and directors of the
Company. The new facility is held under a lease expiring in 2023, with rent
reviews every five years and an option to exit in 2007. The rent paid by the
company was determined after completion of a survey of the rental market, and
the terms of the lease are no less favorable than those that could be obtained
in arms-length transactions. The Frankfurt facility is under a five year lease
which expires in 2004. The San Mateo facility is under a 5 year lease which
expires in 2004. The Austin facility is under a two year lease which expires in
2001. The Princeton facility is under a five year lease which expires in 2003.
Rent expense under all operating leases was approximately, US$345,000,
US$574,000 and US$1,236,000 for the years ended January 31, 1998, 1999, and
2000, respectively.

                                      F-14
<PAGE>

                               TRINTECH GROUP PLC

          NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(Continued)

6. Operating Lease Commitments (Continued)

   Future minimum lease payments under the operating leases as of January 31,
2000, are as follows (U.S. dollars in thousands):

<TABLE>
     <S>                                                                 <C>
     Year ending January 31,
       2001............................................................. $1,518
       2002.............................................................  1,492
       2003.............................................................  1,428
       2004.............................................................  1,254
       2005.............................................................    860
       Thereafter.......................................................  1,035
                                                                         ------
       Total minimum lease payments..................................... $7,587
                                                                         ======
</TABLE>

7. Capital Leases

   The following is an analysis of the property acquired under capital leases,
and included in property and equipment, by major classes:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                Asset balances at January 31,
                                                -------------------------------
                                                  1998       1999       2000
                                                ---------  ---------  ---------
                                                 (U.S. dollars in thousands)
     <S>                                        <C>        <C>        <C>
     Computers and office equipment............ $     291  $     309  $     705
     Motor vehicles............................        51         36         62
     Fixtures and fittings.....................        25         14         12
                                                ---------  ---------  ---------
       Total cost..............................       367        359        779
     Accumulated depreciation..................      (263)      (118)      (218)
                                                ---------  ---------  ---------
       Total, net.............................. $     104  $     241  $     561
                                                =========  =========  =========
</TABLE>

   The following is a schedule by year of future minimum lease payments under
capital leases, together with the present value of the net minimum lease
payments as of January 31, 2000 (U.S. dollars in thousands):

<TABLE>
     <S>                                                                   <C>
     Year ending January 31,
       2001............................................................... $175
       2002...............................................................  164
       2003...............................................................  123
       2004...............................................................   88
       2005...............................................................   83
                                                                           ----
       Total minimum lease payments.......................................  633
       Less: Amount representing interest.................................  (68)
                                                                           ----
     Present value of net minimum lease payments.......................... $565
                                                                           ====
</TABLE>

   The current portion and non-current portion of present value of net minimum
lease payments as of January 31, 2000 was US$156,000 and US$409,000,
respectively.

                                      F-15
<PAGE>

                               TRINTECH GROUP PLC

          NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(Continued)

8. Property and Equipment

   Property and equipment consist of the following:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                            January 31,
                                                      -------------------------
                                                       1998     1999     2000
                                                      -------  -------  -------
                                                         (U.S. dollars in
                                                            thousands)
     <S>                                              <C>      <C>      <C>
     Computers and office equipment.................. $ 1,482  $ 2,233  $ 3,938
     Motor vehicles..................................     251       82      162
     Fixtures and fittings...........................      84      766      919
                                                      -------  -------  -------
     Total cost......................................   1,817    3,081    5,019
     Accumulated depreciation........................  (1,078)  (1,023)  (1,829)
                                                      -------  -------  -------
     Property and equipment, net..................... $   739  $ 2,058  $ 3,190
                                                      =======  =======  =======
</TABLE>

9. Redeemable Preference Shares

   At January 31, 1997 the Company's authorized share capital included 200,000
redeemable preference shares at a par value of IR(Pounds)1 each.

   On January 31, 1997, pursuant to the Company's Articles of Association, the
181,062 redeemable preference shares, then in issue, were redeemed at par, for
a consideration of IR(Pounds)181,062 (approximately US$288,000) out of the
proceeds of a new issue of ordinary shares on that date.

   On November 21, 1997 the Company cancelled the authorized redeemable
preference shares.

   The redeemable preference shares conferred on the holders thereof upon a
winding up of the Company the right to a repayment of capital in priority to a
repayment of capital to the holders of ordinary shares in the capital of the
Company. Such redeemable preference shares did not, however, confer upon the
holders thereof any further rights to participate in the assets of the Company.
The preference shares conferred on the holders thereof the rights to receive
notice of and to attend all general meetings of the Company, but not the right
to vote on any resolution proposed thereof, nor the right to receive a
dividend, from the Company.

10. Shareholders' Equity and Redeemable Convertible Preference Shares

   The Company's authorized share capital comprises 100,000,000 Ordinary shares
of US$0.0027 par value per share and 10,000,000 Series B Redeemable Convertible
Preference Shares of US$0.0027 par value per share.

   The Company previously had authorized share capital of IR(Pounds)206,000
comprising 100,000,000 Ordinary shares of IR(Pounds)0.002 par value per share
and 3,000,000 Series A Redeemable Convertible Preference Shares of
IR(Pounds)0.002 par value per share. On August 23, 1999 in connection with the
re-registration of the Company as a public limited company, the Company re-
organised its share capital into Ordinary shares and Series A Redeemable
Convertible Preference Shares of US$0.0027 par value per share in the following
manner:

     The authorised share capital was first reduced from IR(Pounds)206,000 to
  IR(Pounds)38,431 by the cancellation of 83,744,574 authorised and unissued
  Ordinary Shares of IR(Pounds)0.002 each and 40,000 Series A Redeemable
  Convertible Preference Shares of IR(Pounds)0.002 each.

                                      F-16
<PAGE>

                               TRINTECH GROUP PLC

          NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(Continued)

10. Shareholders' Equity and Redeemable Convertible Preference Shares
(Continued)

     The authorised share capital was then increased to IR(Pounds)38,431 plus
  US$278,100 by the creation of 100,000,000 Ordinary shares of US$0.0027 each
  and 3,000,000 Redeemable Convertible Preference Shares of US$0.0027 each.

     The 16,255,426 Ordinary shares of IR(Pounds)0.002 each in issue at that
  date were converted to redeemable shares and these shares, together with
  the 2,960,000 Series A Redeemable Convertible Preference Shares of
  IR(Pounds)0.002 each were redeemed out of the proceeds of a fresh issue of
  16,255,426 Ordinary shares of US$0.0027 each and 2,960,000 Series A
  Redeemable Convertible Preference Shares of US$0.0027 each.

     The authorised share capital was then reduced to US$278,100 by the
  cancellation of the authorised shares of IR(Pounds)0.002 each which had
  been redeemed.

   On the closing of the initial public offering of the Company's shares the
authorised share capital was reduced to US$270,000 by the cancellation of the
3,000,000 Series A Redeemable Convertible Preference Shares of US$0.0027 each.

   Immediately thereafter the authorised share capital was increased to
US$297,000 by the creation of 10,000,000 Series B Preference Shares of
US$0.0027 each which may be issued with such special, qualified, preferred,
deferred or other rights or privileges or conditions as to capital, dividends,
rights of voting or other matters as the Directors may decide.

   The accompanying financial statements have given effect to this re-
organisation.

   Dividends may only be declared and paid out of profits available for
distribution determined in accordance with accounting principles generally
accepted in Ireland and applicable Irish company law.

   During 1998, in connection with the issuance of the Series A Redeemable
Convertible Preference Shares and certain strategic marketing agreements with
VISA International, the Company issued a warrant to purchase 250,000 of the
Company's Ordinary Shares at a price of US$6 per share. The warrant is fully
exercisable upon the date of issuance and expires two years from the date of
the strategic marketing agreement.

   The Company has determined the fair value of the warrant at the time of
issuance using a Black-Scholes option pricing model with the following
weighted-average assumptions: risk free interest rate of 6%; dividend yields of
0%; volatility factors of the expected market price of the Company's ordinary
shares of 0.325; and a weighted-average expected life of the option of two
years. The determined value of the warrant was debited to prepaid expenses and
other current assets and is being charged to marketing expenses over the two
year term of the strategic marketing agreement. The Company amortised US$83,000
and US$80,000 of the value of the warrant to sales and marketing expense in the
years ended January 31, 1999 and 2000, respectively.

   During 1999, in connection with a strategic alliance with MasterCard, the
Company issued options to purchase 50,000 shares of the Company's Ordinary
Shares at prices ranging from US$11.55 to US$12.50. The options vest eighteen
months from the date of grant and expire two years from the date of issuance.

                                      F-17
<PAGE>

                               TRINTECH GROUP PLC

          NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(Continued)

10. Shareholders' Equity and Redeemable Convertible Preference Shares
(Continued)

   The Company has determined the fair value of the options at the period end
using a Black-Scholes option pricing model with the following weighted-average
assumptions: risk free interest range of 5.5%; divided yields of 0%; volatility
factors of the expected market price of the Company's ordinary shares of 0.4;
and a weighted-average expected life of the options of 1.34 years. The Company
recorded US$587,000 in stock compensation related to these options in the year
ended January 31, 2000.

   Also in 1999, in connection with the formation of the Company's Advisory
Board, the Company issued options to purchase 60,000 shares of the Company's
Ordinary Shares at an exercise price of US$11.36 to each of the three Advisory
Board Members. The options vest ratably over 4 years and expire after seven
years from the date of grant.

   The Company has determined the fair value of the options at the period end
using a Black-Scholes option pricing model with the following weighted-average
assumptions: risk free interest rate of 5.5%; dividend yields of 0%; volatility
factors of the expected market price of the Company's ordinary shares of 0.4;
and a weighted-average expected life of the options of 1.16 years. The company
recorded US$1,481,000 in stock compensation related to these options in the
year ended January 31, 2000.

   The holders of the Series A Redeemable Convertible Preference Shares were
entitled to receive a dividend, when and if declared by the Board of Directors,
on an equal basis with the holders of Ordinary Shares. There were no dividends
declared or payable by the Company in any of the years presented. At January
31, 1998, 1999 and 2000 the Company did not have any profits available for
distribution.

   The Series A Redeemable Convertible Preference Shares were redeemable on a
change of control and accordingly were classified outside shareholders' equity
at their redemption value.

   The Series A Redeemable Convertible Preference Shares were convertible at
any time at the option of the holder into Ordinary Shares at the then effective
conversion price. The Series A Redeemable Convertible Preference Shares
automatically converted into Ordinary Shares: upon the closing of a firmly
underwritten public offering under the Securities Act of 1933 (IPO) of Ordinary
Shares of the Company at a per share price not less than US$10.50 per share and
for a total offering of not less than US$20 million; or at such time as the
Company received the consent of not less than two-thirds of the holders of the
Series A Redeemable Convertible Preference Shares; or in the event that fewer
than one-third of the originally issued Series A Redeemable Convertible
Preference Shares remained outstanding.

   Each Series A Redeemable Convertible Preference Share had a number of votes
equal to the number of Ordinary Shares then issuable upon conversion of such
Series A Redeemable Convertible Preference Shares. Upon liquidation, the
holders of the Series A Redeemable Convertible Preference Shares were entitled
to receive a per share amount equal to the Original Purchase Price plus any
declared but unpaid dividends, before any distribution was made to the holders
of the Ordinary Shares.

   In August 1998, 40,000 Series A Redeemable Convertible Preference Shares
were converted to 40,000 Ordinary Shares at a conversion price of US$6 each. In
September 1999, the remaining 2,960,000 Series A Redeemable Convertible
Preference Shares were converted to 2,960,000 Ordinary Shares.

                                      F-18
<PAGE>

                               TRINTECH GROUP PLC

          NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(Continued)

11. Net Income (Loss) Per Ordinary Share

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                   Year ended January 31,
                                              ---------------------------------
                                                 1998       1999        2000
                                              ---------- ----------  ----------
<S>                                           <C>        <C>         <C>
Numerator:
Numerator for basic and diluted net income
 (loss) per ordinary share--Income (loss)
 available to ordinary shareholders.........  $      175 $   (6,873) $  (12,111)
Denominator:
Denominator for basic earnings per share--
 weighted average Ordinary Shares...........  15,688,335 16,157,831  19,309,964
Effect of employee stock options............      60,826        --          --
                                              ---------- ----------  ----------
Denominator for diluted net income (loss)
 per Ordinary Share.........................  15,749,161 16,157,831  19,309,964
                                              ---------- ----------  ----------
Basic net income (loss) per Ordinary Share..  $     0.01 $    (0.43) $    (0.63)
                                              ---------- ----------  ----------
Diluted net income (loss) per Ordinary
 Share......................................  $     0.01 $    (0.43) $    (0.63)
                                              ---------- ----------  ----------
ADSs used in computing basic net income
 (loss) per equivalent ADS..................  31,376,670 32,315,662  38,619,928
                                              ---------- ----------  ----------
ADSs used in computing diluted net income
 (loss) per equivalent ADS..................  31,498,322 32,315,662  38,619,928
                                              ---------- ----------  ----------
</TABLE>

12. Employee Benefit Plans

   The Company has elected to follow Accounting Principles Board Opinion Number
25, "Accounting for Stock Issued to Employees", ("APB 25") and related
interpretations in accounting for its stock options because, as discussed
below, the alternative fair value accounting provided for under FASB Statement
Number 123, "Accounting for Stock-Based Compensation", ("SFAS 123"), requires
use of option valuation models that were not developed for use in valuing stock
options. Under APB 25, the Company has not recognized compensation expense
during the years ended January 31, 1998, 1999 and 2000, respectively, as the
Company believes the exercise price of the Company's share options at the date
of grant was equal to or greater than the estimated fair value of the
underlying shares on the date of grant.

   The Company established a share option scheme in January 1990, which was
available to all employees of the Company. Options granted under this scheme
generally had a three year vesting period. All options granted under this
scheme were granted prior to 1994. There are no options outstanding under the
scheme. This scheme was terminated in October 1998.

   In May 1997 the Company established the Trintech Group Limited Share Option
1997 Scheme (the "1997 Scheme"). The 1997 Scheme initially provided for the
issuance of up to 1,200,000 of the Company's Ordinary Shares. In June 1998,
Trintech's Board of Directors and shareholders approved an amendment to the
1997 Scheme, providing for an increase in the number of Ordinary Shares that
may be issued under the 1997 Scheme to an aggregate of 2,200,000. In July 1999,
Trintech's Board of Directors and shareholders approved an amendment to the
1997 Scheme, providing for an increase in the number of Ordinary Shares that
may be issued under the 1997 Scheme to an aggregate of 3,700,000. All options
granted have a seven year term and generally commence vesting at a rate of one
twelfth of the total

                                      F-19
<PAGE>

                               TRINTECH GROUP PLC

          NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(Continued)

12. Employee Benefit Plans (Continued)

   During 1998, the Company's Board of Directors and shareholders also approved
the Directors and Consultants Share Option Scheme which provides for the grant
of options to purchase a maximum of 200,000 Ordinary Shares of the Company to
non-employee directors and consultants of the Company. In July 1999, Trintech's
Board of Directors and shareholders approved an amendment to the 1998 Scheme,
providing for an increase in the number of Ordinary Shares that may be issued
under the 1998 Scheme to an aggregate of 600,000.

   In August, 1999, the Company obtained shareholder approval for the
establishment of the Trintech 1999 employee savings related share option scheme
for our Irish employees. The Company may issue an aggregate of 350,000 shares
under the 1999 savings related scheme. The scheme will be adopted shortly by
the board following the receipt of approval by the Irish Revenue Commissioners.
The 1999 savings related scheme applies to all of the Company's qualifying
Irish employees and is intended to be an approved scheme under Schedule 12A to
the Taxes Consolidation Act 1997 of the Republic of Ireland. The eligible
employees may apply for an option to purchase ordinary shares at a discount of
15% to the market value of ordinary shares on the last day on which the
ordinary shares were traded before grant. Participants must enter into approved
savings arrangements the purpose of which is to fund the cost of the exercise
of the option. As of January 31, 2000 no shares had been issued under this
plan.

   On August 23, 1999, the Company obtained shareholder approval for the
establishment of the Trintech 1999 employee share purchase plan for Trintech's
U.S. employees. The Company may issue an aggregate of 350,000 ordinary shares
under the 1999 share purchase plan. The 1999 share purchase plan is intended to
qualify under Section 423 of the Code and contains consecutive, overlapping,
twenty-four month offering periods. Each offering period includes four six-
month purchase periods. The offering periods generally start on the first
trading day on or after March 1 and September 1 of each year. The 1999 share
purchase plan permits participants to purchase common stock through payroll
deductions of up to 15% of the participant's compensation. As of January 31,
2000 no shares had been issued under this plan.

   In the fourth quarter of fiscal year 2000, the Company recorded a stock
compensation charge of US$2.1 million in relation to stock options granted at
market value to the members of Trintech's advisory board and to a strategic
alliance partner with the Company.

   Pro forma information regarding net income is required by SFAS 123, and has
been determined as if the Company had accounted for its stock options under the
fair value method of SFAS 123. The fair value for these options was estimated
at the date of grant using a Black-Scholes option pricing model with the
following weighted-average assumptions for 1998, 1999 and 2000: risk free
interest rate of 6%, 5% and 6% respectively; dividend yields of 0%; volatility
factors of the expected market price of the Company's ordinary shares for
options granted following the initial public offering of 0.4 and volatility
factors of 0.001 (to approximate to the minimum value method appropriate for
non-public companies) for options granted prior to the initial public offering
and a weighted-average expected life of the option of three years.

   The Black-Scholes option model was developed for use in estimating the fair
value of traded options which have no vesting restrictions and are fully
transferable. In addition, option valuation models require the input of highly
subjective assumptions including the expected stock price volatility. Because
the Company's stock options have characteristics significantly different from
those of traded options, and because changes in the subjective input

                                      F-20
<PAGE>

                               TRINTECH GROUP PLC

          NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(Continued)

12. Employee Benefit Plans (Continued)

assumptions can materially affect the fair value estimate, in management's
opinion, the existing models do not necessarily provide a reliable single
measure of the fair value of its stock options.

   For purposes of pro forma disclosures, the estimated fair value of the
options is amortized to expense over the options' vesting period. The Company's
pro forma information follows for the years ended January 31, 2000 (in
thousands of U.S. dollars):

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                       Year ended January 31,
                                                       -----------------------
                                                       1998   1999      2000
                                                       ----- -------  --------
     <S>                                               <C>   <C>      <C>
     Pro forma net income (loss)...................... $ 115 $(7,014) $(12,835)
                                                       ===== =======  ========
     Pro forma net income (loss) per ordinary share
       Basic.......................................... $0.01 $ (0.43) $  (0.66)
       Diluted........................................ $0.01 $ (0.43) $  (0.66)
     Pro forma net income (loss) per equivalent ADS
       Basic.......................................... $0.00 $ (0.22) $  (0.33)
       Diluted........................................ $0.00 $ (0.22) $  (0.33)
</TABLE>

   A summary of the Company's stock option activity and related information for
the years ended January 31, 1998, 1999 and 2000 follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                          January 31, 1998    January 31, 1999     January 31, 2000
                          ------------------ -------------------- --------------------
                                   Weighted-            Weighted-            Weighted-
                                    average              average              average
                                   exercise             exercise             exercise
                          Options    price    Options     price    Options     price
                          -------  --------- ---------  --------- ---------  ---------
<S>                       <C>      <C>       <C>        <C>       <C>        <C>
Outstanding at beginning
 of Period..............   31,651    $1.00     912,393    $2.12   1,486,681   $ 3.40
Granted.................  903,420    $2.15     756,220    $4.59   2,471,358    16.36
Lapsed..................  (18,538)   $1.78    (166,967)   $2.02    (281,033)    7.45
Exercised...............   (4,140)   $1.00     (14,965)   $1.34     (65,679)    2.41
                          -------    -----   ---------    -----   ---------   ------
Outstanding at end of
 period.................  912,393    $2.12   1,486,681    $3.40   3,611,327   $11.96
                          =======    =====   =========    =====   =========   ======
Exercisable at end of
 period.................   23,573    $1.00     129,257    $2.27     438,116   $ 3.79
                          =======    =====   =========    =====   =========   ======
</TABLE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                      Weighted-       Weighted-       Weighted-
                                       average         average         average
                                Fair  exercise  Fair  exercise  Fair  exercise
                                Value   price   Value   price   Value   price
                                ----- --------- ----- --------- ----- ---------
<S>                             <C>   <C>       <C>   <C>       <C>   <C>
Weighted-average fair value of
 options granted during the
 year for options whose
 exercise price exceeds the
 market price of the Ordinary
 Shares on the date of grant..  $0.26   $2.20   $ --    $ --    $ --   $  --
Weighted-average fair value of
 options granted during the
 year for options whose
 exercise price equals the
 market price of the Ordinary
 Shares on the date of grant..  $0.45   $2.14   $0.83   $4.59   $3.91  $16.36
</TABLE>


                                      F-21
<PAGE>

                               TRINTECH GROUP PLC

          NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(Continued)

12. Employee Benefit Plans (Continued)

   Exercise prices for options outstanding as of January 31, 2000 ranged from
$1.55 to $60.00 per share. The breakdown of outstanding options at January 31,
2000 by price range is as follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                     Weighted average      Options     Options
Price range                       remaining life (years) outstanding exercisable
- -----------                       ---------------------  ----------- -----------
<S>                               <C>                    <C>         <C>
$ 1.55-- 2.99....................         4.57              758,390    306,235
$ 3.00-- 9.99....................         5.73              564,779     79,190
$10.00--11.49....................         6.42            1,219,125     46,908
$11.50--48.99....................         6.44              979,833      5,783
$49.00--60.00....................         6.93               89,200        --
                                                          ---------    -------
                                                          3,611,327    438,116
                                                          =========    =======
</TABLE>

   Options have been granted in US dollars since September 1999, previously
options were granted in Irish pounds. The U.S. dollar equivalents for
disclosures above have been determined using the U.S. dollar rate at the date
of each grant.

13. Income Taxes

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                       Year ended January
                                                               31,
                                                      ----------------------
                                                      1998  1999      2000
                                                      ---- -------  --------
                                                        (U.S. dollars in
                                                           thousands)
     <S>                                              <C>  <C>      <C>
     Income (loss) before provision for income taxes
      consists of the following:
       Ireland....................................... $161 $(2,887) $(16,172)
       Foreign.......................................   64  (3,986)    4,604
                                                      ---- -------  --------
         Total....................................... $225 $(6,873) $(12,108)
                                                      ==== =======  ========
</TABLE>

   The provision for income taxes consists of the following:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                    Year ended
                                                                   January 31,
                                                                  --------------
                                                                  1998 1999 2000
                                                                  ---- ---- ----
                                                                  (U.S. dollars
                                                                  in thousands)
     <S>                                                          <C>  <C>  <C>
     Current:
       Ireland................................................... $50  $ -- $ 3
       Foreign...................................................  --    --  --
                                                                  ---  ---- ---
         Total current........................................... $50  $ -- $ 3
                                                                  ===  ==== ===
     Deferred:
       Ireland................................................... $--  $ -- $--
       Foreign...................................................  --    --  --
                                                                  ---  ---- ---
         Total deferred.......................................... $--  $ -- $--
                                                                  ===  ==== ===
         Total provision for income taxes........................ $50  $ -- $ 3
                                                                  ===  ==== ===
</TABLE>


                                      F-22
<PAGE>

                               TRINTECH GROUP PLC

          NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(Continued)

13. Income Taxes (Continued)

   The provision for income taxes differs from the amount computed by applying
the statutory income tax rate to income before taxes. The sources and tax
effects of the differences are as follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                       Year ended January
                                                               31,
                                                      -----------------------
                                                      1998    1999     2000
                                                      -----  -------  -------
                                                        (U.S. dollars in
                                                           thousands)
     <S>                                              <C>    <C>      <C>
     Income taxes computed at the Irish statutory
      income tax rate of 38% for 1998, 31.66% for
      1999 and 27.66% for 2000....................... $  82  $(2,176) $(3,349)
     Income (losses) from Irish manufacturing
      operations (taxed) relieved at lower rates.....   159      657    2,456
     Income (losses) subject to (relieved at) higher
      rates of tax...................................    (4)    (504)     707
     Income (losses) subject to (relieved at) lower
      rates of tax...................................   (15)     --       --
     Operating losses utilized.......................    (9)     --    (1,530)
     Operating losses not utilized...................    61    2,477    1,737
     Income not subject to tax.......................  (302)    (648)  (1,003)
     Foreign withholding tax.........................    21      --       --
     Non-deductible expenses.........................    57      194      345
     Non-deductible stock compensation...............   --       --       640
                                                      -----  -------  -------
       Total provision for income taxes.............. $  50  $   --   $     3
                                                      =====  =======  =======
</TABLE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                          Year ended January
                                                                  31,
                                                          ---------------------
                                                          1998    1999    2000
                                                          -----  ------  ------
                                                           (U.S. dollars in
                                                              thousands)
     <S>                                                  <C>    <C>     <C>
     Deferred tax assets
     Net operating loss carryforwards.................... $ 965  $3,584  $3,305
                                                          -----  ------  ------
     Total deferred tax assets...........................   965   3,584   3,305
     Valuation allowance.................................  (965) (3,584) (3,305)
                                                          -----  ------  ------
     Net deferred tax assets.............................   --      --      --
                                                          =====  ======  ======
</TABLE>

   At January 31, 2000, the Company had Irish manufacturing, German, U.S. and
U.K. net operating loss carryforwards of approximately US$20,661,000,
US$295,000, US$2,660,000 and US$111,000 respectively. The utilization of these
net operating loss carryforwards is limited to the future profitable operations
of the Company in the related tax jurisdictions in which such carryforwards
arose. The Irish, German and U.K. losses carry forward indefinitely. The U.S.
loss carryforwards will expire in 2014 if not previously utilized. 100%
valuation allowances have been provided against the net operating loss
carryforwards because of the history of operating losses in the related tax
jurisdictions.

14. Segment Information

   Operating segments are identified as components of an enterprise about which
separate discrete financial information is available that is evaluated by the
chief operating decision maker or decision making group to make decisions about
how to allocate resources and

                                      F-23
<PAGE>

                               TRINTECH GROUP PLC

          NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(Continued)

14. Segment Information (Continued)

assess performance. The Company's chief operating decision maker is the Chief
Executive Officer. To date, the Company has viewed its operations as
principally two segments:

                          Year ended January 31, 1998
                          (U.S. dollars in thousands)

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                      Licenses  Segments   All    Consolidated
                             Product & Services  Total    Other      Total
                             ------- ---------- -------- -------  ------------
<S>                          <C>     <C>        <C>      <C>      <C>
Revenue..................... 10,824     5,822    16,646      --      16,646
Cost of Sale................  8,352     1,342     9,694      --       9,694
Gross Profit................  2,472     4,480     6,952      --       6,952
Operating Expenses..........    783     2,204     2,987    3,746      6,733
Operating Profit (Loss).....  1,689     2,276     3,965   (3,746)       219
Non-operating Income
 (expense), net.............    --        --        --       (44)       (44)
                             ------    ------    ------  -------    -------
Net Income (Loss)...........  1,689     2,276     3,965   (3,790)       175
                             ======    ======    ======  =======    =======
Segment Assets..............  3,146     1,764     4,910    2,093      7,003
                             ======    ======    ======  =======    =======

                          Year ended January 31, 1999
                          (U.S. dollars in thousands)

<CAPTION>
                                      Licenses  Segments   All    Consolidated
                             Product & Services  Total    Other      Total
                             ------- ---------- -------- -------  ------------
<S>                          <C>     <C>        <C>      <C>      <C>
Revenue..................... 14,554     6,479    21,033      --      21,033
Cost of Sale................ 10,851     3,062    13,913      --      13,913
Gross Profit................  3,703     3,417     7,120      --       7,120
Operating Expenses..........  1,913     6,260     8,173    5,771     13,944
Operating Profit (Loss).....  1,790    (2,843)   (1,053)  (5,771)    (6,824)
Non-operating Income
 (expense), net.............    --        --        --       (49)       (49)
                             ------    ------    ------  -------    -------
Net Income (Loss)...........  1,790    (2,843)   (1,053)  (5,820)    (6,873)
                             ======    ======    ======  =======    =======
Segment Assets..............  3,708     1,420     5,128   15,133     20,261
                             ======    ======    ======  =======    =======

                          Year ended January 31, 2000
                          (U.S. dollars in thousands)

<CAPTION>
                                      Licenses  Segments   All    Consolidated
                             Product & Services  Total    Other      Total
                             ------- ---------- -------- -------  ------------
<S>                          <C>     <C>        <C>      <C>      <C>
Revenue..................... 18,457    11,787    30,244      --      30,244
Cost of Sale................ 12,034     3,973    16,007    1,250     17,257
Gross Profit................  6,423     7,814    14,237   (1,250)    12,987
Operating Expenses..........  3,410    14,770    18,180    8,965     27,145
Operating Profit (Loss).....  3,013    (6,956)   (3,943) (10,215)   (14,158)
Non-operating Income
 (expense), net.............    --        --        --     2,047      2,047
                             ------    ------    ------  -------    -------
Net Income (Loss)...........  3,013    (6,956)   (3,943)  (8,168)   (12,111)
                             ======    ======    ======  =======    =======
Segment Assets..............  4,695     3,944     8,639   65,656     74,295
                             ======    ======    ======  =======    =======
</TABLE>


                                      F-24
<PAGE>

                               TRINTECH GROUP PLC

          NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(Continued)

14. Segment Information (Continued)

   The Company only reports direct operating expenses under the control of the
Chief Operating Decision Maker in the Segmental Information disclosed. The
Company does not report indirect operating expenses, depreciation and
amortization, interest income (expense), income taxes, capital expenditures, or
identifiable assets by industry segment, other than inventories and accounts
receivable, to the Chief Executive Officer.

   The following tables reconcile segment income (loss) before income taxes to
consolidated income (loss) before income taxes and segment assets to
consolidated total assets.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                       Year ended January
                                                               31,
                                                      -----------------------
                                                       1998    1999    2000
                                                      ------  ------  -------
<S>                                                   <C>     <C>     <C>
Total income (loss) before taxes for reportable
 segments............................................  3,965  (1,053)  (3,943)
Unallocated amounts:
  Central overheads.................................. (3,407) (5,205)  (7,938)
  Depreciation and amortization......................   (339)   (566)  (2,277)
  Interest income (expense), net.....................     18     272    1,208
  Exchange gain (loss), net..........................    (12)   (321)     842
                                                      ------  ------  -------
  Income (loss) before income taxes..................    225  (6,873) (12,108)
                                                      ------  ------  -------
    Total assets for reportable segments.............  4,910   5,128    8,639
Unallocated amounts:
  Cash...............................................    272   1,691   10,862
  Marketable securities..............................    --    7,178   48,830
  Value added taxes..................................    420     407      192
  Prepaid expenses and other current assets..........    662   1,299    1,332
  Property and equipment, net........................    739   2,058    3,190
  Software development costs.........................    --    2,500    1,250
                                                      ------  ------  -------
    Total Assets.....................................  7,003  20,261   74,295
                                                      ======  ======  =======
</TABLE>

   The distribution of net revenue by geographical area was as follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                               January 31,
                                                           --------------------
                                                            1998   1999   2000
                                                           ------ ------ ------
                                                             (U.S. dollars in
                                                                thousands)
<S>                                                        <C>    <C>    <C>
Germany................................................... 11,242 14,724 18,005
United States of America..................................    835    368  3,600
Ireland...................................................  2,465  2,435  3,085
Europe (excluding Germany and Ireland)....................  1,858  2,130  2,640
Rest of World (excluding United States of America)........    246  1,376  2,914
                                                           ------ ------ ------
    Total................................................. 16,646 21,033 30,244
                                                           ====== ====== ======
</TABLE>

                                      F-25
<PAGE>

                               TRINTECH GROUP PLC

          NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(Continued)

14. Segment Information (Continued)

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                 January 31,
                                                              ------------------
                                                              1998  1999   2000
                                                              ---- ------ ------
                                                               (U.S. dollars in
                                                                  thousands)
<S>                                                           <C>  <C>    <C>
Long lived Assets:
Country of Domicile:
  Ireland....................................................  506  4,107  3,233
Foreign Countries:
  United States..............................................  121    298  1,026
  Germany....................................................   91    153    181
  Other......................................................   21    --     --
                                                              ---- ------ ------
    Total.................................................... $739 $4,558 $4,440
                                                              ==== ====== ======
</TABLE>

15. Government Grants and Related Loans

   Under employment agreements between the Company and Enterprise Ireland (the
Irish Development Authority, Forbairt) the Company has offset against related
payroll expense amounts of US$252,000, US$249,000 and US $10,000 in the years
ended January 31, 1998, 1999 and 2000, respectively. Under the terms of the
agreements between the Company and Enterprise Ireland, these grants may be
repaid to Enterprise Ireland in certain circumstances, principally the failure
to maintain the related jobs for a period of five years from the payment of the
first installment of the related employment grant. The Company has complied
with the terms of the grant agreements through January 31, 2000.

   Under research and development agreements between the Company and Enterprise
Ireland the Company has offset US$248,000, US$80,000 and US$174,000 against
related research and development expenditure for the years ended January 31,
1998, 1999 and 2000, respectively. Under the terms of the agreements between
the Company and Enterprise Ireland, these grants may be repaid to Enterprise
Ireland in certain circumstances, principally the disposal by the Company of
intellectual property arising from the grant aided research and development.
The Company has not disposed of any such intellectual property through January
31, 2000.

   Under agreements between the Company and the Irish Trade Board, the Company
has offset against related sales and marketing expense amounts of US$139,000,
US$nil and US$nil in the years ended January 31, 1998, 1999 and 2000,
respectively. In the years ended January 31, 1998, 1999 and 2000 the Company
received US$139,000, US$530,000 and US$100,000 respectively in the form of non-
interest bearing loans which are repayable at rates linked to future revenues
earned in the related markets. The loan is repayable at a rate of 1.4% of total
export sales in the period January 1999 to December 2001 with payments to
commence in January 2000 and end in July 2002. If the repayments calculated as
a percentage of sales are not sufficient to repay the loans in full Enterprise
Ireland may write off the balance provided they are satisfied with the
information provided about the sales achieved. The Company has credited all
such loan amounts to the balance sheet liability account "Government Grants
repayable and related loans" as the Company believes such loans will be repaid
in full.

                                      F-26
<PAGE>

                               TRINTECH GROUP PLC

          NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(Continued)

16. Selected Statement of Operating Data

   The following customers accounted for more than 10% of revenue in any one of
the years ended January 31, 1998, 1999 and 2000 respectively.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                    Year Ended
                                                                    January 31
                                                                  ----------------
                                                                  1998  1999  2000
                                                                  ----  ----  ----
   <S>                                                            <C>   <C>   <C>
   Deutsche Verkehrs Bank Zentrale...............................  --     1%   11%
                                                                  ---   ---   ---
   Bank of Ireland...............................................  11%   11%    5%
                                                                  ---   ---   ---
   GRK...........................................................  10%    8%    1%
                                                                  ---   ---   ---
   Easycash......................................................  12%    9%   --
                                                                  ---   ---   ---
   Which.........................................................  26%   33%   20%
                                                                  ---   ---   ---
</TABLE>

   The customers identified in the above table all relate to the product
segment described in note 14.

17. Related Party Transactions

   Huttoft Company, an unlimited company which is wholly-owned by certain
directors of the Company owns a special non-voting class of shares in Trintech
Limited, one of the Company's Irish subsidiaries. All of the voting shares in
the subsidiary are owned by the Company. The shares do not entitle the holders
thereof to receive any share of the assets of the Company on a winding up.
Trintech Limited may, from time to time, declare dividends to Huttoft Company
and Huttoft Company may declare dividends to its shareholders out of these
amounts. Any such dividends paid by Trintech Limited are treated as
compensation expense by the Company in its financial statements prepared in
accordance with generally accepted accounting principles in the United States
notwithstanding their legal form of dividends to minority interests in order to
correctly reflect the substance of the transactions.

   The amount of dividends included in compensation expenses are as follows:


                                                  Year ended January 31,
                                             -------------------------------
                                                1998       1999       2000
                                             ---------  ---------  ---------
                                                 (U.S. dollars in thousands)

                                                   215        241        312
                                             ---------  ---------  ---------


   As described in Note 6 the Company leases the new corporate headquarters in
Dublin, Ireland from John and Cyril McGuire, officers and directors of the
Company. The rent paid by the company was determined after completion of a
survey of the rental market, and the terms of the lease are no less favorable
than those that could be obtained in arms-length transactions.

   The Company has a strategic relationship with VISA International covering
Europe, the United States, Latin America and the Asia Pacific region. VISA
markets and recommends certain of the Company's products throughout the world.
Member organizations of VISA license products from the Company. In August 1998
VISA International subscribed $1,500,000 for 250,000 of the Series A Redeemable
Convertible Preference Shares and in September 1998

                                      F-27
<PAGE>

                               TRINTECH GROUP PLC

          NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(Continued)

17. Related Party Transactions (Continued)

appointed a representative to the board of directors. In addition, in August
1998 the Company issued to VISA a warrant to purchase 250,000 ordinary shares
at a price of $6 per ordinary share exercisable for a two-year period. The
value of the warrant was determined to be $163,000, has been included in
prepaid sales and marketing costs and is being amortized rateable over the two
year period of the strategic agreement with VISA to pursue opportunities in the
Internet marketplace entered into at the time.

   Revenues from the supply of products and services to VISA, and balances due
from VISA at the ends of the related accounting period were as follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                     Year ended January 31,
                                                  -----------------------------
                                                    1998      1999      2000
                                                  --------- --------- ---------
                                                   (U.S. dollars in thousands)
   <S>                                            <C>       <C>       <C>
   Revenues......................................     1,157     1,777     2,005
   Balances due from VISA........................        53       414       399
</TABLE>

   Trintech has entered into a number of development and marketing agreements
with VISA. The development agreements comprise the customization of certain
Trintech products to meet VISA specifications. The development element of such
arrangements are accounted for in accordance with the Company's revenue
recognition policy for services using the percentage-of-completion contract
accounting method. Trintech has no obligation to repay funds received under the
agreements and bears the financial risks and rewards of the development
projects as well as retaining title to the intellectual property rights of the
developed technology. The marketing agreements entered into between Trintech
and VISA have no accounting value.

   On March 31, 1998 the Company licensed the source code for S/Pay and J/Pay
from RSA Data Security for a consideration of $2.5 million and entered into a
joint marketing activities agreement with RSA Data Security. On the same date,
Security Dynamics Technologies, Inc., the parent company of RSA Data Security
purchased 482,765 ordinary shares in the Company for $2 million and appointed a
representative to the Company's board of directors. On June 30, 1998 Security
Dynamics Technologies Limited purchased 500,000 Series A Redeemable Convertible
Preference Shares for $3 million.

   During the year ended January 31, 1998, 1999 and 2000 respectively, the
Company incurred expenditure of $0, $50,000 and $0 on joint marketing
activities with RSA. There were no balances due to or from RSA or Security
Dynamics at any period end.

18. Subsequent Events

   On March 10, 2000 the Company announced a two-for-one split of its issued
and outstanding ADSs. Basic and diluted net income (loss) per equivalent ADS is
therefore calculated using twice the weighted average number of ordinary shares
outstanding during the period. All amounts shown per equivalent ADS have been
retroactively adjusted to give effect to the split.

                                      F-28
<PAGE>

                                    ANNEX A:

                        ADDITIONAL INFORMATION REQUIRED
                       BY THE COMPANIES ACT, 1963 TO 1999
                           OF THE REPUBLIC OF IRELAND
                   AND THE EUROPEAN COMMUNITIES (TRANSFERABLE
               SECURITIES AND STOCK EXCHANGE) REGULATIONS, 1992.

  1. We were incorporated in Ireland as a private company on January 29, 1987
under registration number 119798. Our founders were John McGuire and Cyril
McGuire.

  2.  The directors whose names appear on page 56 through 58 of this document
accept responsibility for the information contained in this document. To the
best of the knowledge and belief of the directors, who have taken all
reasonable care to ensure that such is the case, the information contained in
this document is consistent with the facts and does not omit anything likely to
affect the import of such information.

  3. Our articles of association provide that no share qualification shall be
required by a director.

  4. Our articles of association provide with regard to the remuneration of
directors:

    (a) The ordinary remuneration of the directors shall be determined from
  time to time by an ordinary resolution of our shareholders and shall be
  divisible, unless such resolution shall provide otherwise, among the
  directors as they may agree or, failing agreement, equally, except that any
  director who shall hold office for part only of the period in for which
  such remuneration is payable shall be entitled only to rank in such
  division for a proportion of the remuneration related to the period during
  which he has held office.

    (b) The directors shall also be entitled to be paid all travelling, hotel
  and other expenses incurred by them for attending meetings of directors or
  committees of directors or general meetings in connection with our
  business.

    (c) Any director who holds any executive office, including the office of
  chairman or deputy chairman, or who serves on any committee or who
  otherwise performs services which in the opinion of the directors are
  outside the scope of the ordinary duties of a director may be paid such
  extra remuneration by way of salary, commission or other form of
  renumeration as the directors may determine.

    (d) The directors on our behalf may pay a gratuity, pension or allowance
  on retirement to any director who has held any other salaried office or
  place of profit with us or to his widow or dependants, and may make
  contributions to any fund and pay premiums for the purchase or provision of
  any such gratuity, pension or allowance.

  5. Our principal objects which are described in full in our memorandum and
articles of association include the acquisition and holding of shares and
stocks and the business of a holding and investment company generally.

  6. Except as otherwise provided in this prospectus, in the opinion of the
directors the amount required to be provided for the matters specified in
paragraph 4 of the Third Schedule to the Companies Act, 1963, whether out of
the proceeds of the issue or through some other means, is nil.

  7. The subscription lists are anticipated to be opened at 9:00 am Frankfurt
Time, on April 17, 2000 and may be closed at any time thereafter.

                                      A-1
<PAGE>


   8. At the date of this prospectus, options to purchase an aggregate of
3,750,507 ordinary shares (7,501,014 equivalent ADSs), including options held
by officers and directors to purchase 1,520,863 ordinary shares (3,041,726
equivalent ADSs), are outstanding. Additional information about these options
is as follows:


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                      Number of
                                                       Options       Exercise
                                                     (in Ordinary   Price per
                       Date of Grant                    Shares)   Ordinary Share
       --------------------------------------------- ------------ --------------
       <S>                                           <C>          <C>
       April 20, 1990...............................    10,931    IR(Pounds)0.67
       May 28, 1997.................................   298,808    IR(Pounds)1.33
       May 28, 1997.................................   200,000    IR(Pounds)1.46
       September 11, 1997...........................    67,322    IR(Pounds)1.67
       November 21, 1997............................    88,900    IR(Pounds)1.67
       February 5, 1998.............................   121,670    IR(Pounds)2.00
       March 18, 1998...............................    81,770    IR(Pounds)2.40
       April 22, 1998...............................    19,250    IR(Pounds)3.25
       May 25, 1998.................................    31,200    IR(Pounds)3.60
       June 19, 1998................................    30,400    IR(Pounds)3.75
       July 27, 1998................................    59,250    IR(Pounds)3.75
       September 11, 1998...........................    33,700    IR(Pounds)3.75
       November 30, 1998............................    88,700    IR(Pounds)3.75
       January 11, 1999.............................   231,000    IR(Pounds)3.75
       February 25, 1999............................    67,700    IR(Pounds)3.75
       May 27, 1999.................................   561,625    IR(Pounds)8.25
       May 27, 1999.................................   135,000    IR(Pounds)8.25
       June 11, 1999................................    70,000    IR(Pounds)8.25
       June 27, 1999................................    31,000    IR(Pounds)8.25
       August 27, 1999..............................   502,000    US$      11.00
       August 27, 1999..............................    40,000    US$      11.00
       September 23, 1999...........................    20,000    US$       1.55
       September 23, 1999...........................   647,000    US$      11.55
       September 28, 1999...........................    40,000    US$      14.88
       October 4, 1999..............................    15,000    US$      12.25
       December 3, 1999.............................   276,833    US$      43.25
       December 16, 1999............................     4,000    US$      43.00
       December 22, 1999............................    27,500    US$      49.50
       January 5, 2000..............................    19,500    US$      50.00
       January 12, 2000.............................    34,000    US$      49.00
       January 19, 2000.............................     6,200    US$      51.00
       January 26, 2000.............................     2,000    US$      60.00
       February 2, 2000.............................    17,500    US$      58.50
       February 9, 2000.............................     5,200    US$     107.00
       February 16, 2000............................    15,500    US$      92.00
       February 23, 2000............................     3,000    US$     100.10
       March 24, 2000...............................    66,000    US$     100.00
</TABLE>


  9. The number of ordinary and preference shares issued by us otherwise than
for cash within the preceding three years are as follows:

    (a) On January 31, 1997, the shareholders of Trintech Limited were
  allotted 167,971 of our ordinary shares in exchange for all of the ordinary
  shares of Trintech Limited. Upon completion of the transaction, Trintech
  Limited became one of our wholly owned subsidiaries.

                                      A-2
<PAGE>

  10. The financial information concerning us contained in this prospectus does
not constitute statutory accounts within the meaning of Section 19 of the
Companies Act 1986 of the Republic of Ireland. Our statutory accounts for the
financial years ended January 31, 1997, 1998, 1999 and 2000 have been delivered
to the Registrar of Companies of the Republic of Ireland. For each of those
statutory accounts, our independent auditors, Ernst & Young, have given reports
which were unqualified and did not contain a statement under Section 193 of the
Companies Act 1990.

  11. In addition to the contracts described in the section entitled "Related
Party Transactions" of the document, the following contracts have been entered
into outside the ordinary course of business within the five years immediately
preceding the date of this document and are or may be material:

    (a) Form of Global Underwriting Agreement

    (b) Amended Memorandum and Articles of Association of Trintech Group PLC,
  as adopted on September 22, 1999

    (c) Form of Depositary Agreement among Trintech Group PLC, The Bank of
  New York, as Depositary, and holders from time to time of American
  Depositary Shares issued thereunder (including as an exhibit the form of
  American Depositary Receipt) dated as of September 27, 1999, as amended on
  March 21, 2000

    (d) 1990 Trintech Group Limited Share Option Scheme

    (e) 1997 Trintech Group Limited Share Option Scheme

    (f) 1998 Trintech Group Limited Directors and Consultants Share Option
  Scheme

    (g) 1999 Employee Share Purchase Plan

    (h) Form of Indemnification Agreement between Trintech, Inc. and its
  directors and officers dated September, 1999

    (i) Employment Agreement between Trintech Group Limited and John McGuire
  dated April 1, 1996

    (j) Employment Agreement between Trintech Group Limited and Cyril McGuire
  dated April 1, 1996

    (k) Employment Agreement between Trintech Group Limited and Christopher
  Meehan dated November 2, 1995

    (l) Employment Agreement between Trintech Group Limited and R. Paul Byrne
  dated November 2, 1995

    (m) 1999 U.S. Employee Share Purchase Plan

    (o) Investors Rights Agreement by and among Trintech Group Limited,
  Security Dynamics Technologies, Inc., John F. McGuire, Cyril P. McGuire,
  Instove Limited, Jayness Limited and Vanspur Limited dated March 31, 1998

    (p) Series A Convertible Preference Share Investors Rights Agreement by
  and among Trintech Group Limited, the Investors (as defined therein), John
  F. McGuire, Cyril P. McGuire, Instove Limited, Jayness Limited and Vanspur
  Limited dated June 30, 1998

    (q) Amendment No. 1 to the Investors Rights Agreement by and among
  Trintech Group Limited, the Investors (as defined therein), John F.
  McGuire, Cyril P. McGuire, Instove Limited, Jayness Limited and Vanspur
  Limited

                                      A-3
<PAGE>

    (r) Credit Agreement between Trintech Group of Companies and The Bank of
  Ireland dated November 12, 1997

    (s) Debenture between Trintech Group Limited and The Bank of Ireland
  dated April 23, 1998

    (t) Software Source Code License Agreement between RSA Data Security,
  Inc. and Trintech Manufacturing Ltd. dated March 31, 1998

    (u) Marketing Agreement between RSA Data Security, Inc. and Trintech
  Manufacturing Ltd. dated March 31, 1998

    (v) Agreement between Visa International and Trintech Group Limited dated
  August 27, 1998

    (w) Marketing Agreement between SAP Aktiengesellschaft and Trintech Group
  dated November 19, 1998

    (x) Supply Agreement between Keltek Electronics Limited and Trintech
  Group dated August 17, 1998

    (y) Lease Agreement between John McGuire, Cyril McGuire and Trintech
  Group dated September 1999

    (z) Lease Agreement between 5 Independence Associates Limited Partnership
  and Trintech, Inc. dated April 30, 1998

    (aa) Amendment No. 1 to Lease Agreement between 5 Independence Associates
  Limited Partnership and Trintech, Inc. dated August 4, 1998

    (bb) Guaranty Agreement between 5 Independence Associates Limited
  Partnership and Trintech Holdings Limited dated April, 1998

    (cc) Office Lease Agreement between Sherlon Investments Corp. and
  Trintech, Inc. dated December 12, 1997

    (dd) Lease Agreement between Grund und Vermogensverwaltung Gmbh & Co KG
  and Trintech GmbH dated June 13, 1996

    (ee) Lease Agreement between Service Life & Casualty Ins. Co. and
  Trintech, Inc. dated January 5, 1999

    (ff)  Lease Agreement between Lincoln Bascom Office Center and Trintech,
  Inc. dated March 19, 1996

    (gg) First Amendment to Office Building Lease between Lincoln Bascom
  Office Center and Trintech, Inc. dated April 1, 1997

    (hh) First Amendment to Office Lease Agreement between Sherlon
  Investments Corp. and Trintech, Inc. dated February 10, 1999

    (ii) Second Amendment to Office Building Lease between Lincoln Bascom
  Office Center and Trintech, Inc. dated May 4, 1998

    (jj) Third Amendment to Office Building Lease between Lincoln Bascom
  Office Center and Trintech, Inc. dated May 21, 1998

    (kk) Grant to Trintech Manufacturing Limited from Enterprise Ireland
  dated December 3, 1996

    (ll) Grant to Trintech Manufacturing Limited from Enterprise Ireland
  dated December 3, 1996

                                      A-4
<PAGE>

    (mm) Grant to Trintech Manufacturing Limited from Enterprise Ireland
  dated October 13, 1997

    (nn) Grant to Trintech Manufacturing Limited from Enterprise Ireland
  dated October 13, 1997

    (oo) Development and Marketing Agreement between Trintech Group and Visa
  International Service Association dated April 26, 1999

    (pp) License Agreement between Trintech, Inc. and Visa U.S.A., Inc. dated
  May 12, 1999

    (qq) Master Joint Marketing Agreement between Trintech, Inc. and Compaq
  Computer Corporation dated March 17, 1999

    (rr) Employment Agreement between Trintech Group Limited and John Harte
  dated August 1, 1999

    (ss) Employment Agreement between Trintech Group PLC and Kevin C. Shea
  dated September, 1999

    (tt) Office Lease Agreement between Trintech, Inc. and The Joshua Group
  dated August 16, 1999

    (uu) Lease Agreement between Trintech, Inc. and Peninsula Office Park
  Associates, L.P. dated May 28, 1999

    (vv) First Amendment to the Lease between Trintech, Inc. and Peninsula
  Office Park Associates, L.P. dated November 1, 1999

  12. Copies of the underwriting agreements being the contract under which the
shares being offered are to be allotted will be available at the offices of A&L
Goodbody, I.F.S.C. North Wall Quay, Dublin 1, Ireland, during normal business
hours on any weekday (Saturdays excepted) within the period of 14 days
following the completion of this offering.

  13. Our auditors are Ernst & Young, Ernst & Young Building, Harcourt Street,
Dublin 2, Republic of Ireland.

  14. Ernst & Young, independent auditors, and A&L Goodbody Solicitors have
given and not withdrawn their written consent to the inclusion in this document
of the references to them in the form and context in which they appear.

  15. A copy of this offer for sale has been delivered to the Registrar of
Companies in the Republic of Ireland for registration, each copy having
attached to it a copy of the consents mentioned above and each of the material
contracts mentioned above.


                                      A-5
<PAGE>

  16. The following are the names and addresses of the directors of Trintech
Group PLC:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
          Name                            Address                        Description
          ----                            -------                        -----------
<S>                      <C>                                       <C>
John F. McGuire......... c/o Trintech Building, South County       Chief Executive Officer
                         Business Park, Leopardstown, Dublin 18.   and Director
Cyril P. McGuire........ c/o Trintech Building, South County       Executive Chairman
                         Business Park, Leopardstown, Dublin 18.
Kevin C. Shea........... c/o Trintech Building, South County       Chief Operating Officer
                         Business Park, Leopardstown, Dublin 18    and Director
Christopher P. Meehan... c/o Trintech Building, South County       Executive Vice
                         Business Park, Leopardstown, Dublin 18.   President, Operations
                                                                   and Director
R. Paul Byrne........... c/o Trintech Building, South County       Chief Financial Officer
                         Business Park, Leopardstown, Dublin 18.   and Director
Trevor D. Sullivan...... c/o Trintech Building, South County       Director
                         Business Park, Leopardstown, Dublin 18.
B. James Bidzos......... c/o Trintech Building, South County       Director
                         Business Park, Leopardstown, Dublin 18.
Wolfgang H. Heinrich.... c/o Trintech Building, South County       Director
                         Business Park, Leopardstown, Dublin 18.
Robert N. Wadsworth..... c/o Trintech Building, South County       Director
                         Business Park, Leopardstown, Dublin 18.
</TABLE>

  17. The price at which ADSs are being offered to the public in this offering
would be payable in full on application.

  18. The number of shares allotted by us and the amounts paid on the shares,
within the previous five years are as follows:

    (a) all amounts were payable and paid on allotment:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                              Class of       Number of
          Date               Shareholder      Shares                   Class of Shares                   Price per Share
- ------------------------ ------------------- --------- ------------------------------------------------ -----------------
<S>                      <C>                 <C>       <C>                                              <C>
January 28, 1997........ Employee              156,164 Ordinary                                         IR(Pounds) 0.0100
January 28, 1997........ Government Agency      11,807 Ordinary                                         IR(Pounds) 0.0100
January 31, 1997........ Government Agency     387,610 Ordinary                                         IR(Pounds) 1.1766
July 14, 1997........... Employee                4,140 Ordinary                                         IR(Pounds) 1.3300
March 31, 1998.......... Technology Partner    482,765 Ordinary                                         US$        4.1428
April 22, 1998.......... Employee                1,700 Ordinary                                         IR(Pounds) 1.3300
April 22, 1998.......... Employee                1,700 Ordinary                                         IR(Pounds) 0.6369
June 30, 1998........... Venture Capitalists 2,583,333 Series A Convertible Redeemable Preference Share US$        6.0000
July 30, 1998........... Venture Capitalists   166,667 Series A Convertible Redeemable Preference Share US$        6.0000
August 18, 1998......... Venture Capitalists    40,000 Ordinary                                         US$        6.0000
August 27, 1998......... Technology Partner    250,000 Series A Convertible Redeemable Preference Share US$        6.0000

</TABLE>

                                      A-6
<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                         Class of   Number of
         Date           Shareholder  Shares   Class of Shares  Price per Share
- ----------------------- ----------- --------- --------------- -----------------
<S>                     <C>         <C>       <C>             <C>
September 11, 1998..... Employee      442     Ordinary        IR(Pounds) 2.0000
September 11, 1998..... Employee      800     Ordinary        IR(Pounds) 2.4000
September 11, 1998..... Employee    1,833     Ordinary        IR(Pounds) 1.6700
November 30, 1998...... Employee    7,850     Ordinary        IR(Pounds) 0.6370
January 11, 1999....... Employee    1,570     Ordinary        IR(Pounds) 0.6370
February 25, 1999...... Employee    4,800     Ordinary        IR(Pounds) 1.3300
February 25, 1999...... Employee    2,000     Ordinary        IR(Pounds) 2.0000
April 12, 1999......... Employee    1,167     Ordinary        IR(Pounds) 1.6700
April 12, 1999......... Employee    1,798     Ordinary        IR(Pounds) 1.3300
April 12, 1999......... Employee      300     Ordinary        IR(Pounds) 3.7500
May 28, 1999........... Employee      166     Ordinary        IR(Pounds) 1.9950
May 28, 1999........... Employee    5,287     Ordinary        IR(Pounds) 1.3300
May 28, 1999........... Employee      930     Ordinary        IR(Pounds) 2.0000
May 28, 1999........... Employee      998     Ordinary        IR(Pounds) 1.6700
May 28, 1999........... Employee      166     Ordinary        IR(Pounds) 1.3250
June 2, 1999........... Employee       83     Ordinary        US$        2.0000
July 6, 1999........... Employee    6,333     Ordinary        US$        1.6700
July 8, 1999........... Employee       83     Ordinary        US$        2.4000
August 12, 1999........ Employee      251     Ordinary        US$        2.0000
August 18, 1999........ Employee      167     Ordinary        US$        2.0000
August 19, 1999........ Employee    1,333     Ordinary        US$        1.3300
August 25, 1999........ Employee      666     Ordinary        US$        1.3300
August 26, 1999........ Employee       83     Ordinary        US$        4.3100
August 30, 1999........ Employee    1,140     Ordinary        US$        1.7700
August 30, 1999........ Employee       83     Ordinary        US$        4.7700
August 31, 1999........ Employee      333     Ordinary        US$        1.9000
September 15, 1999..... Employee       84     Ordinary        US$        2.6300
September 17, 1999..... Employee       83     Ordinary        US$        4.2900
September 17, 1999..... Employee      334     Ordinary        US$        1.7600
September 22, 1999..... Employee    1,016     Ordinary        US$        4.8000
</TABLE>

                                      A-7
<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                           Class of    Number of                               Price per
          Date            Shareholder   Shares          Class of Shares          Share
- ------------------------ ------------- --------- ----------------------------  ----------
<S>                      <C>           <C>       <C>                           <C>
September 28, 1999...... IPO Investors 5,800,000 Ordinary                      US$10.7175
October 7, 1999......... Employee            167 Ordinary                      US$ 3.2800
October 8, 1999......... Employee          2,764 Ordinary                      US$ 1.8000
October 14, 1999........ Employee          2,000 Ordinary                      US$ 2.2800
October 26, 1999........ IPO Investors    87,598 Ordinary                      US$10.7175
October 26, 1999........ Employee         10,840 Ordinary                      US$ 0.8500
October 28, 1999........ Employee            187 Ordinary                      US$ 2.6800
November 17, 1999....... Employee            333 Ordinary                      US$ 4.7600
November 17, 1999....... Employee          2,000 Ordinary                      US$ 2.2100
November 18, 1999....... Employee             83 Ordinary                      US$ 2.6300
November 24, 1999....... Employee            168 Ordinary                      US$ 2.5900
November 29, 1999....... Employee            833 Ordinary                      US$ 4.8000
November 30, 1999....... Employee            804 Ordinary                      US$ 1.7100
December 2, 1999........ Employee            500 Ordinary                      US$ 1.7000
December 15, 1999....... Employee          2,083 Ordinary                      US$ 3.0500
December 15, 1999....... Employee          1,333 Ordinary                      US$ 2.2100
December 17, 1999....... Employee            100 Ordinary                      US$ 1.7100
December 18, 1999....... Employee          1,042 Ordinary                      US$ 3.0800
December 22, 1999....... Employee            250 Ordinary                      US$ 3.0700
December 22, 1999....... Employee             83 Ordinary                      US$ 2.1400
December 22, 1999....... Employee             84 Ordinary                      US$ 4.1500
January 5, 2000......... Employee            500 Ordinary                      US$ 1.7500
January 11, 2000........ Employee             84 Ordinary                      US$ 4.5700
January 11, 2000........ Employee            625 Ordinary                      US$11.3600
January 19, 2000........ Employee          1,875 Ordinary                      US$ 5.3000
January 24, 2000........ Employee          4,000 Ordinary                      US$ 2.4300
January 26, 2000........ Employee            469 Ordinary                      US$11.3600
January 26, 2000........ Employee             63 Ordinary                      US$11.5500
January 28, 2000........ Employee            250 Ordinary                      US$ 4.5700
January 30, 2000........ Employee             63 Ordinary                      US$11.3600
January 30, 2000........ Employee            250 Ordinary                      US$ 5.3000
January 30, 2000........ Employee             63 Ordinary                      US$11.5500
February 1, 2000........ Employee            268 Ordinary                      US$ 2.0200
February 1, 2000........ Employee          1,418 Ordinary                      US$ 5.3000
February 2, 2000........ Employee            600 Ordinary                      US$ 5.1400
February 2, 2000........ Employee            188 Ordinary                      US$ 4.5700
February 2, 2000........ Employee          3,398 Ordinary                      US$ 2.0200
February 2, 2000........ Employee            250 Ordinary                      US$11.3600
February 2, 2000........ Employee          1,167 Ordinary                      US$ 2.8100
February 2, 2000........ Employee          3,000 Ordinary                      US$ 3.2900
February 3, 2000........ Employee            250 Ordinary                      US$ 4.5700
February 4, 2000........ Employee             83 Ordinary                      US$ 5.3000
February 7, 2000........ Employee          1,875 Ordinary                      US$11.3600
February 7, 2000........ Employee            125 Ordinary                      US$11.5500
February 18, 2000....... Employee            333 Ordinary                      US$ 2.4300
February 23, 2000....... Employee             83 Ordinary                      US$ 2.4300
February 23, 2000....... Employee             83 Ordinary                      US$ 4.5700
February 28, 2000....... Employee             83 Ordinary                      US$ 2.8100
February 28, 2000....... Employee            104 Ordinary                      US$ 5.3000
February 28, 2000....... Employee            750 Ordinary                      US$ 5.1400
February 29, 2000....... Employee          3,125 Ordinary                      US$ 5.3000
March 22, 2000.......... Employee         13,618 Ordinary                      US$ 4.1200
March 23, 2000.......... Employee         10,625 Ordinary                      US$ 5.0600
March 24, 2000.......... Employee          6,688 Ordinary                      US$ 7.0000
March 27, 2000.......... Employee            500 Ordinary                      US$11.5600
March 28, 2000.......... Employee          1,155 Ordinary                      US$ 3.0800
March 29, 2000.......... Employee          4,900 Ordinary                      US$ 3.6600
March 30, 2000.......... Employee            700 Ordinary                      US$ 3.6600
March 31, 2000.......... Employee            250 Ordinary                      US$ 3.4200
</TABLE>

                                      A-8
<PAGE>


  19. At an assumed public offering price of US$43.25, the estimated amount of
the expenses of the offering, including estimated underwriting commissions and
discounts, is currently anticipated to be approximately US$16,013,092, of which
US$11,123,247 would be payable by us and approximately US$4,889,845 would be
payable by the selling shareholders. If the underwriters exercise in whole
their option to purchase additional ADSs from us and the selling shareholders,
the estimated amount of further expenses incurred, including estimated
underwriting commissions and discounts, is approximately US$2,200,432, of which
US$1,100,216 would be payable by us and approximately US$1,100,216 would be
payable by the selling shareholders. The net amount of the consideration
estimated to be received by us for the ADSs comprised in the offering is
US$161,877,000.

  20. We have previously paid no commissions in relation to procuring
subscriptions for shares and debentures other than commissions to underwriters.

  21. Share Capital and Share Capital Increases and Decreases

   Our current capital structure and authorized share capital are the result of
a series of corporate actions.

   On January 27, 1997, our articles of association authorized us to have a
share capital of IR(Pounds)250,000, divided into 5,000,000 ordinary shares of
IR(Pounds)0.01 each and 200,000 redeemable preference shares of IR(Pounds)1.00
each, of which 2,891,640 ordinary shares and 181,062 redeemable preference
shares were outstanding.

   On January 27, 1997, our shareholders resolved to subdivide each of the
5,000,000 ordinary shares of IR(Pounds)0.01 each into 5 ordinary shares of
IR(Pounds)0.002 each, which gave us a share capital of IR(Pounds)250,000
divided into 25 million ordinary shares of IR(Pounds)0.002 each and 200,000
redeemable preference shares of IR(Pounds)1.00 each.

   On November 21, 1997, our shareholders resolved to reduce our authorized
share capital from IR(Pounds)250,000 to IR(Pounds)50,000 by cancelling 200,000
authorized but unissued redeemable preference shares of IR(Pounds)1.00 each.
Immediately after that cancellation, our shareholders then resolved to increase
our authorized share capital to IR(Pounds)200,000 by creating 75,000,000
ordinary shares of IR(Pounds)0.002 each, with the new ordinary shares having
the same rights as our existing ordinary shares.

   On June 26, 1998, our shareholders resolved to increase our authorized share
capital from IR(Pounds)200,000 divided into 100,000,000 ordinary shares of
IR(Pounds)0.002 each to IR(Pounds)206,000 composed of 100,000,000 ordinary
shares of IR(Pounds)0.002 each and 3,000,000 redeemable convertible preference
shares of IR(Pounds)0.002 each by the creation of 3,000,000 redeemable
convertible preference shares of IR(Pounds)0.002 each.

   On August 23, 1999, our shareholders resolved to convert the currency of our
share capital from Irish pounds to US dollars by converting each of our
ordinary shares and redeemable convertible preference shares from shares of
IR(Pounds)0.002 each to shares of US$0.0027 each. To effect the conversion our
shareholders then resolved to cancel all 83,744,547 of the authorized but
unissued ordinary shares and all 40,000 of the authorized but unissued
redeemable convertible preference shares. Our shareholders then resolved to
increase our authorized share capital by the creation of 100,000,000 ordinary
shares of US$0.0027 each and 3,000,000 redeemable convertible preference shares
of US$0.0027.

   Our board of directors than allotted 16,255,426 ordinary shares of US$0.0027
each to our existing shareholders and further allotted 2,960,000 redeemable
convertible preference shares of US$0.0027 to our existing redeemable
convertible preference shareholders.

                                      A-9
<PAGE>

   Our board of directors then resolved to redeem all 16,255,426 issued
ordinary shares of IR(Pounds)0.002 each and all 2,960,000 issued redeemable
convertible preference shares of IR(Pounds)0.002 each for an amount per share
equal to the amount paid by each shareholder for each ordinary share and for
each redeemable convertible preference share, such amounts being satisfied out
of and set off against the amount owed by each shareholder for the ordinary
shares of US$0.0027 each and the redeemable convertible preference shares of
US$0.0027 each allotted to our shareholders. Our shareholders then resolved to
cancel each of the redeemed ordinary shares of IR(Pounds)0.002 each and each of
the convertible redeemable preference shares of IR(Pounds)0.002 each upon the
redemption.

  22. Before closing of the initial public offering, our authorized share
capital was US$278,100 divided into 100,000,000 ordinary shares of US$0.0027
each and 3,000,000 redeemable convertible preference shares of US$0.0027 each.
Upon the date of closing of the initial public offering, all of the issued
convertible redeemable preferences shares in our capital automatically
converted into ordinary shares at a conversion rate of one ordinary share per
one convertible redeemable preference share. Further, immediately following the
conversion a resolution of our shareholders cancelling the 3,000,000 authorized
redeemable convertible preference shares became effective, which reduced our
authorized share capital from US$278,100 to US$270,000. Then, a resolution of
our shareholders increasing our authorized share capital from US$270,000
divided into 100,000,000 ordinary shares of US$0.0027 each to US$297,000
divided into 100,000,000 ordinary shares of US$0.0027 each and 10,000,000
series B preference shares of US$0.0027 each by the creation of 10,000,000
series B preference shares became effective.

   As a result, our authorized share capital is US$297,000 divided into
100,000,000 ordinary shares of US$0.0027 per ordinary share and 10,000,000
series B preference shares of US$0.0027 per series B preference share.

  23. On August 23, 1999, our shareholders authorized by special resolution the
board of directors to allot all of the authorized but unissued shares in our
share capital, including 5,887,598 ordinary shares in our initial public
offering. On August 27, 1999, our directors resolved to allot the 5,887,598
ordinary shares to the custodian and establish a sponsored ADR program to issue
the ADRs under the terms of the deposit agreement with The Bank of New York.

  24. On March 10, 2000, the Board authorized the allotment of up to 2,000,000
ordinary shares in our follow-on offering to the custodian.


                                      A-10
<PAGE>

                                    ANNEX B:

                 ADDITIONAL INFORMATION REQUIRED BY GERMAN LAW

Responsibility for the content of the prospectus

   We and the underwriters named at the end of this sales prospectus undertake,
under Section 13 of the German Securities Sales Prospectus Act and Sections 45,
77 of the German Stock Exchange Act, responsibility for the contents of this
prospectus, including Annexes A and B, and state that, to the best of our and
their knowledge, the information contained in this prospectus is correct and
that no material information has been omitted.

Availability of documents for inspection

   Certain documents referred to in this prospectus which relate to us as well
as annual and interim reports prepared by us may be inspected during customary
business hours at the offices of Trintech GmbH, Siemenstrasse 20, D-63263 Neu
Isenburg, Germany, as well as at the offices of Deutsche Bank
Aktiengesellschaft, Taunusanlage 12, D-60262 Frankfurt am Main.

Subject of this prospectus

   The subject of this prospectus as sales prospectus is (a) 6,000,000 ADSs
representing registered 2,000,000 ordinary shares being offered by us, from the
issuance of authorized capital resolved on March 10, 2000, and 1,000,000
ordinary shares from our selling shareholders, and (b) up to 900,000 ADSs
representing 225,000 registered ordinary shares from us from the issuance of
authorized capital, if any, and 225,000 ordinary shares from our selling
shareholders with respect to an over-allotment option granted to the
underwriters.

Deliverability and Clearing

   The ADSs are deliverable in Germany in book-entry form in the collective
holdings deposited with the Depository Trust Company on behalf of Clearstream
Banking AG.

                                      B-1
<PAGE>

   Since our creation in 1987, we have consistently sought to develop and
deploy technology that offers financial transaction processors secure,
practical payment solutions. Our first product was an off-line credit card
authorization product that transmitted lost and stolen card numbers using
broadcast networks. This product illustrated our innovative use of existing
networks for secure payment applications.

   That ability to anticipate payment requirements continued when we built
payment applications for leading airline reservation systems such as Lufthansa.
We believe that the expertise gleaned from working with large-scale proprietary
computer networks, gave us a natural edge when open networks, such as the
Internet, emerged.

   Recognizing the rigorous technical requirements of marrying Internet
technology with the myriad of complex protocols, we devoted considerable
resources to gain "first-mover" advantage. This led to Netscape's decision to
choose us as the payment software solution for the world's first international
SSL secured transaction in Sweden in 1995. Following that early Internet first,
we developed a suite of end-to-end Internet solutions based on the SSL security
standard. As the more sophisticated security standard, known as SET, emerged,
we demonstrated our leadership position by conducting the world's first SET 1.0
transaction in Puerto Rico with Visa International in 1997. In the following
year, we were one of the first vendors in the world to achieve SET
certification for its suite of payment products.

   One of our specialties is multi-currency, which was instrumental in the
completion of the world's first euro transaction in Germany. At the stroke of
midnight on January 1, 1999, a senior Visa executive used our PayWare and
Compact 9000 technology to authorize and process a card transaction in the new
European single currency. Appropriately, the purchase was a bottle of
champagne!

   In 1999, we have continued to innovate with industry firsts. We expanded our
Internet commerce product suite with a number of unique products. These include
a merchant hosting solution for Internet service providers and commerce service
providers, and the deployment of a robust gateway solution that combines SSL
and SET security and routes all Visa USA's e-commerce payment transactions in
the United States.

   Strategic relationships and awards are evidence of our success--We have
strategic relationships with, Visa, MasterCard, VeriSign, RSA Security, Compaq,
SAP and Intershop. Our websites: trintech.com and epaynews.com have won
Netscape awards. Epaynews.com is a newswire Internet portal for the world of e-
payments. Finally in May 1999, The Red Herring chose us as one of the top 100
companies of the electronic economy-- 'the brightest stars of the digital
universe, the technology companies that are creating new markets and defining
the electronic economy.'
<PAGE>

You may rely on the information contained in this prospectus. We have not
authorized anyone to provide information different from that contained in this
prospectus. Neither the delivery of this prospectus nor sale of the securities
offered by this prospectus means that information contained in this prospectus
is correct after the date of this prospectus. This prospectus is not an offer
to sell or solicitation of an offer to buy the securities offered hereby in
any circumstances under which the offer or solicitation is unlawful.

                               TABLE OF CONTENTS
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                          Page
                                                                          ----
<S>                                                                       <C>
Summary..................................................................   3
Risk Factors.............................................................   6
Use of Proceeds..........................................................  15
Dividend Policy..........................................................  15
Presentation of Financial Information....................................  15
Exchange Rate Information................................................  16
Price Range of American Depositary Shares................................  17
Capitalization...........................................................  18
Selected Consolidated Financial Data.....................................  19
Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results
 of Operations...........................................................  21
Business.................................................................  36
Management...............................................................  56
Principal and Selling Shareholders.......................................  66
Related Party Transactions...............................................  69
Description of Share Capital.............................................  72
Description of American Depositary Shares................................  79
Shares Eligible for Future Sale..........................................  88
The German Equity Market.................................................  90
Taxation.................................................................  92
Exchange Control Regulations.............................................  99
Underwriting............................................................. 101
Legal Matters............................................................ 102
Experts.................................................................. 103
Where You Can Find More Information...................................... 103
Index to the Consolidated Financial Statements........................... F-1
Additional Information Required by the Irish Companies Act............... A-1
Additional Information Required by German Law ........................... B-1
</TABLE>

Subject to Completion, Dated April 13, 2000
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------

                                     [LOGO OF TRINTECH GROUP PLC APPEARS HERE]

 Trintech Group PLC


 6,000,000 American Depositary Shares
 Representing
 3,000,000 Ordinary Shares


 Deutsche Banc Alex. Brown

 Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette

 Robertson Stephens

 Chase H&Q

 Prospectus
       , 2000
<PAGE>

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
+The information in this preliminary prospectus is not complete and may be     +
+changed. We may not sell these securities until the registration statement    +
+filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission is effective. This          +
+preliminary prospectus is not an offer to sell securities, and we are not     +
+soliciting offers to buy these securities, in any state, the Republic of      +
+Ireland or in any other jurisdiction where the offer or sale is not           +
+permitted.                                                                    +
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Subject to Completion, Dated April 13, 2000

[LOGO OF TRINTECH GROUP
PLC APPEARS HERE]

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Trintech Group PLC
 6,000,000 American Depositary Shares
 Representing 3,000,000 Ordinary Shares
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 We are offering 4,000,000 American depositary shares and selling shareholders
 are offering 2,000,000 American depositary shares in this offering. Each
 American depositary share, or ADS, offered by this prospectus represents one-
 half of one of our ordinary shares. The ADSs are represented by American
 depositary receipts, or ADRs. The ADSs being offered are initially being
 offered in the United States and are concurrently being offered, under a
 separate prospectus, in Germany and to institutional investors outside of the
 United States and Germany. We will not receive any of the proceeds from the
 sale of ADSs by the selling stockholders.

 The ADSs are quoted on the Nasdaq National Market under the symbol TTPA and
 on the Neuer Markt segment of the Frankfurt Stock Exchange under the symbol
 TTP. The last reported sale price of the ADSs on the Nasdaq National Market
 on April 7, 2000 was $43.25 and the last reported sale price of the ADSs on
 the Neuer Markt on April 7, 2000 was (Euro)42.80 per ADS.

 Investing in the ADSs involves risks. See "Risk Factors" beginning on page 6.

 The Securities and Exchange Commission and state securities regulators have
 not approved or disapproved these securities or determined if this prospectus
 is truthful or complete. Any representation to the contrary is a criminal
 offense.

 A copy of this prospectus, together with the documents specified in
 paragraphs 11 and 14 of Annex A in this prospectus, has been delivered to the
 Registrar of Companies in the Republic of Ireland.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                    Per American
                                                     Depositary
                                                        Share         Total
                                                    ------------- -------------
  <S>                                               <C>           <C>
                                                    $   (Euro)    $   (Euro)
  Public offering price............................
  Underwriting discounts and commissions...........
  Proceeds, before expenses, to Trintech...........
  Proceeds to selling shareholders.................
</TABLE>

 We and the selling shareholders identified on pages 66 and 67 of this
 prospectus have granted the underwriters the right to purchase up to 900,000
 ADSs to cover any over-allotments.
                                  -----------

 The underwriters expect to deliver the ADRs evidencing the ADSs in book entry
 form through the facilities of The Depositary Trust Company and Clearstream
 Banking AG on or about         2000.

 Deutsche Bank
            Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette
                       Robertson Stephens International
                                     Chase H&Q

 The date of this Prospectus is      ,    2000
<PAGE>

                                  UNDERWRITING

   Subject to the terms and conditions of the underwriting agreement, the
underwriters named below, through their representatives Deutsche Bank AG,
Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette International Corporation, FleetBoston Robertson
Stephens International Limited, and Chase Manhattan International Limited, have
agreed to purchase from us the following numbers of ADSs.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                          Underwriters                            Number of ADSs
                          ------------                            --------------
<S>                                                               <C>
Deutsche Bank AG.................................................
Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette International Corporation...........
FleetBoston Robertson Stephens International Limited.............
Chase Manhattan International Limited............................
                                                                    ---------
  Total..........................................................   6,000,000
                                                                    =========
</TABLE>

   The underwriting agreement provides that the obligations of the underwriters
depend on the satisfaction of the conditions contained in the underwriting
agreement, and that the underwriters will purchase all of the ADSs offered by
us under this prospectus if any of these shares are purchased.

   We have been advised by the representatives that the underwriters propose to
offer the ADSs to the public at the public offering price and to dealers at a
price less a concession not in excess of $    , or approximately (Euro)     ,
per ADS to other dealers. After the public offering, the offering price and
other selling terms may be changed by the representatives.

   The share offering will take place from April 17, 2000 to on or about May 4,
2000. The offer price per ADS will be determined on the basis of the NASDAQ
closing price on or about May 4, 2000 and will be published in the "Frankfurter
Allgemeine Zeitung" and the "Handelsblatt" on or about May 5, 2000 and
announced via electronic media. The number of shares allotted to any investor
who has placed an order with a Manager is expected to be available upon request
beginning on or about May 5, 2000 from such Manager. Payment of the Offer Price
is expected to be due on or about May 9, 2000.

   We and one of our shareholders have granted the underwriters an option,
exercisable not later than 30 days after the date of this prospectus, to
purchase up to 900,000 additional ADSs at the public offering price less the
underwriting discount. To the extent that the underwriters exercise their
option, each of the underwriters will have a commitment to purchase
approximately the same percentage of ADSs available under the option that the
number of ADSs to be purchased by it in the above table bears to 6,000,000, and
we and the selling shareholders will be obligated under the option to sell the
same number of ADSs to the underwriters. The underwriters may exercise this
option only to cover over-allotments made in connection with the sale of the
ADSs offered by us under this prospectus. If purchased, the underwriters will
offer the additional ADSs on the same terms as those on which the 6,000,000
ADSs are being offered.

   We and the selling shareholders have agreed to indemnify the underwriters
against liabilities, including liabilities under the Securities Act, arising
from breaches of representations.

   All of our officers and directors and the selling shareholders in this
offering have entered into agreements with the underwriters. Under these
agreements, our officers and directors and most of our shareholders holding 5%
or more of the outstanding ordinary shares have agreed

                                      101
<PAGE>


not to offer, sell, contract to sell or dispose of, or enter into any
transaction having an economic effect similar to that of a sale of, any ADSs or
ordinary shares for a period of 90 days after the date of this prospectus
without the prior written consent of Deutsche Bank AG. In addition, certain of
our shareholders have agreed not to offer, sell, contact to sell or dispose of,
or enter into any transaction having an economic effect similar to that of a
sale, of 50% of the ordinary shares held by such shareholders for a period of
90 days after the date of the prospectus, without the prior written consent of
Deutsche Bank AG. In either case, this consent may be given at any time without
public notice. We have entered into a similar agreement, except that we may
issue, and grant options or warrants to purchase, ADSs or ordinary shares or
any securities convertible into, exercisable for or exchangeable for ADSs or
ordinary shares, upon the exercise of outstanding options and warrants and
under the existing stock option and stock purchase plans.

   The representatives have advised us that, under Regulation M of the U.S.
federal securities laws, participants in the offering may engage in
transactions which might stabilize or maintain the market price of the ADSs at
a level above that which might otherwise prevail in the open market. These
transactions include the following:

  .  Stabilizing bids. A stabilizing bid is a bid for or the purchase of the
     ADSs on behalf of the underwriters for the purpose of fixing or
     maintaining the price of the ADSs.

  .  Syndicate covering transaction. A syndicate covering transaction is the
     bid for or the purchase of the ADSs on behalf of the underwriters to
     reduce a short, or over-sold, position incurred by the underwriters in
     connection with the offering.

  .  Penalty bid. A penalty bid is an arrangement permitting the
     representatives to reclaim the selling concession otherwise owed an
     underwriter or syndicate member in connection with the offering if the
     ADSs originally sold by that underwriter or syndicate member is
     purchased by the representatives in a syndicate covering transaction and
     has therefore not been effectively placed by that underwriter or
     syndicate member.

   The representatives have advised us that these transactions may be effected
in different ways, including on the Neuer Markt or the Nasdaq National Market.
These transactions, if commenced, may be discontinued at any time.

   The representatives have also advised us that the underwriters and dealers
may engage in passive market making transactions in the ADSs in accordance with
Regulation M of the U.S. federal securities laws. In general, a passive market
maker may not bid for or purchase the ADSs at a price that exceeds the higher
independent bid. In addition, the net daily purchases made by any passive
market maker generally may not exceed 30% of its average daily trading volume
in the ADSs during a specified two-month prior period or 200 ADSs, whichever is
greater. A passive market maker must identify passive market making bids as
such on the Nasdaq electronic inter-dealer reporting system. Passive market
making may have the effect of stabilizing or maintaining the market price of
the ADSs at a level above that which might otherwise prevail in the open
market. Underwriters and dealers are not required to engage in passive market
making and may discontinue these activities at any time.

   Each underwriter, to the extent that it effects trades on the Neuer Markt,
has represented that it has complied and will comply with the reporting
obligations of Section 9 of the German Securities Trading Act.

   Each underwriter has also agreed that:

  .  it has not offered or sold and, prior to the date six months after the
     date of issue of the ADSs, will not offer or sell any ADSs to persons in
     the United Kingdom except to

                                      102
<PAGE>

     persons whose ordinary activities involve them in acquiring, holding,
     managing or disposing of investments, as principal or agent, for their
     businesses in circumstances which have not resulted and will not result
     in an offer to the public in the United Kingdom within the meaning of
     the Public Offers of Securities Regulations 1995, and

  .  it has complied, and will comply, with all provisions of the Financial
     Services Act of 1986 of Great Britain applicable to anything done by it
     in relation to ADSs in, from or otherwise involving the United Kingdom.

   This prospectus has not been approved as an investment advertisement that
complies with Section 57 of the Financial Services Act 1986 and may not be
issued or passed on in the United Kingdom except to a person who is of the kind
described in Article 11(3) of the Financial Services Act (Investment
Advertisements) (Exemptions) Order 1996 (as amended), or is a person to whom
the prospectus may otherwise lawfully be issued or passed on.

                                 LEGAL MATTERS

   The validity of the ordinary shares represented by the ADSs offered by us
under this prospectus will be passed upon by A&L Goodbody, Solicitors, Dublin,
Ireland, our Irish counsel. Some legal matters under United States law
regarding this offering will be passed upon by Wilson Sonsini Goodrich &
Rosati, Professional Corporation, Palo Alto, California, our U.S. counsel. Some
legal matters under the law of the Republic of Germany regarding this offering
will be passed upon by Oppenhoff & Radler, member of Linklaters & Alliance,
Frankfurt, Germany, our German counsel. Legal matters regarding this offering
will be passed upon for the underwriters by Brobeck Hale and Dorr, London,
England. Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati may rely upon A&L Goodbody,
Solicitors regarding matters governed by Irish law, and upon Oppenhoff &
Radler, member of Linklaters & Alliance, regarding matters governed by German
law. As of April 7, 2000, investment partnerships composed of some current and
former members of and persons associated with Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati,
as well as some individual attorneys of Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati,
beneficially owned an aggregate of 16,668 equivalent ADSs.

                                    EXPERTS

   The consolidated financial statements of Trintech Group PLC as of January
31, 1998, 1999 and 2000 and for each of the three years in the period ended
January 31, 2000 appearing in this prospectus have been audited by Ernst &
Young, independent auditors, as stated in their report appearing in this
prospectus. The auditors are located at Harcourt Centre, Harcourt Street,
Dublin, Ireland.

                      WHERE YOU CAN FIND MORE INFORMATION

   We have filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission a
registration statement on Form F-1 under the Securities Act for the ordinary
shares represented by the ADSs offered by this prospectus. This prospectus does
not contain all of the information included in the registration statement and
the exhibits and schedules to the registration statement. For further
information about us and the ordinary shares represented by the ADSs offered by
this prospectus, reference is made to the registration statement and the
exhibits and schedules filed as a part of the registration statement.
Statements made in this prospectus concerning the contents of any contract or
any other document summarize only the material information

                                      103
<PAGE>

about the contract or other document. These statements are qualified in their
entirety by reference to the copy of each these contracts or other document
filed as an exhibit to the registration statement. The registration statement,
including exhibits and schedules attached to the registration statement, may be
inspected without charge at the Commission's principal office in Washington,
D.C., and copies of all or any part of the registration statement may be
obtained from the Public Reference Room of the Commission, 450 Fifth Street,
N.W., Washington, D.C. 20549, and at the Commission's regional offices located
at Citicorp Center, 500 West Madison Street, Suite 1400, Chicago, Illinois
60661 and at 7 World Trade Center, 13th Floor, New York, New York 10048 after
payment of fees prescribed by the Commission.

   We will furnish the depositary referred to under "Description of American
Depositary Shares" with annual reports in English, which will include a review
of operations and annual audited consolidated financial statements prepared in
conformity with U.S. GAAP. Upon receipt of the reports, the depositary will
promptly mail these reports to all registered holders of ADSs. We will also
furnish to the depositary in English all notices of shareholders' meetings and
other reports and communications that are made generally available to its
shareholders. The depositary will make notices, reports and communications
available to holders of ADSs in the manner we request and will mail to all
record holders of ADSs a notice containing a summary of the information
contained in any notice of a shareholders' meeting received by the depositary.

   We are subject to the reporting requirements of the U.S. Securities Exchange
Act of 1934 applicable to foreign private issuers. In connection with the
Exchange Act, we will file reports, including annual reports on Form 20-F, and
other information with the Commission. In addition, we will submit to the
Commission quarterly reports, which will include unaudited quarterly condensed
consolidated financial information, on Form 6-K for the first three quarters of
each fiscal year and file our annual report on Form 20-F within the time period
prescribed under Section 13 of the Exchange Act for filing domestic issuers of
quarterly reports on Form 10-Q and annual reports on Form 10-K. These reports
and other information may be obtained, upon written request, from The Bank of
New York, as depositary at its corporate trust office located at 101 Barclay
Street, New York, New York 10286. These reports and other information may also
be inspected and copied at prescribed rates at the public reference facilities
maintained by at Public Reference Room of the Commission, 450 Fifth Street,
N.W., Washington, D.C. 20549, and at the Commission's regional offices located
at Citicorp Center, 500 West Madison Street, Suite 1400, Chicago, Illinois
60661 and at 7 World Trade Center, 13th Floor, New York, New York 10048 after
payment of fees prescribed by the Commission. Although the rules of the Nasdaq
National Market require us to solicit proxies from our shareholders, we are not
subject to the proxy solicitation requirements of Section 14 of the Exchange
Act, and our officers, directors and 10% beneficial owners are not subject to
the beneficial ownership reporting requirements or the short-swing profits
recovery rules of Section 16 of the Exchange Act.

                                      104
<PAGE>

You may rely on the information contained in this prospectus. We have not
authorized anyone to provide information different from that contained in this
prospectus. Neither the delivery of this prospectus nor sale of the securities
offered by this prospectus means that information contained in this prospectus
is correct after the date of this prospectus. This prospectus is not an offer
to sell or solicitation of an offer to buy the securities offered hereby in
any circumstances under which the offer or solicitation is unlawful.

                               TABLE OF CONTENTS
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                          Page
                                                                          ----
<S>                                                                       <C>
Summary..................................................................   3
Risk Factors.............................................................   6
Use of Proceeds..........................................................  15
Dividend Policy..........................................................  15
Presentation of Financial Information....................................  15
Exchange Rate Information................................................  16
Price Range of American Depositary Shares................................  17
Capitalization...........................................................  18
Selected Consolidated Financial Data.....................................  19
Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results
 of Operations...........................................................  21
Business.................................................................  36
Management...............................................................  56
Principal and Selling Shareholders.......................................  66
Related Party Transactions...............................................  69
Description of Share Capital.............................................  72
Description of American Depositary Shares................................  79
Shares Eligible for Future Sale..........................................  88
The German Equity Market.................................................  90
Taxation.................................................................  92
Exchange Control Regulations.............................................  99
Underwriting............................................................. 101
Legal Matters............................................................ 102
Experts.................................................................. 103
Where You Can Find More Information...................................... 103
Index to the Consolidated Financial Statements........................... F-1
Additional Information Required by the Irish Companies Act............... A-1
Additional Information Required by German Law ........................... B-1
</TABLE>
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------

 Subject to Completion, Dated April 13, 2000

                                     [LOGO OF TRINTECH GROUP PLC APPEARS HERE]

 Trintech Group PLC


 6,000,000 American Depositary Shares
 Representing
 3,000,000 Ordinary Shares


 Deutsche Bank

 Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette

 Robertson Stephens International

 Chase H&Q

 Prospectus
       , 2000
<PAGE>

                                    PART II

                     INFORMATION NOT REQUIRED IN PROSPECTUS

Item 13. Other Expenses of Issuance and Distribution.

   The following table sets forth all expenses, other than the underwriting
discounts and commissions, payable by the registrant in connection with the
sale of the securities being registered. All amounts shown are estimates except
for the SEC registration fee and the NASD filing fee.

<TABLE>
   <S>                                                               <C>
   SEC registration fee............................................. $  117,157
   NASD filing fee..................................................     39,000
   Nasdaq National Market Fees......................................          0
   Blue Sky fees and expenses.......................................     10,000
   Irish capital duty...............................................  1,648,690
   VAT non-recoverable..............................................     47,111
   Depositary fees..................................................     20,000
   Printing and engraving expenses..................................    300,000
   Accountant's fees and expenses...................................    150,000
   Legal fees and expenses..........................................    415,290
   Roadshow expenses................................................     80,000
   Miscellaneous....................................................    164,999
                                                                     ----------
     Total.......................................................... $2,992,247
                                                                     ==========
</TABLE>

   Item 14. Indemnification of Directors and Officers.

   Reference is made to our memorandum and articles of association, filed as
Exhibit 3.1, which, subject to certain conditions, authorize us to indemnify
our directors and officers against certain liabilities and expenses incurred by
them in connection with claims made by reason of their being one of our
directors or officers. Further reference is made to the form of indemnification
agreement filed as Exhibit 10.5 under which our subsidiary, Trintech, Inc., has
agreed to indemnify its directors and officers and directors and officers
serving at the request of Trintech, Inc. as our directors and officers against
certain liabilities and expenses incurred by them in connection with claims
made by reason of their being such a director or officer.

   See Section 8 of the form of the global underwriting agreement filed as
Exhibit 1.1 to this registration statement for certain provisions relating to
indemnification of us and our officers and directors.

   We have obtained directors and officers insurance providing indemnification
for certain of our directors, officers, affiliates, partners or employees for
certain liabilities.

Item 15. Recent Sales of Unregistered Securities.

   A description of our sales of securities during the past three years is
shown on pages A-6 through A-8 of the Statutory Information required under the
Companies Acts, 1963 to 1990, of the Republic of Ireland contained in the
prospectus. All sales were to our employees, directors and officers and to
institutions and sophisticated individual investors. Our sales of 482,765
ordinary shares in March 1998, an aggregate of 2,960,000 redeemable convertible
preference shares in June and August 1998 and a warrant to purchase 250,000
ordinary shares in August 1998 were each made in reliance on Section 4(2) of
the Securities Act. Sales to our employees, directors and officers were deemed
to be exempt from registration under the Securities Act in reliance on either
Rule 701 promulgated under Section 3(b) of the Securities Act as transactions
under

                                      II-1
<PAGE>

compensatory benefit plans and contracts relating to compensation as provided
under Rule 701 or Regulation S as offers and sales that occurred outside the
United States.

   There were no underwriters employed in connection with any transactions
described in this Item 15.

Item 16. Exhibits and Financial Statement Schedules

   (a) Exhibits.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
 Exhibit
 Number                          Description of Document
 ------- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
 <C>     <S>
   1.1.  Form of Global Underwriting Agreement

   3.1.  Amended Memorandum and Articles of Association of Trintech Group PLC,
         dated August 23, 1999**

   3.2.  Certificate of Incorporation of Trintech Group Public Limited
         Company**

   4.1.  Specimen of Ordinary Share Certificate**

   4.2.  Depositary Agreement among Trintech Group PLC, The Bank of New York, as
         Depositary, and holders from time to time of American Depositary Shares
         issued thereunder (including as an exhibit the form of American
         Depositary Receipt) dated as of September 27, 1999, as amended

   5.1.  Opinion of A&L Goodbody, Solicitors, regarding the validity of the
         Shares

  10.1.  1990 Trintech Group Limited Share Option Scheme**

  10.2.  1997 Trintech Group Limited Share Option Scheme**

  10.3.  1998 Trintech Group Limited Directors and Consultants Share Option
         Scheme**

  10.4.  1999 Employee Share Purchase Plan**

  10.5.  Form of Indemnification Agreement between Trintech, Inc. and its
         directors and officers**

  10.6.  Employment Agreement between Trintech Group Limited and John McGuire
         dated August 1, 1999**

  10.7.  Employment Agreement between Trintech Group Limited and Cyril McGuire
         dated August 1, 1999**

  10.8.  Employment Agreement between Trintech Group Limited and Christopher
         Meehan dated August 1, 1999**

  10.9.  Employment Agreement between Trintech Group Limited and R. Paul Byrne
         dated August 1, 1999**

 10.10.  1999 U.S. Employee Share Purchase Plan**

 10.11.  Investors Rights Agreement by and among Trintech Group Limited,
         Security Dynamics Technologies, Inc., John F. McGuire, Cyril P.
         McGuire, Instove Limited, Jayness Limited and Vanspur Limited dated
         March 31, 1998**

 10.12.  Series A Convertible Preference Share Investors Rights Agreement by
         and among Trintech Group Limited, the Investors (as defined therein), John F. McGuire,
         Cyril P. McGuire, Instove Limited, Jayness Limited and Vanspur Limited
         dated June 30, 1998**

 10.13.  Amendment No. 1 to the Investors Rights Agreement by and among
         Trintech Group Limited, the Investors (as defined therein), John F. McGuire, Cyril P. McGuire,
         Instove Limited, Jayness Limited and Vanspur Limited**

 10.14.  Credit Agreement between Trintech Group of Companies and The Bank of
         Ireland dated November 12, 1997**
</TABLE>

                                      II-2
<PAGE>

<TABLE>

<CAPTION>
 Exhibit
 Number                          Description of Document
 ------- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
 <C>     <S>
 10.15.  Debenture between Trintech Group Limited and The Bank of Ireland dated
         April 23, 1998**

 10.16.  Software Source Code License Agreement between RSA Data Security, Inc.
         and Trintech Manufacturing Ltd. dated March 31, 1998**

 10.17.  Marketing Agreement between RSA Data Security, Inc. and Trintech
         Manufacturing Ltd. dated March 31, 1998+

 10.18.  Agreement between Visa International and Trintech Group Limited dated
         August 27, 1998+**

 10.19.  Marketing Agreement between SAP Aktiengesellschaft and Trintech Group
         Limited dated November 19, 1998**

 10.20.  Supply Agreement between Keltek Electronics Limited and Trintech Group
         Limited dated August 17, 1998**

 10.21.  Lease Agreement between John McGuire, Cyril McGuire and Trintech Group
         Limited dated September, 1999**

 10.22.  Lease Agreement between 5 Independence Associates Limited Partnership
         and Trintech, Inc. Dated April 30, 1998**

 10.23.  Amendment No. 1 to Lease Agreement between 5 Independence Associates
         Limited Partnership and Trintech, Inc. dated August 4, 1998**

 10.24.  Guaranty Agreement between 5 Independence Associates Limited
         Partnership and Trintech Holdings Limited dated April 1998**

 10.25.  Office Lease Agreement between Sherlon Investments Corp. and Trintech,
         Inc. dated December 12, 1997**

 10.26.  Lease Agreement between Grund und Vermogensverwaltung Gmbh & Co KG and
         Trintech GmbH dated June 13, 1996**

 10.27.  Lease Agreement between Service Life & Casualty Ins. Co. and Trintech,
         Inc. dated January 5, 1999**

 10.28.  Lease Agreement between Lincoln Bascom Office Center and Trintech,
         Inc. dated March 19, 1996**

 10.29.  First Amendment to Office Building Lease between Lincoln Bascom Office
         Center and Trintech, Inc. dated April 1, 1997**

 10.30.  First Amendment to Office Lease Agreement between Sherlon Investments
         Corp and Trintech, Inc. dated February 10, 1999**

 10.31.  Second Amendment to Office Building Lease between Lincoln Bascom
         Office Center and Trintech, Inc. dated May 4, 1998**

 10.32.  Third Amendment to Office Building Lease between Lincoln Bascom Office
         Center and Trintech, Inc. dated May 21, 1998**

 10.33.  Grant to Trintech Manufacturing Limited from Enterprise Ireland dated
         December 3, 1996**

 10.34.  Grant to Trintech Manufacturing Limited from Enterprise Ireland dated
         December 3, 1996**

 10.35.  Grant to Trintech Manufacturing Limited from Enterprise Ireland dated
         October 13, 1997**

</TABLE>


                                      II-3
<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
 Exhibit
 Number                         Description of Document
 ------- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
 <C>     <S>
 10.36.  Grant to Trintech Manufacturing Limited from Enterprise Ireland dated
         October 13, 1997**

 10.37.  Development and Marketing Agreement between Trintech Group and Visa
         International Service Association dated April 29, 1999+**

 10.38.  License Agreement between Trintech, Inc. and Visa USA, Inc. dated May
         12, 1999+**

 10.39.  Master Joint Marketing Agreement between Trintech, Inc. and Compaq
         Computer Corporation dated March 17, 1999**

 10.40.  Employment Agreement between Trintech Group PLC and John Harte dated
         July 15, 1999***

 10.41.  Employment Agreement between Trintech Group PLC and Kevin C. Shea
         dated September, 1999***

 10.42.  Office Lease Agreement between Trintech, Inc. and The Joshua Group
         dated August 16, 1999***

 10.43.  Lease Agreement between Trintech, Inc. and Peninsula Office Park
         Associates, L.P. dated May 28, 1999***

 10.44.  First Amendment to the Lease between Trintech, Inc. and Peninsula
         Office Park Associates, L.P. dated November 1, 1999***

 11.1.   Computation of earnings per share***

 21.1.   Subsidiaries of the Registrant (see page 54 of the prospectus)

 23.1.   Consent of Ernst & Young

 23.2.   Consent of A&L Goodbody, Solicitors (included in Exhibit 5.1)

 24.1.   Powers of Attorney***
</TABLE>
- --------

   * Documents to be filed by amendment.

  ** Incorporated by reference to Registrant's registration statement on Form
     F-1 (Registration number 333-10738).

 *** Documents previously filed.

   + Documents for which confidential treatment has been granted

                                      II-4
<PAGE>

   (b) Financial Statement Schedules.

                       VALUATION AND QUALIFYING ACCOUNTS

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                    Additions
                         Balance at charged to                        Balance at
                         beginning  costs and   Exchange                end of
      Description        of period   expenses  differences Deductions   period
      -----------        ---------- ---------- ----------- ---------- ----------
                                       (U.S. dollars in thousands)
<S>                      <C>        <C>        <C>         <C>        <C>
Year ended January 31,
 2000
Deducted from asset
 account:
  Provision for bad and
   doubtful debts.......    241        127         (19)        (19)      330

Year ended January 31,
 1999
Deducted from asset
 account:
  Provision for bad and
   doubtful debts.......     98        138           5          --       241

Year ended January 31,
 1998
Deducted from asset
 account:
  Provision for bad and
   doubtful debts.......    114         --         (16)         --        98

Year ended January 31,
 2000
Warranty Reserve........    876         76        (107)       (289)      556

Year ended January 31,
 1999
Warranty Reserve........    922        162          53        (261)      876

Year ended January 31,
 1998
Warranty Reserve........    780        275        (133)         --       922
</TABLE>

   Schedules not listed above have been omitted because the information
required to be described in the schedules is not applicable or is shown in the
financial statements.

      REPORT OF INDEPENDENT AUDITORS ON FINANCIAL STATEMENT SCHEDULE

   We have audited the consolidated financial statements of Trintech Group PLC
as of January 31, 1998, 1999 and 2000 and for each of the three years in the
period ended January 31, 2000 and have issued our report thereon included
elsewhere in this Registration Statement. Our audits also included the
financial statement schedule listed in item 16(b) of this Registration
Statement. This schedule is the responsibility of the company's management. Our
responsibility is to express an opinion based on our audits.

   In our opinion, the financial statements schedule referred to above, when
considered in relation to the basic financial statements taken as a whole,
presents fairly in all material respects the information set forth therein.

/s/ Ernst & Young

Ernst & Young

Dublin, Ireland

March 16, 2000

                                      II-5
<PAGE>

Item 17. Undertakings.

   Insofar as indemnification for liabilities arising under the Securities Act
of 1933 may be permitted to directors, officers and controlling persons of the
registrant under these provisions, or under other obligations, the registrant
has been advised that in the opinion of the Securities and Exchange Commission
such indemnification is against public policy as expressed in the Securities
Act and is, therefore, unenforceable. If a claim for indemnification against
such liabilities, other than the payment by the registrant of expenses incurred
or paid by a director, officer or controlling person of the registrant in the
successful defense of any action, suit or proceeding, is asserted by such
director, officer or controlling person in connection with the securities being
registered, the registrant will, unless in the opinion of our counsel the
matter has been settled by controlling precedent, submit to a court of
appropriate jurisdiction the question whether such indemnification by it is
against public policy as expressed in the Securities Act and will be governed
by the final adjudication of such issue.

   The undersigned registrant undertakes that:

   (1) For purposes of determining any liability under the Securities Act of
1933, the information omitted from the form of prospectus filed as part of this
registration statement in reliance upon Rule 430A and contained in a form of
prospectus filed by the registrant under Rule 424(b)(1) or (4) or 497(h) under
the Securities Act shall be deemed to be part of this registration statement as
of the time it was declared effective.

   (2) For the purpose of determining any liability under the Securities Act of
1933, each post-effective amendment that contains a form of prospectus shall be
deemed to be a new registration statement relating to the securities offered in
the prospectus, and the offering of such securities at that time shall be
deemed to be the initial bona fide offering of such securities.

                                      II-6
<PAGE>

                                  SIGNATURES

   As required by the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, the
registrant certifies that it has reasonable grounds to believe that it meets
all of the requirements for filing on Form F-1 and has duly caused this
amendment to the registration statement to be signed on its behalf by the
undersigned, thereunto duly authorized, in Dublin, Ireland, on April 10, 2000.

                                          TRINTECH GROUP PLC

                                               /s/ John F. McGuire
                                          By: _________________________________

                                             John F. McGuire Chief Executive
                                                Officer and Director

   As required by the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, this
registration statement has been signed by the following persons in the
capacities and on the dates indicated.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
             Signature                              Title                        Date
             ---------                              -----                        ----

 <C>                                <S>                                   <C>
       /s/ John F. McGuire          Chief Executive Officer and Director    April 10, 2000
 _________________________________   (Principal Executive Officer and
          John F. McGuire            Director)

        /s/ R. Paul Byrne           Chief Financial Officer (Principal      April 10, 2000
 _________________________________   Financial Officer and Principal
           R. Paul Byrne             Accounting Officer)

                 *                  Chairman of the Board                   April 10, 2000
 _________________________________
          Cyril P. McGuire

                 *                  Director                                April 10, 2000
 _________________________________
          Chris P. Meehan

                 *                  Director                                April 10, 2000
 _________________________________
         Trevor D. Sullivan

                 *                  Director                                April 10, 2000
 _________________________________
        Wolfgang H. Heinrich

                 *                  Director                                April 10, 2000
 _________________________________
          D. James Bidzos

                 *                  Director                                April 10, 2000
 _________________________________
        Robert M. Wadsworth

        /s/ Kevin C. Shea           Director and U.S. Representative        April 10, 2000
 _________________________________
           Kevin C. Shea

        /s/ R. Paul Byrne
 *By: ____________________________
           R. Paul Byrne
          Attorney-in-Fact
</TABLE>

                                     II-7
<PAGE>

                                 EXHIBIT INDEX

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
 Exhibit
 Number                          Description of Document
 ------- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
 <C>     <S>
   1.1.  Form of Global Underwriting Agreement

   3.1.  Amended Memorandum and Articles of Association of Trintech Group PLC,
         dated August 23, 1999**

   3.2.  Certificate of Incorporation of Trintech Group Public Limited
         Company**

   4.1.  Specimen of Ordinary Share Certificate**

   4.2.  Depositary Agreement among Trintech Group PLC, The Bank of New York,
         as Depositary, and holders from time to time of American Depositary
         Shares issued thereunder (including as an exhibit the form of American
         Depositary Receipt) dated as of September 27, 1999, as amended

   5.1.  Opinion of A&L Goodbody, Solicitors, regarding the validity of the
         Shares

  10.1.  1990 Trintech Group Limited Share Option Scheme**

  10.2.  1997 Trintech Group Limited Share Option Scheme**

  10.3.  1998 Trintech Group Limited Directors and Consultants Share Option
         Scheme**

  10.4.  1999 Employee Share Purchase Plan**

  10.5.  Form of Indemnification Agreement between Trintech, Inc. and its
         directors and officers**

  10.6.  Employment Agreement between Trintech Group Limited and John McGuire
         dated August 1, 1999**

  10.7.  Employment Agreement between Trintech Group Limited and Cyril McGuire
         dated August 1, 1999**

  10.8.  Employment Agreement between Trintech Group Limited and Christopher
         Meehan dated August 1, 1999**

  10.9.  Employment Agreement between Trintech Group Limited and R. Paul Byrne
         dated August 1, 1999**

 10.10.  1999 U.S. Employee Share Purchase Plan**

 10.11.  Investors Rights Agreement by and among Trintech Group Limited,
         Security Dynamics Technologies, Inc., John F. McGuire, Cyril P.
         McGuire, Instove Limited, Jayness Limited and Vanspur Limited dated
         March 31, 1998**

 10.12.  Series A Convertible Preference Share Investors Rights Agreement by
         and among Trintech Group Limited, the Investors (as defined therein), John F. McGuire,
         Cyril P. McGuire, Instove Limited, Jayness Limited and Vanspur Limited
         dated June 30, 1998**

 10.13.  Amendment No. 1 to the Investors Rights Agreement by and among
         Trintech Group Limited, the Investors (as defined therein), John F. McGuire, Cyril P. McGuire,
         Instove Limited, Jayness Limited and Vanspur Limited**

 10.14.  Credit Agreement between Trintech Group of Companies and The Bank of
         Ireland dated November 12, 1997**

 10.15.  Debenture between Trintech Group Limited and The Bank of Ireland dated
         April 23, 1998**

 10.16.  Software Source Code License Agreement between RSA Data Security, Inc.
         and Trintech Manufacturing Ltd. dated March 31, 1998**

</TABLE>

<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
 Exhibit
 Number                          Description of Document
 ------- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
 <C>     <S>
 10.17.  Marketing Agreement between RSA Data Security, Inc. and Trintech
         Manufacturing Ltd. dated March 31, 1998+

 10.18.  Agreement between Visa International and Trintech Group Limited dated
         August 27, 1998+**

 10.19.  Marketing Agreement between SAP Aktiengesellschaft and Trintech Group
         Limited dated November 19, 1998**

 10.20.  Supply Agreement between Keltek Electronics Limited and Trintech Group
         Limited dated August 17, 1998**

 10.21.  Lease Agreement between John McGuire, Cyril McGuire and Trintech Group
         Limited dated September, 1999**

 10.22.  Lease Agreement between 5 Independence Associates Limited Partnership
         and Trintech, Inc. Dated April 30, 1998**

 10.23.  Amendment No. 1 to Lease Agreement between 5 Independence Associates
         Limited Partnership and Trintech, Inc. dated August 4, 1998**

 10.24.  Guaranty Agreement between 5 Independence Associates Limited
         Partnership and Trintech Holdings Limited dated April 1998**

 10.25.  Office Lease Agreement between Sherlon Investments Corp. and Trintech,
         Inc. dated December 12, 1997**

 10.26.  Lease Agreement between Grund und Vermogensverwaltung Gmbh & Co KG and
         Trintech GmbH dated June 13, 1996**

 10.27.  Lease Agreement between Service Life & Casualty Ins. Co. and Trintech,
         Inc. dated January 5, 1999**

 10.28.  Lease Agreement between Lincoln Bascom Office Center and Trintech,
         Inc. dated March 19, 1996**

 10.29.  First Amendment to Office Building Lease between Lincoln Bascom Office
         Center and Trintech, Inc. dated April 1, 1997**

 10.30.  First Amendment to Office Lease Agreement between Sherlon Investments
         Corp and Trintech, Inc. dated February 10, 1999**

 10.31.  Second Amendment to Office Building Lease between Lincoln Bascom
         Office Center and Trintech, Inc. dated May 4, 1998**

 10.32.  Third Amendment to Office Building Lease between Lincoln Bascom Office
         Center and Trintech, Inc. dated May 21, 1998**

 10.33.  Grant to Trintech Manufacturing Limited from Enterprise Ireland dated
         December 3, 1996**

 10.34.  Grant to Trintech Manufacturing Limited from Enterprise Ireland dated
         December 3, 1996**

 10.35.  Grant to Trintech Manufacturing Limited from Enterprise Ireland dated
         October 13, 1997**

 10.36.  Grant to Trintech Manufacturing Limited from Enterprise Ireland dated
         October 13, 1997**

 10.37.  Development and Marketing Agreement between Trintech Group and Visa
         International Service Association dated April 29, 1999+**

 10.38.  License Agreement between Trintech, Inc. and Visa USA, Inc. dated May
         12, 1999+**
</TABLE>
<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
 Exhibit
 Number                         Description of Document
 ------- --------------------------------------------------------------------
 <C>     <S>
 10.39.  Master Joint Marketing Agreement between Trintech, Inc. and Compaq
         Computer Corporation dated March 17, 1999**

 10.40.  Employment Agreement between Trintech Group PLC and John Harte dated
         July 15, 1999***

 10.41.  Employment Agreement between Trintech Group PLC and Kevin C. Shea
         dated September, 1999***

 10.42.  Office Lease Agreement between Trintech, Inc. and The Joshua Group
         dated August 16, 1999***

 10.43.  Lease Agreement between Trintech, Inc. and Peninsula Office Park
         Associates, L.P. dated May 28, 1999***

 10.44.  First Amendment to the Lease between Trintech, Inc. and Peninsula
         Office Park Associates, L.P. dated November 1, 1999***

 11.1.   Computation of earnings per share***

 21.1.   Subsidiaries of the Registrant (see page 54 of the prospectus)

 23.1.   Consent of Ernst & Young

 23.2.   Consent of A&L Goodbody, Solicitors (included in Exhibit 5.1)

 24.1.   Powers of Attorney***
</TABLE>
- --------

   * Documents to be filed by amendment.

  ** Incorporated by reference to Registrant's registration statement on Form
     F-1 (Registration number 333-10738).

 *** Documents previously filed.

   + Documents for which confidential treatment has been granted

<PAGE>

                                                                     EXHIBIT 1.1

                      6,000,000 AMERICAN DEPOSITARY SHARES
                             REPRESENTING 3,000,000
                                ORDINARY SHARES

                       (nominal value $0.0027 per share)

                               TRINTECH GROUP PLC

                         GLOBAL UNDERWRITING AGREEMENT
                         -----------------------------

                                                                  April __, 2000

Deutsche Bank AG (London Branch)
Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette Securities Corporation
FleetBoston Robertson Stephens Inc.
Chase Securities Inc.
As Representatives of the
 Several Underwriters
c/o Deutsche Bank AG (London Branch)
1 Appold Street
London, England EC2A 2HE

Ladies and Gentlemen:

Trintech Group PLC, a public limited company incorporated under the laws of the
Republic of Ireland (the "Company"), proposes to sell to the several
underwriters (the "Underwriters") named in Schedule I hereto, for whom you are
acting as representatives (the "Representatives"), an aggregate of 6,000,000
American Depositary Shares ("Firm ADSs") representing 3,000,000 ordinary shares
of nominal value $0.0027 each of the Company (the "Firm Shares") to be deposited
pursuant to the Deposit Agreement hereinafter referred to.  The respective
amounts of the Firm ADSs to be so purchased by the several Underwriters are set
forth opposite their names in Schedule I hereto. The Company and certain
shareholders of the Company (the "Selling Shareholders") propose to sell, at the
Underwriters' option, an aggregate of up to 900,000 additional American
Depositary Shares ("Option ADSs") representing 450,000 ordinary shares, nominal
value $0.0027 each of the Company (the "Option Shares") to be deposited pursuant
to the Deposit Agreement if and to the extent you shall have determined to
exercise the right to exercise the option as set forth below.  The Company and
the Selling Shareholders are sometimes referred to herein collectively as the
"Sellers."

As the Representatives, you have advised the Company and the Selling
Shareholders (a) that you are authorized to enter into this Agreement on behalf
of the several Underwriters, and (b) that the several Underwriters are willing,
acting severally and not jointly, to purchase the number of Firm ADSs set forth
opposite their respective names in Schedule I, plus their pro rata portion of
the Option ADSs if you elect to exercise the over-allotment option in whole or
in part for the accounts of the several Underwriters.  The Firm ADSs and Option
ADSs (to the extent the aforementioned option is exercised) are herein
collectively called the "Shares" or "ADSs".  The Shares will be evidenced by
American Depositary Receipts (the "ADRs") issuable in accordance
<PAGE>

with a Deposit Agreement to be dated as of September 27, 1999 among the Company,
The Bank of New York, as Depositary (the "Depositary"), and all owners and
beneficial owners from time to time of the Shares (the "Deposit Agreement").
Unless the context otherwise requires, references herein to the Shares shall
include the ADRs evidencing the Shares.

In consideration of the mutual agreements contained herein and of the interests
of the parties in the transactions contemplated hereby, the parties hereto agree
as follows:

1.   REPRESENTATIONS AND WARRANTIES OF THE COMPANY AND THE SELLING SHAREHOLDERS.
     --------------------------------------------------------------------------

     (a) The Company represents and warrants to each of the Underwriters as
follows:

          (i)   A registration statement on Form F-1 (File No. 333-10738) with
                respect to the Shares has been prepared by the Company in
                conformity with the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933,
                as amended (the "Act"), and the Rules and Regulations (the
                "Rules and Regulations") of the Securities and Exchange
                Commission (the "Commission") thereunder and has been filed with
                the Commission under the Act.  Copies of such registration
                statement, including any amendments thereto, the preliminary
                prospectuses (meeting the requirements of the Rules and
                Regulations) contained therein and the exhibits and financial
                statements, as amended and revised through the date hereof, have
                heretofore been delivered by the Company to you.  Such
                registration statement on Form F-1, together with any
                registration statement filed by the Company pursuant to Rule
                462(b) under the Act, herein referred to as the "Registration
                Statement," which shall be deemed to include all information
                omitted therefrom in reliance upon Rule 430A and contained in
                the prospectus referred to in the next sentence, has become
                effective under the Act, and no post-effective amendment to the
                Registration Statement has been filed as of the date of this
                Agreement.  "Prospectus" means the form of prospectus first
                filed by the Company with the Commission pursuant to Rule
                424(b).  Each preliminary prospectus included in the
                Registration Statement prior to the time it becomes effective or
                filed pursuant to Rule 424(a) under the Act is herein referred
                to as a "Preliminary Prospectus."  Any reference herein to any
                Prospectus shall be deemed to include any supplements or
                amendments thereto filed with the Commission after the date of
                filing of the Prospectus under Rule 424(b) or Rule 430A, and
                prior to the termination of the offering of the Shares by the
                Underwriters.

          (ii)  A registration statement on Form F-6 (File No. 333-10742) with
                respect to the ADRs and the ADSs has been carefully prepared by
                the Company in conformity with the requirements of the Act and
                the Rules and Regulations and has been filed with the Commission
                under the Act.  The Company has complied with the conditions for
                the use of Form F-6.  Copies of such registration statement,
                including any amendments

                                      -2-
<PAGE>

                thereto, the prospectus (meeting the requirements of the Rules
                and Regulations) contained therein and the exhibits, financial
                statements and schedules, as finally amended and revised, have
                heretofore been delivered by the Company to you. The
                registration statement on Form F-6 with respect to the ADRs and
                the ADSs, as amended at the time when it becomes effective, is
                herein referred to as the "ADR Registration Statement".

          (iii) Prior to the date of this Agreement, the Company has prepared
                an uncompleted German sales prospectus ("Preliminary German
                Sales Prospectus"/Unvollstanddiger Wertpapierverkaufsprospekt")
                and it will prepare a German Stock Exchange Admission Prospectus
                ("German Admission Prospectus"/Verkaufsprospekt,
                Untemehmensbericht) in connection with the admission of the
                Shares for trading and quotation in the Regular Market/New
                Market on the Frankfurt Stock Exchange.

                The Preliminary German Sales Prospectus and the German Admission
                Prospectus (on their respective dates and together with each and
                all amendments and supplements thereto the "German Offer
                Documents") are -- with regard to the most substantial aspects -
                - a translation of the Prospectus.  The German Offer Documents
                are substantially in conformity with the rules and regulations
                under German Law and contain all statements which are required
                to be stated therein, excluding statements waived by the
                Frankfurt Stock Exchange (the "FSE").

          (iv)  Deutsche Bank AG, acting for the Underwriters, has informed us
                that they will on behalf of and in cooperation with the Company
                apply for the admission of the total share capital of the
                Company for trading in the Regular Market/New Market on the
                Frankfurt Stock Exchange.  In accordance with requirements of
                the listing agent between the Company and Deutsche Bank AG, in
                connection with such application, the Company, in cooperation
                with Deutsche Bank AG, shall endeavor to obtain the listing as
                promptly as possible and the Company and Deutsche Bank AG shall
                furnish any and all documents, instruments, information, notices
                and representations and warranties that may be necessary or
                advisable in order to obtain and to maintain the listing of all
                Shares of the Company on the Frankfurt Stock Exchange.  The
                Company makes no representation as to whether Deutsche Bank AG
                will perform as described in this paragraph.

          (v)   The Company has been duly organized and is validly existing as a
                company under the laws of the Republic of Ireland, with
                corporate power and authority to own or lease its properties and
                conduct its business as described in the Registration Statement
                and the German Offer Documents.  Each of the subsidiaries of the
                Company, as set forth in the Registration Statement and the
                German Offer Documents, (collectively, the "Subsidiaries") has
                been duly organized and is validly

                                      -3-
<PAGE>

                 existing as a corporation in good standing under the laws of
                 the jurisdiction of its incorporation, with corporate power and
                 authority to own or lease its properties and conduct its
                 business as described in the Registration Statement and the
                 German Offer Documents. The Subsidiaries, as set forth in the
                 Registration Statement and the German Offer Documents, are the
                 only owned subsidiaries, direct or indirect, of the Company.
                 The Company and each of the Subsidiaries will be duly
                 qualified, prior to the Closing Date, to transact business in
                 all jurisdictions in which the conduct of their business
                 requires such qualification, except where the failure to be so
                 qualified would not have a material adverse effect on the
                 business, property, financial condition or operations of the
                 Company and the Subsidiaries, taken as a whole (a "Material
                 Adverse Effect").

          (vi)   Except as disclosed in the Registration Statement, the
                 outstanding shares of capital stock of each of the Subsidiaries
                 have been duly authorized and validly issued, are fully paid
                 and non-assessable and are owned directly or indirectly by the
                 Company free and clear of all liens, charges, encumbrances,
                 security interests, restrictions and claims; and no options,
                 warrants or other rights to purchase, agreements or other
                 obligations to issue or other rights to convert any obligations
                 into shares of capital stock or ownership interests in any of
                 the Subsidiaries are outstanding.

          (vii)  The Company has an authorized capitalization as set forth in
                 the Registration Statement and the German Offer Documents. All
                 capital stock of the Company outstanding prior to the issuance
                 of the ordinary shares underlying the ADSs to be sold by the
                 Company hereunder have been duly authorized and are validly
                 issued, fully paid and not subject to any call.

          (viii) The unissued ordinary shares underlying the ADSs to be sold by
                 the Company to the Underwriters hereunder have been duly and
                 validly authorized and, when issued and deposited under the
                 Deposit Agreement in accordance with the terms of this
                 Agreement, will be duly and validly issued, fully paid and not
                 subject to any call. The ordinary shares underlying the ADSs to
                 be sold by the Selling Shareholders hereunder have been duly
                 authorized and when deposited under the Deposit Agreement, in
                 accordance with the terms of this Agreement, will be fully paid
                 and not subject to any call. The issuance of such ordinary
                 shares and the offering, sale and issuance of the ADSs and ADRs
                 will not be subject to any preemptive or similar rights other
                 than those which have been waived or satisfied. Neither the
                 filing of the Registration Statement, the German Offer
                 Documents, the ADR Registration Statement, nor the offering and
                 sale of the ADSs as contemplated by this Agreement and the
                 Deposit Agreement gives rise to any rights, other than those
                 which have been waived or satisfied, for or relating to the

                                      -4-
<PAGE>

                 registration of any ordinary shares or other capital stock of
                 the Company.

          (ix)   Upon the deposit of the ordinary shares underlying the ADSs to
                 be sold by the Company hereunder with the Depositary pursuant
                 to the Deposit Agreement against issuance of the ADRs
                 representing such ADSs, all right, title and interest in such
                 ADSs, subject to the Deposit Agreement, will be transferred to
                 the Depositary or its nominee, as the case may be, free and
                 clear of all liens, charges, encumbrances, security interests,
                 restrictions, and claims; upon the due issuance by the
                 Depositary of ADRs evidencing ADSs against the deposit of the
                 ADSs in accordance with the provisions of the Deposit
                 Agreement, such ADRs will be duly and validly issued and
                 persons in whose names such ADRs are registered will be
                 entitled to the rights of registered holders of ADRs specified
                 therein and in the Deposit Agreement.

          (x)    The issuance and deposit with the Depositary of the ordinary
                 shares underlying the ADSs to be sold by the Sellers hereunder
                 against issuance of the ADRs evidencing such ADSs, the sale and
                 delivery of such ADSs and the execution and delivery by the
                 Sellers of, and the performance by the Sellers of their
                 obligations under, this Agreement and the Deposit Agreement
                 will not contravene any provision that is material to the
                 Company and its Subsidiaries taken as a whole, of the federal
                 laws of the United States or the laws of the Republic of
                 Ireland, or the Memorandum or Articles of Association of the
                 Company, or any agreement or other instrument binding upon the
                 Company or any of its Subsidiaries that is material to the
                 Company and its Subsidiaries taken as a whole or any judgment,
                 or decree of any United States, Irish or German governmental
                 body, agency or court having jurisdiction over the Company or
                 any of its Subsidiaries, and no consent, approval,
                 authorization or order of, or qualification with, any United
                 States, Irish or German governmental body or agency is required
                 for the performance by the Company of its obligations under
                 this Agreement and the Deposit Agreement except such as may be
                 required by the securities or Blue Sky laws of the various
                 states within the United States in connection with the offer
                 and sale of the ADSs.

          (xi)   The information set forth under the caption "Capitalization" in
                 the Prospectus and under the caption "Kapitalisierung" in the
                 German Offer Documents is true and correct (other than for
                 subsequent issuances and grants pursuant to benefit plans
                 described in the Prospectus or the exercise of outstanding
                 options described in the Prospectus). All of the ordinary
                 shares, ADSs and the ADRs conform, in all material respects, to
                 the descriptions thereof contained in the Registration
                 Statement, the ADR Registration Statement and the German Offer
                 Documents. The form of certificate for the ordinary shares
                 conforms to the corporate law of the Republic of Ireland.

                                      -5-
<PAGE>

          (xii)  The Commission has not issued an order preventing or suspending
                 the use of any Preliminary Prospectus or Prospectus relating to
                 the proposed offering of the Shares nor instituted proceedings
                 for that purpose. The Registration Statement, the ADR
                 Registration Statement and the Prospectus contain, and any
                 amendments or supplements thereto will contain, all statements
                 which are required to be stated therein by, and in all material
                 respect conformed or will conform, as the case may be, to the
                 requirements of the Act and the Rules and Regulations. Neither
                 the Registration Statement, the ADR Registration Statement, nor
                 any amendment or supplement thereto contains or will contain,
                 as the case may be, any untrue statement of a material fact or
                 omits or will omit to state any material fact required to be
                 stated therein or necessary to make the statement therein, not
                 misleading and neither the Prospectus nor any amendment or
                 supplement thereto contains or will contain, as the case may
                 be, any untrue statement of a material fact or omits or will
                 omit to state any material fact necessary to make the
                 statements therein, in the light of the circumstances under
                 which they were made, not misleading, provided, however, that
                 the Company makes no representations or warranties as to
                 information contained in or omitted from the Registration
                 Statement, the ADR Registration Statement or the Prospectus, or
                 any such amendment or supplement, in reliance upon, and in
                 conformity with, written information furnished to the Company
                 by or on behalf of any Underwriter through the Representatives,
                 specifically for use in the preparation thereof.

                 Neither the German Offer Documents nor any amendment or
                 supplement thereto contains or will contain, as the case may
                 be, any untrue statement of a material fact or omits or will
                 omit to state any material fact required to be stated therein
                 or necessary to make the statements therein, in the light of
                 the circumstances under which they were made, not misleading;
                 provided, however, that the Company makes no representations or
                 warranties as to information contained in or omitted from the
                 German Offer Documents, or any such amendment or supplement
                 thereto, in reliance upon, and in conformity with, written
                 information furnished to the Company by or on behalf of any
                 Underwriter through the Representatives, specifically for use
                 in the preparation thereof.

          (xiii) The consolidated financial statements of the Company and the
                 Subsidiaries, together with the related notes thereto as set
                 forth in the Registration Statement, the Prospectus and the
                 German Offer Documents present fairly the financial position
                 and the results of operations and cash flows of the Company and
                 the Subsidiaries on a consolidated basis, at the indicated
                 dates and for the indicated periods. Such financial statements
                 have been prepared in accordance with United States generally
                 accepted accounting principles consistently applied throughout
                 the periods involved, and all adjustments necessary for a fair

                                      -6-
<PAGE>

                 presentation of results for such periods have been made. The
                 amounts reserved in such financial statements for the payment
                 of unpaid Irish, U.S. federal or other income taxes are
                 adequate. The summary financial and statistical data included
                 in the Registration Statement, the Prospectus and the German
                 Offer Documents present fairly the information shown therein
                 and, to the extent such information is derived from the
                 financial statements of the Company and the Subsidiaries, have
                 been compiled on a basis consistent with the financial
                 statements presented therein. The pro forma financial
                 information included in the Registration Statement and the
                 Prospectus have been prepared in accordance with the
                 Commission's rules and guidelines with respect to such pro
                 forma financial information, have been properly compiled on the
                 pro forma bases described therein, and, in the reasonable
                 opinion of the Company, except to the extent otherwise required
                 to comply with the Commission's rules and guidelines with
                 respect to pro forma financial information, the assumptions
                 used in the preparation thereof are reasonable and the
                 adjustments used therein are appropriate to give effect to the
                 transactions or circumstances referred to therein.

          (xiv)  Except as disclosed in the Registration Statement, the
                 Prospectus and the German Offer Documents, there is no legal or
                 governmental action, suit, claim or proceeding pending or, to
                 the knowledge of the Company, threatened against the Company or
                 any of the Subsidiaries before any court or administrative
                 agency or otherwise which would reasonably be expected to
                 result in a Material Adverse Effect or to prevent the
                 consummation of the transactions contemplated hereby.

          (xv)   The Company and the Subsidiaries have good and marketable title
                 to all of the properties and assets reflected in the financial
                 statements (or as described in the Registration Statement and
                 the German Offer Documents) hereinabove described, subject to
                 no lien, mortgage, pledge, charge, security interest or
                 encumbrance of any kind except liens for taxes not yet due,
                 those reflected in such financial statements (or as described
                 in the Registration Statement and the German Offer Documents)
                 or which are not material in amount. The Company and the
                 Subsidiaries occupy their leased properties under valid,
                 subsisting and enforceable leases with such exceptions as are
                 not material and do not materially interfere with the use made
                 and proposed to be made of such properties by the Company and
                 its Subsidiaries.

          (xvi)  The Company and each of the Subsidiaries have filed with the
                 appropriate taxing authorities all Irish, U.S. federal, state
                 and foreign income and franchise tax returns which are required
                 to have been filed through the date hereof and have paid all
                 taxes indicated by said returns and all assessments received by
                 any of them to the extent that such taxes have become due and
                 are not being contested in good faith. All unpaid tax
                 liabilities have been adequately provided for in the financial

                                      -7-
<PAGE>

                   statements of the Company and the Subsidiaries, and the
                   Company does not know of any actual or proposed additional
                   material tax assessments.

          (xvii)   Since the respective dates as of which information is given
                   in the Registration Statement, the ADR Registration
                   Statement, the Prospectus and the German Offer Documents, as
                   they may be amended or supplemented, there has not been any
                   material adverse change or a development involving a material
                   adverse change in or affecting the earnings, business,
                   management, properties, assets, results of operations,
                   condition (financial or otherwise) or prospects of the
                   Company and its Subsidiaries taken as a whole, whether or not
                   occurring in the ordinary course of business, and there has
                   not been any material transaction entered into by the Company
                   or any of the Subsidiaries, other than changes, developments
                   or transactions in the ordinary course of business and
                   changes, developments and transactions set forth in or
                   contemplated by the Registration Statement, the Prospectus
                   and the German Offer Documents, as they may be amended or
                   supplemented. Neither the Company nor any of the Subsidiaries
                   have contingent obligations material to the Company and the
                   Subsidiaries taken as a whole which are not disclosed in the
                   Registration Statement and the German Offer Documents, as
                   they may be amended or supplemented.

          (xviii)  Neither the Company nor any of the Subsidiaries is, nor do
                   there exist facts or circumstances that, with the giving of
                   notice, would cause the Company or any of the Subsidiaries to
                   be, in violation of or in default under its Memorandum of
                   Association, Articles of Association, Certificate of
                   Incorporation or By-laws or other organizational documents,
                   as the case may be, or under any material agreement, lease,
                   contract, indenture or other instrument or obligation to
                   which it is a party or by which it, or any of its properties,
                   is bound. The issuance of ordinary shares underlying the ADSs
                   and the issuance and the sale of the ADSs, the consummation
                   of the transactions herein contemplated and the fulfillment
                   of the terms hereof will not conflict with or result in a
                   breach or violation of any of the terms or provisions of, or
                   constitute a default under any indenture, mortgage, deed of
                   trust, loan agreement or other agreement or instrument to
                   which the Company or any of the Subsidiaries is a party or by
                   which the Company or any of the Subsidiaries is bound or to
                   which any of the property or assets of the Company or any of
                   its Subsidiaries is subject; nor will such action result in
                   any violation of the provisions of the Memorandum of
                   Association, Articles of Association, Certificate of
                   Incorporation or By-laws or other organizational documents,
                   as a case may be, of the Company or any of the Subsidiaries
                   or any Irish, German or U.S. order, rule or regulation
                   applicable to the Company or any of the Subsidiaries or any
                   Irish, German or U.S. court or any regulatory body or
                   administrative agency or other Irish, German or U.S.
                   governmental body having jurisdiction over the Company or any
                   of its Subsidiaries or any of their properties.

                                      -8-
<PAGE>

          (xix)   The Company has full legal right, power and authority to enter
                  into this Agreement and the Deposit Agreement and perform the
                  transactions contemplated hereby. This Agreement and the
                  Deposit Agreement have been duly authorized, executed and
                  delivered by the Company and constitute the valid and binding
                  obligations of the Company in accordance with their terms.

          (xx)    Each approval, consent, order, authorization, resignation,
                  designation, declaration, qualification or filing by or with
                  any Irish, German or U.S. regulatory, administrative or other
                  governmental body required in connection with the issuance of
                  the ordinary shares underlying the ADSs and the issuance and
                  sale of the Shares, the execution and delivery by the Company
                  of this Agreement and the Deposit Agreement and the
                  consummation of the transactions contemplated hereby (except
                  such additional steps as may be required by the National
                  Association of Securities Dealers, Inc. ("NASD") or except as
                  may be necessary to qualify the Shares for public offering by
                  the Underwriters under U.S. state securities or Blue Sky laws
                  or except as may be necessary for listing and quotation on the
                  Frankfurt Stock Exchange) has been obtained or made and is in
                  full force and effect.

          (xxi)   The Company and each of the Subsidiaries hold all material
                  licenses, certificates and permits from governmental
                  authorities which are necessary to the conduct of their
                  businesses.

          (xxii)  Except as generally disclosed in the Registration Statement,
                  the Prospectus and the German Offer Documents, neither the
                  Company nor any of the Subsidiaries owns any material patent,
                  patent rights, registered designs or registered trademarks.
                  Except as disclosed in the Prospectus and the German Offer
                  Documents, the Company and the Subsidiaries have received all
                  approvals and governmental authorizations, and have the right
                  to use all trademarks, trade names, trade secrets,
                  servicemarks, inventions, patent rights, mask works,
                  copyrights, licenses, software code, audiovisual works,
                  formats, algorithms and underlying data now used in, or which
                  are necessary for fulfillment of their respective obligations
                  or the conduct of their respective businesses as now conducted
                  or proposed to be conducted as described in the Prospectus or
                  the German Offer Documents, except for such would not have a
                  Material Adverse Effect; and the Company has no knowledge of
                  any infringement by it or by any of the Subsidiaries of
                  trademarks, trade name rights, patent rights, mask works,
                  copyrights, licenses, trade secret, servicemarks or other
                  similar rights of others, and except as described in the
                  Prospectus or the German Offer Documents, there is no claim
                  being made against the Company or any of the Subsidiaries
                  regarding trademark, trade name, patent, mask work, copyright,
                  license, trade secret or other infringement or assertion of
                  intellectual property rights which could have a Material
                  Adverse Effect.

                                      -9-
<PAGE>

                    To the Company's knowledge, no person or entity has
                    infringed any of the Company's or any of the Subsidiaries'
                    trade names, trademarks, trade secrets or copyrights, which
                    infringement is material to the business of the Company and
                    the Subsidiaries taken as a whole.

          (xxiii)   Ernst & Young, who have certified certain of the financial
                    statements filed with the Commission as part of the
                    Registration Statement and with the Deutsche Borse as part
                    of the German Offer Documents and who will give "comfort
                    letters" to the Underwriters with regard to the financial
                    statements and certain financial information included in the
                    Registration Statement and the German Offer Documents, are
                    independent public accountants as required by the Act and
                    the Rules and Regulations.

          (xxiv)    Neither the Company, nor any of the Subsidiaries, is, nor
                    upon consummation of the transactions contemplated hereby
                    and the application of the net proceeds as described in the
                    Registration Statement under the caption "Use of Proceeds"
                    and the German Offer Documents under the caption "Verwendung
                    des Emissionserloses" shall be, subject to registration as
                    an "investment company" under the Investment Company Act of
                    1940, as amended (the "1940 Act").

          (xxv)     The ADSs have been approved for quotation on the Nasdaq
                    National Market subject to official notice of issuance.

          (xxvi)    The Company maintains a system of internal accounting
                    controls sufficient to provide reasonable assurances that
                    (i) transactions are executed in accordance with
                    management's general or specific authorization, (ii)
                    transactions are recorded as necessary to permit preparation
                    of financial statements in conformity with United States
                    generally accepted accounting principles and to maintain
                    accountability for assets, (iii) access to assets is
                    permitted only in accordance with management's general or
                    specific authorization, and (iv) the recorded accountability
                    for assets is compared with existing assets at reasonable
                    intervals and appropriate action is taken with respect to
                    any differences.

          (xxvii)   The Company and each of the Subsidiaries carry, or are
                    covered by, insurance in such amounts and covering such
                    risks as is customary for companies engaged in similar
                    industries.

          (xxviii)  Neither the Company nor any of the Subsidiaries is involved
                    in any labor dispute, nor, to the knowledge of the Company,
                    is any such dispute threatened, other than individual
                    employee grievances in the ordinary course of business.

          (xxix)    Neither the Company nor any of the Subsidiaries have
                    incurred any liability for a fee, commission, or other
                    compensation on account of the

                                      -10-
<PAGE>

                    employment of a broker or finder in connection with the
                    transactions contemplated by this Agreement other than as
                    contemplated hereby.

          (xxx)     All material transactions during the Company's current or
                    last three fiscal years between the Company, any of the
                    Subsidiaries and the officers, directors and 10%
                    shareholders of the Company or any of the Subsidiaries have
                    been accurately disclosed in the Prospectus and the German
                    Offer Documents to the extent required by the Rules and
                    Regulations; and to the Company's knowledge, the terms of
                    each such transaction are in all material respects fair to
                    the Company and the Subsidiaries and no less favorable to
                    the Company and the Subsidiaries than the terms that could
                    have been obtained from unrelated parties.

          (xxxi)    Except as disclosed in the Registration Statement, the
                    Company is not, and upon the consummation of the
                    transactions contemplated hereby and the application of the
                    net proceeds as described in the Registration Statement
                    under the caption "Use of Proceeds" and in the German Offer
                    Documents under the caption "Verwendung des
                    Emissionserloses" will not become, a "passive foreign
                    investment company" ("PFIC") as defined in Section 1297(a)
                    of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the
                    "Code").

      (b) Each of the Selling Shareholders hereby represents and warrants as
follows:

          (i)       Each of the Selling Shareholders has as of the date of this
                    Agreement and at the Option Closing Date, as the case may be
                    (as such dates are hereinafter defined) will have good and
                    valid title to the ordinary shares to be deposited by it
                    with the Depositary pursuant to the Deposit Agreement, free
                    of any liens, charges, encumbrances, security interests,
                    restrictions and claims and full right, power and authority
                    to effect such deposit and the sale and delivery of the ADSs
                    representing such ordinary shares; and upon the sale and
                    delivery of the ADSs to be sold by such Selling Shareholder
                    hereunder, good and valid title thereto, free of any liens,
                    charges, encumbrances, security interests, restrictions and
                    claims, subject to the Deposit Agreement, will be
                    transferred to the several Underwriters who purchase such
                    shares in good faith without notice of adverse claims;

          (ii)      Such Selling Shareholder has (A) full right, power and
                    authority to execute and deliver this Agreement, and the
                    Custody Agreement and Power of Attorney referred in Section
                    2(a) and such Selling Shareholder's obligations under such
                    documents. The execution and delivery of this Agreement, the
                    Custody Agreement and Power of Attorney, the consummation by
                    such Selling Shareholder of the transactions herein and
                    therein contemplated and the fulfillment by such Selling
                    Shareholder of the terms hereof and thereof will not require
                    any consent, approval, authorization or order of or
                    declaration or filing with

                                      -11-
<PAGE>

                    any court, regulatory body, administrative agency or other
                    governmental body (except as may be required under the Act
                    or United States state securities law or Blue Sky laws) and
                    will not result in a breach of any of the terms and
                    provisions of, or constitute a default under, the
                    organizational documents of such Selling Shareholder, if not
                    an individual, or any material indenture, mortgage, deed of
                    trust or other agreement or instrument to which such Selling
                    Shareholder is a party, or of any order, rule or regulation
                    applicable to such Selling Shareholder of any court or of
                    any regulatory body or administrative agency or other
                    governmental body having jurisdiction over such Selling
                    Shareholder;

          (iii)     Such Selling Shareholder has not taken and will not take,
                    directly or indirectly, any action designed to, or which has
                    constituted or which might reasonably be expected to cause
                    or result in stabilization or manipulation of the price of
                    the ADSs to facilitate the sale or resale of the ADSs;

          (iv)      The information pertaining to such Selling Shareholder under
                    the caption "Principal Shareholders" in the Prospectus and
                    in the German Offer Documents under the caption
                    "Hauptaktionare" is complete and accurate in all material
                    respects;

          (v)       During the period beginning from the date hereof and
                    continuing to and including the date 90 days after the date
                    of the Prospectus, such Selling Shareholder shall not offer,
                    sell, contract to sell or otherwise dispose of, except as
                    provided hereunder, any securities of the Company that are
                    substantially similar to the ordinary shares or the ADSs,
                    including but not limited to any securities that are
                    convertible into or exchangeable for, or that represent the
                    right to receive, ordinary shares or ADSs or any such
                    substantially similar securities (other than pursuant to
                    employee stock option plans existing on, or upon the
                    conversion or exchange of convertible or exchangeable
                    securities outstanding as of, the date of this Agreement),
                    without your prior written consent;

          (vi)      Certificates representing all of the ordinary shares to be
                    deposited by such Selling Shareholder hereunder have been
                    placed in custody under a Custody Agreement, in the form
                    heretofore furnished to you (the "Custody Agreement"), duly
                    executed and delivered by such Selling Shareholder to an
                    account in the name of the Company, as custodian (the
                    "Custodian"), and such Selling Shareholder has duly executed
                    and delivered a Power of Attorney, in the form heretofore
                    furnished to you (the "Power of Attorney"), appointing R.
                    Paul Byrne and John McGuire as the Selling Shareholder's
                    attorneys-in-fact (the "Attorneys-in-Fact") with authority
                    to execute and deliver this Agreement on behalf of such
                    Selling Shareholder, to determine the purchase price to be
                    paid by the Underwriters to such Selling Shareholder as
                    provided in Section 2 hereof, to authorize the delivery of
                    the ordinary shares to be deposited

                                      -12-
<PAGE>

                    by such Selling Shareholder hereunder and otherwise to act
                    on behalf of such Selling Shareholder in connection with the
                    transactions contemplated by this Agreement and the Custody
                    Agreement; and

          (vii)     The ordinary shares represented by the certificates held in
                    custody for such Selling Shareholder under the Custody
                    Agreement are subject to the interests of the Underwriters
                    hereunder; the arrangements made by such Selling Shareholder
                    for such custody, and the appointment by such Selling
                    Shareholder of the Attorneys-in-Fact by the Power of
                    Attorney, are to that extent irrevocable; the obligations of
                    such Selling Shareholder hereunder shall not be terminated
                    by operation of law, whether by the death or incapacity of
                    such Selling Shareholder or, in the case of an estate or
                    trust, by the death or incapacity of any executor or trustee
                    or the termination of such estate or trust, or in the case
                    of a partnership or corporation, by the dissolution of such
                    partnership or corporation, or by the occurrence of any
                    other event; if such Selling Shareholder or any such
                    executor or trustee should die or become incapacitated, or
                    if any such estate or trust should be terminated, or if any
                    such partnership or corporation should be dissolved, or if
                    any other such event should occur, before the delivery of
                    the ordinary shares hereunder, certificates representing the
                    ordinary shares shall be deposited by or on behalf of such
                    Selling Shareholder in accordance with the terms and
                    conditions of this Agreement and the Custody Agreements; and
                    actions taken by the Attorneys-in-Fact pursuant to the Power
                    of Attorney shall be as valid as if such death, incapacity,
                    termination, dissolution or other event had not occurred,
                    regardless of whether or not the Custodian, the
                    Attorneys-in-Fact, or any of them, shall have received
                    notice of such death, incapacity, termination dissolution or
                    other event.

2.   PURCHASE, SALE AND DELIVERY OF THE FIRM ADSs AND OPTION ADSs.
     ------------------------------------------------------------

     (a) On the basis of the representations, warranties and covenants herein
contained, and subject to the conditions herein set forth, the Company agrees to
sell to the Underwriters and each Underwriter agrees, severally and not jointly,
to purchase, at a price of (i) $10.74 per ADS, 53.75% of the number of Firm ADSs
set forth opposite the name of each Underwriter in Schedule I hereof, subject to
adjustments in accordance with Section 9 hereof and (ii) euro 10.23 per ADS,
46.25% of the number of Firm ADSs set forth opposite the name of each
Underwriter in Schedule I hereof, subject to adjustments in accordance with
Section 9 hereof.

The Selling Shareholders have delivered certificates in negotiable form
representing the total number of ordinary shares (with stock transfer forms
executed in blank) to be sold hereunder by the Selling Shareholders which have
been placed in custody with the Company or its agent as custodian (the
"Custodian") pursuant to the Custody Agreement and Power of Attorney executed by
Selling Shareholders for delivery of any Option ADSs to be sold hereunder by the
Selling Shareholders.  Each of the Selling Shareholders specifically agrees that
any ordinary shares which will represent Option ADSs represented by the ADRs
held in custody for the Selling Shareholders under the Custody Agreement and
Power of Attorney are subject to the interests of

                                      -13-
<PAGE>

the Underwriters hereunder, that the conditions of such renunciation or
arrangements made by the Selling Shareholders for such custody, as the case may
be, are to that extent irrevocable, and that the obligations of the Selling
Shareholders hereunder shall not be terminable by any act or deed of the Selling
Shareholders (or by any other person, firm or corporation including the Company,
the Custodian or the Underwriters) or by operation of law (including the death
of such Selling Shareholder) or by the occurrence of any other event or events,
except as set forth in this Agreement, the Custody Agreement and Power of
Attorney. If any such event should occur prior to the issuance and delivery of
the ADRs evidencing the Option ADSs to the Underwriters hereunder, ADRs
evidencing the Option ADSs shall be delivered by the Custodian in accordance
with the terms and conditions of this Agreement as if such event had not
occurred. The Custodian is authorized to receive and acknowledge receipt of the
proceeds of sale of the Option ADSs held by it against delivery of ADRs
representing such Option ADSs.

ADRs evidencing the ADSs shall (unless otherwise determined by you, and the
Company is so notified) be delivered in definitive form, and be registered in
such names and in such denominations as you shall request in writing addressed
to the Company not later than the Closing Date or the Option Closing Date, as
the case may be.

The Company and the Selling Shareholders, as the case may be, shall pay any
transfer or other taxes in connection with the sale and delivery of ADSs by the
Company or the Selling Shareholders, as the case may be, as contemplated by this
Agreement, including, without limitation, any Irish stamp duty and any Irish
income, capital gains, withholding, transfer or other tax, including any
indirect tax, incident to the deposit of the ordinary shares pursuant to the
Deposit Agreement, the issue by the Depositary of ADSs, the delivery by the
Company or the delivery to the Selling Shareholders, as the case may be, of the
ADSs against receipt of the ordinary shares by the Depositary, and the issue or
delivery to the Company or the Selling Shareholder, as the case may be, of the
ADSs to the Underwriters and the sale and delivery of the ADSs by the
Underwriters.

     (b) Payment for the Firm ADSs to be sold hereunder is to be made by wire
transfer(s) in federal (same day) funds to an account designated by the Company
for the shares to be sold by it, against delivery of ADRs therefor to the
Representatives for the several accounts of the Underwriters.   Such payment and
delivery are to be made through the facilities of the Depository Trust Company
at 10:00 a.m., New York time, on the fourth business day after the date of this
Agreement, or at such other time and date not later than five business days
thereafter as you and the Company shall agree upon, such time and date being
herein referred to as the "Closing Date."  (As used herein, "business day" means
a day on which the New York Stock Exchange is open for trading and on which
banks in New York are open for business and are not permitted by law or
executive order to be closed.)  The ADRs evidencing the Firm ADSs will be
delivered in such denominations and in such registrations as the Representatives
request in writing not later than the second full business day prior to the
Closing Date.

     (c) In addition, on the basis of the representations and warranties herein
contained and subject to the terms and conditions herein set forth, the Company
and the Selling Shareholders hereby grant an option to the several Underwriters
to purchase the Option ADSs at the price of $10.74 per ADS.  The option granted
hereby may be exercised once in whole or in part, at any time upon written
notice given within 30 days after the date of this Agreement, by

                                      -14-
<PAGE>

you, as Representatives of the several Underwriters, to the Company and the
Custodian setting forth the number of Option ADSs as to which the several
Underwriters are exercising the option, the names and denominations in which the
ADRs evidencing the Option ADSs are to be registered and the time and date as
which such ADRs are to be delivered. The time and date at which ADRs evidencing
Option ADSs are to be delivered shall be determined by the Representatives but
shall not bear earlier than three nor later than 10 full business days after the
exercise of such option, nor in any event prior to the Closing Date (such time
and date being herein referred to as the "Option Closing Date"). If the date of
exercise of the option is three or more days before the Closing Date, the notice
of exercise shall set the Closing Date as the Option Closing Date. The number of
Option ADSs to be purchased by each Underwriter shall be in the same proportion
to the total number of Option ADSs being purchased as the number of Firm Shares
being purchased by such Underwriter bears to the total number of Firm Shares,
adjusted by you in such manner as to avoid fractional shares. The option with
respect to the Option ADSs granted hereunder may be exercised only to cover
over-allotments in the sale of the Firm Shares by the Underwriters. You, as
Representatives of the several Underwriters, may cancel such option at any time
prior to its expiration by giving written notice of such cancellation to the
Company and the Custodian. To the extent, if any, that the option is exercised,
payment for the Option ADSs shall be made on the Option Closing Date by wire
transfer(s) in federal (same day) funds to an account designated by the Company
for the Option ADSs to be sold by it and by wire transfer in federal (same day)
funds to accounts designated by each Selling Shareholder for the Option ADSs to
be sold by such Selling Shareholder, in each case against delivery of ADRs
therefor to the Representatives for the several accounts of the Underwriters.

3.  OFFERING BY THE UNDERWRITERS.  It is understood that the several
    ----------------------------
Underwriters are to make a public offering of the Firm ADSs as soon as the
Representatives deem it advisable to do so.  The Firm ADSs are to be initially
offered to the public at the initial public offering price set forth in the
Prospectus.  The Representatives may from time to time thereafter change the
public offering and other selling terms.  To the extent, if at all, that any
Option ADSs are purchased pursuant to Section 2 hereof, the Underwriters will
offer them to the public on the foregoing terms.

It is further understood that you will act as the Representatives for the
Underwriters in the offering and sale of the ADSs in accordance with a Master
Agreement Among Underwriters entered into by you and the several other
Underwriters.  The Representatives, on behalf of themselves and the several
Underwriters, represent and warrant to the Company and the Selling Shareholders
that they have all corporate and governmental licenses, authorizations and
approvals necessary to enter into this Agreement and to consummate the
transactions contemplated hereby.

4.   COVENANTS OF THE COMPANY AND THE SELLING SHAREHOLDERS.
     -----------------------------------------------------

     (a)  The Company covenants and agrees with the several Underwriters:

          (i)   To prepare the Prospectus in a form reasonably approved by you
                and to file such Prospectus pursuant to Rule 424(b) under the
                Act containing information previously omitted at the time of
                effectiveness in reliance on Rule 430A of the Rules and
                Regulations not later than the Commission's

                                      -15-
<PAGE>

                close of business on the second business day following the
                execution and delivery of this Agreement, or, if applicable,
                such earlier time as may be required by Rule 430A(a)(3) under
                the Act; to make no further amendment or any supplement to the
                Registration Statement or Prospectus which shall be disapproved
                by you promptly after reasonable notice thereof; to advise you,
                promptly after it receives notice thereof, of the time when any
                amendment to the Registration Statement or the ADR Registration
                Statement has been filed or becomes effective or any supplement
                to the Prospectus or any amended Prospectus has been filed and
                to furnish you with copies thereof; to advise you, promptly
                after it receives notice thereof, of the issuance by the
                Commission of any stop order or of any order preventing or
                suspending the use of any Preliminary Prospectus or Prospectus,
                of the suspension of the qualification of the ADSs for offering
                or sale in any jurisdiction, of the initiation or threatening of
                any proceeding for any such purpose, or of any request by the
                Commission for the amending or supplementing of the Registration
                Statement, the ADR Registration Statement or Prospectus or for
                additional information; and, in the event of the issuance of any
                stop order or of any order preventing or suspending the use of
                any Preliminary Prospectus or Prospectus or suspending any such
                qualification, promptly to use its best efforts to obtain the
                withdrawal of such order.

          (ii)  Promptly from time to time to take such action as you may
                reasonably request to qualify the ADSs for offering and sale
                under the securities laws of such jurisdictions as you may
                request and to comply with such laws so as to permit the
                continuance of sales and dealings therein in such jurisdictions
                for as long as may be necessary to complete the distribution of
                the ADSs, provided that in connection therewith the Company
                shall not be required to qualify as a foreign corporation or to
                file a general consent to service of process in any
                jurisdiction.

          (iii) The Company will deliver to, or upon the order of, the
                Representatives, from time to time, as many copies of any
                Preliminary Prospectus as the Representatives may reasonably
                request. The Company will deliver to, or upon the order of, the
                Representatives during the period when delivery of a Prospectus
                is required under the Act, as many copies of the Prospectus in
                final form, or as thereafter amended or supplemented, as the
                Representatives may reasonably request. The Company will deliver
                to the Representatives at or before the Closing Date, five
                signed copies of the Registration Statement and the ADR
                Registration Statement and all amendments thereto including all
                exhibits filed therewith, and will deliver to the
                Representatives such number of conformed copies of the
                Registration Statement and the ADR Registration Statement
                (including such number of copies of the exhibits filed therewith
                that may reasonably be requested), and of all amendments
                thereto, as the Representatives may reasonably request.

                                      -16-
<PAGE>

          (iv)  The Company will comply with the Act and the Rules and
                Regulations, and the Exchange Act, and the rules and regulations
                of the Commission thereunder and the German Sales Prospectus Act
                (Verkaufsprospektgesetz), the Stock Admission Act
                (Boersengesetz) and the rules and regulations of the New Market
                (Neuer Markt) of the Frankfurt Stock Exchange, so as to permit
                the completion of the distribution of the ADSs as contemplated
                in this Agreement, the Prospectus and the German Offer
                Documents.  If, during the period in which a Prospectus is
                required by the Act, any event shall occur as a result of which,
                in the judgment of the Company or in the reasonable opinion
                Deutsche Bank AG acting as representative of the Underwriters,
                it becomes necessary to amend or supplement the Prospectus or
                the German Offer Documents in order to make the statements
                therein, in the light of the circumstances existing at the time,
                not misleading, or, if it is necessary at any time to amend or
                supplement the Prospectus or the German Offer Documents to
                comply with the Act, the Verkaufsprospektgesetz or the
                Boersengesetz, the Company promptly will prepare and file with
                the Commission and/or the Deutsche Borse, an appropriate
                amendment to the Registration Statement, supplement to the
                Prospectus or amendment to the German Offer Documents so that
                the Registration Statement, the Prospectus or the German Offer
                Documents, whichever is applicable, as so amended or
                supplemented will not, in the light of the circumstances when it
                is so delivered, be misleading, or so that the Registration
                Statement, Prospectus or the German Offer Documents will comply
                with the Act or the Verkaufsprospektgesetz and Boersengesetz.

          (v)   The Company will make generally available to its security
                holders, as soon as it is practicable to do so, but in any event
                no later than 45 days after the end of the 12-month period
                beginning at the end of the fiscal quarter of the Company during
                which the effective date of the Registration Statement and the
                ADR Registration Statement occurs (or 90 days if such 12-month
                period coincides with the Company's year end), an earning
                statement (which need not be audited) in reasonable detail,
                covering such 12-month period, which earning statement shall
                satisfy the requirements of Section 11(a) of the Act and Rule
                158 of the Rules and Regulations and will advise you in writing
                when such statement has been so made available.

          (vi)  The Company will, for a period of five years from the Closing
                Date, deliver to the Representatives copies of annual reports
                and all other documents, reports and information furnished by
                the Company to its shareholders or filed with any securities
                exchange or the Nasdaq National Market pursuant to the
                requirements of such exchange or the Nasdaq National market or
                with the Commission pursuant to the Act or the Exchange Act or
                the Boersenzulassungsverordnung or the regulation of the New
                Market (Neuer Markt) of the Frankfurt Stock Exchange.

                                      -17-
<PAGE>

          (vii)  No offering, sale, short sale or other disposition of any
                 ordinary shares or any other capital stock of the Company or
                 other securities convertible into or exchangeable or
                 exercisable for ordinary shares or ADSs will be made for a
                 period of 90 days after the date of the Prospectus, directly or
                 indirectly, by the Company otherwise than hereunder or with the
                 prior written consent of Deutsche Bank AG, except that the
                 Company may, without such consent, issue ordinary shares or
                 ADSs upon the exercise of options outstanding on the date of
                 this Agreement and grant options pursuant to the Trintech Group
                 Limited Share Option 1990 Scheme, the Trintech Group Limited
                 Share Option 1997 Scheme, the Trintech Group Limited Directors
                 and Consultants Share Option Scheme, the 1999 Employee Savings
                 Related Share Option Scheme and the 1999 Employee Share
                 Purchase Plan (collectively, "Share Plans") and issue shares or
                 ADSs upon the exercise of any such option.

          (viii) The Company shall cause each director, executive officer and
                 Selling Shareholder to furnish to you, on or prior to the date
                 of this Agreement, a letter or letters, in form and substance
                 satisfactory to the Underwriters, pursuant to which each such
                 person shall agree not to offer, sell, sell short or otherwise
                 dispose of any ordinary shares or ADSs of the Company or other
                 capital stock of the Company, or any other securities
                 convertible into, exchangeable or exercisable for ordinary
                 shares owned by such person (or as to which such person has the
                 right to direct the disposition of) for a period of 90 days
                 after the date of the Prospectus, except with the prior written
                 consent of Deutsche Bank AG.

          (ix)   The Company shall apply the net proceeds of the sale of the
                 ADSs hereunder as set forth under the caption "Use of Proceeds"
                 in the Prospectus and under the caption "Verwendung des
                 Emissionserloses" in the German Offer Documents.

          (x)    The Company shall not invest, or otherwise use the net proceeds
                 received by the Company from the sale of the ADSs to the
                 Underwriters in such a manner as would require the Company or
                 the Subsidiary to register as an "investment company" under the
                 1940 Act.

          (xi)   The Company will maintain a transfer agent and, if necessary
                 under the jurisdiction of incorporation of the Company or if
                 required for the Nasdaq National Market designation, a
                 registrar for its ordinary shares and ADSs.

          (xii)  The Company will not take, directly or indirectly, any action
                 designated to cause or result in, or that has constituted or
                 might reasonably be expected to constitute, the stabilization
                 or manipulation of the price of any securities of the Company
                 to facilitate the sale or resale of ordinary shares or the
                 ADSs.

                                      -18-
<PAGE>

          (xiii) The Company will furnish to each of the Underwriters until the
                 end of the distribution period for the ADSs and for three
                 months thereafter, copies of the German Offer Documents in such
                 quantities as Deutsche Bank AG may from time to time reasonably
                 request, and, if at any time prior to the completion of the
                 initial distribution, or up to three months thereafter, of the
                 ADSs, any event shall have occurred as a result of which any
                 German Offer Document as then amended or supplemented would
                 include an untrue statement of material fact or omit to state
                 any material fact necessary to make the statements therein, in
                 the light of the circumstances under which they were made, not
                 misleading or, if for any other reason it shall be required
                 under applicable law during such period to amend or supplement
                 any German Offer Document, if during such period to amend or
                 supplement any German Offer Document, it will notify Deutsche
                 Bank AG promptly and confirm such notice in writing, and will
                 prepare and furnish to each of the Underwriters, without charge
                 to any of the Underwriters, as many copies as Deutsche Bank AG
                 may, from time to time, reasonably request of an amendment or
                 supplement to such German Offer Documents which will correct
                 such statement or omission or effect such compliance.

          (xiv)  The Company will notify Deutsche Bank AG, for the benefit of
                 all of the Underwriters, promptly of any material change
                 affecting any of the Company's representations, warranties,
                 agreements and indemnities contained herein at any time prior
                 to payment at the Closing Date, and will take such steps as may
                 be reasonably requested by the Underwriters to remedy and/or
                 make appropriate disclosure regarding the same.

          (xv)   The Company will take such action and file such information
                 from time to time on a timely basis as may be necessary to
                 list, and maintain the listing of the ADSs on the Regulated
                 Market/New Market of the Frankfurt Stock Exchange, and comply
                 with all obligations and requirements of the Regulated
                 Market/New Market of the Frankfurt Stock Exchange so as to
                 cause such listing to be maintained.

          (xvi)  The Company will not make or cause to be made, any press or
                 public announcement or statement likely to lead to the
                 publication of information concerning the offer of the ADSs, in
                 Germany or elsewhere, after the execution and delivery hereof
                 and prior to the Closing Date; provided, however, the foregoing
                                                --------  -------
                 shall not apply in relation to events or activities in the
                 ordinary course of business (other than in relation to the
                 offer), which were already in the public domain before the date
                 hereof, or in relation to announcements or statements which, in
                 the opinion of Deutsche Bank AG will not have or are not likely
                 to have an adverse effect on the offer of the ADSs. If an
                 announcement ("Mitteilung") is required to be made pursuant to
                 any applicable law, regulation or order, the Company may make
                 such announcement; provided, however, that the Company shall
                                    -----------------
                 provide Deutsche Bank AG with prior notice thereof

                                      -19-
<PAGE>

                  and consult with Deutsche Bank AG prior to the making of such
                  announcement to the extent practicable and legally
                  permissible.

          (xvii)  The Company will use its best efforts to ensure that it will
                  not become a PFIC and, if it becomes a PFIC, to comply with
                  any applicable reporting and other requirements of Subparts A,
                  B and C of Part VI of Subchapter P of the Code.

          (xviii) To the extent that, and for as long as, the laws of the
                  Republic of Ireland, Germany or the United States require any
                  permit or approval by, or exemption of, any local authority of
                  the transactions contemplated hereby to be legally permitted
                  and to remain effective, the Company will use commercially
                  reasonable best efforts to obtain and maintain each such
                  permit, approval or exemption valid and in full force and
                  effect.

          (xix)   To pay any and all stamp, transfer, withholding or other
                  similar taxes in connection with the execution and delivery of
                  this Agreement and delivery of the ADSs Shares that are sold
                  by the Company to the Underwriters.

     (b) Each of the Selling Shareholders covenants and agrees with the several
Underwriters that:

          (i)     No offering, sale or other disposition of any ordinary shares
                  or any other capital stock of the Company, including any
                  right, convertible, exchangeable or exercisable into ordinary
                  shares or ADSs, will be made for a period of 90 days after the
                  date of the Prospectus, directly or indirectly, by the Selling
                  Shareholders otherwise than hereunder or with the prior
                  written consent of Deutsche Bank AG.

          (ii)    In order to document the Underwriters' compliance with the
                  reporting and withholding provisions of the Tax Equity and
                  Fiscal Responsibility Act of 1982 and the Interest and
                  Dividend Tax Compliance Act of 1983 with respect to the
                  transactions herein contemplated, each of the Selling
                  Shareholders agrees to deliver to you prior to or at the
                  Option Closing Date a properly completed and executed U.S.
                  Treasury Department Form W-8 or W-9 (or other applicable form
                  or statement specified by Treasury Department regulations in
                  lieu thereof).

          (iii)   Such Selling Shareholders will not take, directly or
                  indirectly, any action designed to cause or result in, or that
                  has constituted or could reasonably be expected to constitute,
                  the stabilization or manipulation of the price of any
                  securities of the Company.

5.  COSTS AND EXPENSES.  The Company will pay all costs, expenses and fees
    ------------------
incident to the performance of the obligations of the Company under this
Agreement, including, without limiting the generality of the foregoing, the
following:  accounting fees of the Company; the fees and disbursements of
counsel for the Company; the cost of printing and delivering to, or as

                                      -20-
<PAGE>

requested by, the Underwriters copies of the Registration Statement, the ADR
Registration Statement Preliminary Prospectuses, the Prospectus, the German
Offer Documents, this Agreement, the Agreement Among Underwriters, the
Underwriters' internal Selling Memorandum, the Underwriters' Questionnaire, the
Invitation Letter, the Deposit Agreement and any supplements or amendments
thereto; the filing fees of the Commission; the filing fees, incident to
security any required review by the National Association of Securities Dealers,
Inc. (the "NASD") of the terms of the sale of the Shares; and the Listing Fee of
the Nasdaq Stock Market, Inc. To the extent, if at all, that the Selling
Shareholders engage special legal counsel to represent them in connection with
this offering, the fees and expenses of such counsel shall be borne by the
Selling Shareholders. Any transfer taxes (including, without limitation, Irish
stamp duty) imposed on the sale of the ADSs to the several Underwriters will be
paid by the Company with respect to the ordinary shares transferred by it and by
each Selling Shareholder with respect to the ordinary shares transferred by it.
The Company shall not, however, be required to pay for any of the Underwriters'
expenses (other than those incident to secure any required review by the NASD)
except that, if this Agreement shall not be consummated because the conditions
in Section 6 hereof are not satisfied, or because this Agreement is terminated
by the Representatives pursuant to Section 11(b)(i) hereof, or by reason of any
failure, refusal or inability on the part of the Company or the Selling
Shareholders to perform any undertaking or satisfy any condition of this
Agreement or to comply with any of the terms hereof on their part to be
performed, unless such failure to satisfy said condition or to comply with said
terms are due to the default or omission of any Underwriter, then the Company
shall reimburse the several Underwriters for reasonable out-of-pocket expenses,
including fees and disbursements of counsel, reasonably incurred in connection
with investigating, marketing and proposing to market the ADSs or in
contemplation of performing their obligations hereunder but the Company shall
not in any event be liable to any of the several Underwriters for damages on
account of loss of anticipated profits from the sale by them of the ADSs;
provided, however, that nothing in this Section shall make the Company liable
for any costs or expenses incurred exclusively in connection with the sale of
American Depositary Shares by any Selling Shareholder and not requested or
necessary for the performance by the Company of its obligations under this
Agreement and any such costs or expenses so incurred shall be paid by the
relevant Selling Shareholder.

6.  CONDITIONS AND OBLIGATIONS OF THE UNDERWRITERS.  The several obligations of
    ----------------------------------------------
the Underwriters to purchase the ADSs representing the Firm ADSs on the Closing
Date and the ADSs representing the Option ADSs, if any, on the Option Closing
Date are subject to the accuracy, as of the Closing Date or the Option Closing
Date, as the case may be, of the representations and warranties of the Company
and the Selling Shareholders contained herein, and to the performance by the
Company and the Selling Shareholders of their covenants and obligations
hereunder and to the following additional conditions:

     (a) The Registration Statement and the ADR Registration Statement and all
post-effective amendments thereto shall have become effective and any and all
filings required by Rule 424 and Rule 430A of the Rules and Regulations shall
have been made, and any request of the Commission for additional information (to
be included in the Registration Statement or otherwise) shall have been
disclosed to the Representatives and complied with to their reasonable
satisfaction.  No stop order suspending the effectiveness of the Registration
Statement or the ADR Registration Statement, as amended from time to time, shall
have been issued and no

                                      -21-
<PAGE>

proceedings for that purpose shall have been taken or, to the knowledge of the
Company and the Selling Shareholders, shall be contemplated by the Commission;
and no injunction, restraining order, or order of any nature by a federal or
state court of competent jurisdiction shall have been issued as of the Closing
Date or Option Closing Date, as the case may be, which would prevent the
issuance of the ADSs.

     (b) The Representatives shall have received on the Closing Date or the
Option Closing Date, as the case may be, the opinion of A&L Goodbody, Irish
counsel for the Company and the Selling Shareholders, dated the Closing Date or
the Option Closing Date, as the case may be, addressed to the Underwriters (and
stating that it may be relied upon by counsel to the Underwriters) and
incorporating the qualifications and assumptions set forth in the form of
opinion attached hereto to the effect that:

          (i)    The Company has been duly incorporated and is validly existing
                 as a company under the laws of the Republic of Ireland, is duly
                 qualified to do business in the Republic of Ireland, and has
                 the corporate power and authority necessary to own or hold its
                 properties and conduct the business in which it is engaged as
                 described in the Prospectus and the German Offer Documents.

          (ii)   Based solely upon a certificate to that effect from the
                 Secretary of the Company and an inspection of the share
                 register maintained by the Company, the Company has an
                 authorized capitalization as set forth in the Prospectus under
                 the caption "Capitalization", and all of the issued shares of
                 capital stock of the Company (including the ordinary shares
                 underlying the Shares being delivered on such Closing Date or
                 Option Closing Date) have been duly and validly authorized and
                 issued, are fully paid and not subject to any call and conform
                 to the description thereof contained in the Prospectus and the
                 German Offer Documents and all of the issued shares of capital
                 stock of the Subsidiaries are owned directly by the Company,
                 free and clear of all liens, encumbrances, equities or claims;

          (iii)  Except as described in the Prospectus and in the German Offer
                 Documents, there are no preemptive or other rights to subscribe
                 for or to purchase, nor any restriction upon the voting or
                 transfer of, any ordinary shares pursuant to the Company's
                 Articles of Association or Memorandum of Association;

          (iv)   The Company has the corporate power and authority to issue,
                 sell and deliver the ordinary shares or ADSs in accordance with
                 and upon the terms and conditions set forth in this Agreement.
                 The filing of the Registration Statement, the ADR Registration
                 Statement, the Prospectus and the German Offer Documents with
                 the Commission and, with the appropriate German authorities, to
                 the extent required, has been duly authorized by and on behalf
                 of the Company and has been duly executed in accordance with
                 Irish law; no further approval or authority of the

                                      -22-
<PAGE>

                 shareholders or the Board of Directors of the Company is
                 required for the issuance of the ordinary shares or ADSs;

          (v)    Other than as set forth in the Prospectus and in the German
                 Offer Documents and based solely on a certificate to that
                 effect from the Secretary of the Company and on searches
                 conducted in the central office of the Irish High Court, there
                 are no legal or governmental proceedings pending to which the
                 Company or any of its Subsidiaries is a party or of which any
                 property or assets of the Company or any of its Subsidiaries is
                 the subject which, if determined adversely to the Company or
                 any of its Subsidiaries, might have a Material Adverse Effect
                 and, no such proceedings are threatened or contemplated by
                 governmental authorities or threatened by others;

          (vi)   The statements in the Registration Statement, the Prospectus
                 and the German Offer Documents, insofar as they are
                 descriptions of contracts, agreements, or other legal
                 documents, are accurate insofar as such statements are
                 statements of Irish law.

          (vii)  The statements contained in the Prospectus, Registration
                 Statement and the German Offer Documents under the captions
                 "Risk Factors," "Dividend Policy," "Management's Discussion and
                 Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations,"
                 "Taxation -- Ireland" and "Indemnification of Directors and
                 Officers," and the corresponding sections in the German Offer
                 Documents insofar as they describe Irish statutes, rules and
                 regulations, constitute a fair summary thereof.

          (viii) The form of ADR for the ADSs, delivered on the Closing Date or
                 the Option Closing Date, as the case may be, are in due and
                 proper form under Irish law.

          (ix)   Upon issuance and delivery of the ADSs to be sold by the
                 Company pursuant to this Agreement and payment therefor, as
                 contemplated herein, insofar as concerns the laws of the
                 Republic of Ireland, the Underwriters will receive good, valid
                 and marketable title to the ADSs being sold by the Company
                 thereunder, free and clear of all liens, encumbrances, claims,
                 security interests, restrictions on transfer, shareholders'
                 agreements, voting trusts and other defects of title whatsoever
                 arising through the Company.

          (x)    The submission by the parties to the jurisdiction of any
                 federal or State court sitting in the State of New York would
                 be upheld by the Irish courts. In any proceedings taken in
                 Ireland for the enforcement of this Agreement, the choice of
                 the law of the State of New York as the governing law of this
                 Agreement would be upheld by the Irish courts unless it were
                 considered contrary to public policy, illegal or made in bad
                 faith. A judgment of the courts of the State of New York would
                 be

                                      -23-
<PAGE>

                 recognized and enforced by the courts of Ireland except that
                 to enforce a judgment given by United States court or State
                 court in the State of New York or county of New York and
                 Ireland, it would be necessary to obtain an order of the Irish
                 courts. Such order would be granted upon proper proof of the
                 United States or State court judgment and the merits of the
                 case would not be considered unless it were contended that the
                 foreign court did not have jurisdiction according to the laws
                 of Ireland, that the judgment of the United States or State
                 court had been obtained by fraud or was contrary to national
                 justice as understood in Irish law or was repugnant to Irish
                 public policy. Such judgment would have to be final and
                 conclusive, be for a definite sum of money and the procedural
                 rules of the United States or State court would have to have
                 been observed. These latter exclusions would extend to cover
                 the situation where the Company had not entered an appearance
                 before the United States or State court.

          (xi)   This Agreement, the Deposit Agreement, the Custody Agreement
                 and Power of Attorney have been duly authorized, and insofar as
                 Irish law governs the formalities for execution and delivery
                 thereof, executed and delivered by the Selling Shareholders
                 incorporated in Ireland, assuming this Agreement creates valid
                 and binding obligations of the parties under New York law, and
                 constitute valid and binding agreements of the Selling
                 Shareholders, enforceable in accordance with their respective
                 terms, except as enforcement (a) may be limited by bankruptcy,
                 insolvency, reorganization or other similar laws affecting
                 creditors' rights generally, and (b) is subject to general
                 principles of equity.

          (xii)  Immediately prior to the Closing Date or the Option Closing
                 Date, as the case may be, and based solely on a certificate to
                 that effect from the Secretary of the Company and an inspection
                 of the share register of the Company, the Selling Shareholders
                 were the registered owner of the Shares to be sold by the
                 Selling Shareholders under this Agreement, and, based solely on
                 a certificate to that effect from the Selling Shareholders of
                 the Company, such shares are free and clear of all liens,
                 encumbrances, equities or claims, except as provided in the
                 Custody Agreement and Power of Attorney and this Agreement, and
                 each of the Selling Shareholders has the power and authority to
                 sell, assign, transfer and deliver such Shares to be sold by
                 such Selling Shareholders hereunder.

          (xiii) This Agreement has been duly authorized and executed by the
                 Company and assuming this Agreement creates valid and binding
                 obligations of the parties under New York law, the laws of the
                 Republic or Ireland will not prevent this Agreement from being
                 the valid and binding obligation of the Company.

                                      -24-
<PAGE>

          (xiv)    The issuance and deposit with the Depositary of the ordinary
                   shares underlying the ADSs to be sold by the Company and the
                   Selling Shareholders under this Agreement, the sale and
                   delivery of such ADSs on the Closing Date or the Option
                   Closing Date, and the execution and delivery of this
                   Agreement and the Deposit Agreement and the consummation of
                   the transactions contemplated by such agreements do not and
                   will not conflict with or result in a breach of any of the
                   terms or provisions of, or constitute a default under, the
                   Memorandum or Articles of Association of the Company, and do
                   not and will not contravene any provision of the laws of the
                   Republic of Ireland, or to such counsel's knowledge, any
                   judgment or decree of any Republic of Ireland court in which
                   such counsel has represented the Company.

          (xv)     No approval, consent, order, authorization, or filing by or
                   with any Republic of Ireland regulatory, administrative or
                   other governmental body or agency is necessary in connection
                   with the issue of the ADSs or any of the Shares represented
                   thereby or the sale of the ADSs and the execution and
                   delivery of this Agreement and the Deposit Agreement and the
                   consummation of the transactions therein contemplated by the
                   Company and the Selling Shareholders except such as have been
                   specified in such opinion obtained or made, specifying the
                   same.

          (xvi)    Except as disclosed in the Prospectus, (x) no stamp or other
                   issue or transfer taxes or duties and no capital gains,
                   income, withholding or other taxes are payable to the
                   Republic of Ireland or any political subdivision or taxing
                   authority thereof or therein in connection with (A) the
                   deposit with the Custodian under the Custody Agreement of the
                   Shares by the Selling Shareholders, (B) the deposit with the
                   Depositary of the Shares by the Company and the Selling
                   Shareholders against the creation of ADSs and the issue of
                   the ADRs, (C) the issue of Shares by the Company or the issue
                   and delivery by or on behalf of the Company and the Selling
                   Shareholders of such ADSs to or for the respective accounts
                   of the Underwriters or (D) the sale and delivery by the
                   Underwriters of such ADSs to the initial purchasers thereof
                   and (y) any dividends and other distributions declared and
                   payable on the Shares may under Republic of Ireland laws and
                   regulations be paid to the Depositary in Irish pounds that
                   may be converted into foreign currency, including U.S.
                   dollars that may be freely transferred out of the Republic of
                   Ireland.

          (xvii)   The statements under the captions "Description of Share
                   Capital" and "Irish Exchange Control Regulation" in the
                   Prospectus, and in Items 14 and 15 in the Registration
                   Statement, insofar as such statements constitute a summary of
                   documents referred to therein governed by Republic of Ireland
                   law, are accurate summaries and fairly and correctly present
                   the information called for with respect to such documents and
                   matters.

                                      -25-
<PAGE>

          (xviii)  The Prospectus was, on or before the date of its publication,
                   duly delivered to the Registrar of Companies in the Republic
                   of Ireland for registration in accordance with Sections 47
                   and 51 of the Irish Companies Act having endorsed thereon, or
                   attached thereto, all such matters as are required by the
                   said Section 47 to be endorsed on or attached to it.

          (xix)    Such counsel is not presently representing the Company in any
                   legal proceedings which have been commenced in the courts of
                   the Republic of Ireland other than as specified in such
                   opinions.

     (c) The Representatives shall have received on the Closing Date or the
Option Closing Date, as the case may be, the opinion of Emmet, Marvin & Martin,
LLP, counsel for the Depositary, dated the Closing Date or the Option Closing
Date, as the case may be, addressed to the Underwriters to the effect that:

          (i)      the Deposit Agreement has been duly authorized, executed and
                   delivered by the Depositary and, assuming due authorization,
                   execution and delivery of the Deposit Agreement by the
                   Company and further assuming that the Deposit Agreement is a
                   valid and binding agreement of the Company, constitutes a
                   valid and legally binding obligation of the Depositary
                   enforceable in accordance with its terms, except as
                   enforcement thereof may be limited by bankruptcy, insolvency,
                   fraudulent transfer, reorganization, moratorium or similar
                   laws of general application relating to or affecting
                   creditors' rights and by general principles of equity;

          (ii)     upon the issuance by the Depositary of ADRs evidencing ADSs
                   against the deposit of ordinary shares in accordance with the
                   provisions of the Deposit Agreement (assuming such ordinary
                   shares were, at the time of such deposit, (a) duly authorized
                   and validly issued, fully paid and non-assessable and (b)
                   registered in compliance with the Act), such ADRs will be
                   duly and validly issued and will entitle the holder thereof
                   to the rights specified therein and in the Deposit Agreement;
                   and

          (iii)    the ADR Registration Statement has been declared effective
                   under the Act and, to the best of our knowledge, no stop
                   order suspending the effectiveness of the ADR Registration
                   Statement or any part thereof has been issued and no
                   proceedings for that purpose have been instituted or are
                   pending or contemplated under the Act, and the ADR
                   Registration Statement, and each amendment as of their
                   respective effective dates, complied as to form in all
                   material respects with the requirements of the Act and the
                   Rules and Regulations.

     (d) The Representative shall have received on the Closing Date or the
Option Closing Date, as the case may be, the opinion of Wilson Sonsini Goodrich
& Rosati P.C., U.S. counsel to the Company, addressed to the Underwriters and
dated the Closing Date or the Option Closing

                                      -26-
<PAGE>

Date, as the case may be, in form and substance reasonably satisfactory to the
Representatives, to the effect that:

          (i)    Trintech, Inc. (the "U.S. Subsidiary") has been duly
                 incorporated and is validly existing as a corporation in good
                 standing under the laws of the State of California, is duly
                 qualified to do business and is in good standing as a foreign
                 corporation in the United States where the lack of
                 qualification would have a Material Adverse Effect and has the
                 corporate power and authority necessary to own or hold its
                 properties and conduct its businesses as described in the
                 Prospectus and the German Offer Documents.

          (ii)   To such counsel's knowledge, all of the issued shares of
                 capital stock of the U.S. Subsidiary have been duly and validly
                 authorized and issued and are fully paid, nonassessable and are
                 owned by the Company.

          (iii)  To such counsel's knowledge without independent investigation,
                 there are no legal or governmental actions, suits or
                 proceedings pending to which the U.S. Subsidiary is a party or
                 of which any property of the U.S. Subsidiary is the subject
                 which, if determined adversely to the U.S. Subsidiary, would
                 reasonably be expected to have a Material Adverse Effect; and,
                 to such counsel's knowledge, no such proceedings are threatened
                 by United States governmental authorities against the U.S.
                 Subsidiary.

          (iv)   The execution and delivery of this Agreement by the Company,
                 and the consummation of the transactions contemplated hereby
                 will not conflict with or result in any violation of the
                 certificate of incorporation or by-laws of the U.S. Subsidiary.

          (v)    The Registration Statement has become effective under the Act,
                 any required filing of the Prospectus was filed with the
                 Commission has been made in the manner and within the time
                 period required by Rule 424(b) and, to such counsel's
                 knowledge, no stop order suspending the effectiveness of the
                 Registration Statement has been issued and, no proceeding for
                 that purpose is pending or threatened by the Commission.

          (vi)   The Registration Statement, the Prospectus and any further
                 amendments or supplements thereto made by the Company prior to
                 the Closing Date or Option Closing Date, as the case may be,
                 comply as to form in all material respects with the
                 requirements of the Act and the Rules and Regulations.

          (vii)  The statements contained in the Prospectus under the caption
                 "Taxation -- Our Taxation -- United States Taxation;" "--
                 Taxation of Dividends -- United States Taxation;" and "-- U.S.
                 Information Reporting and Backup Withholding;" insofar as they
                 refer to statements of law of the

                                      -27-
<PAGE>

                 United States or legal conclusions thereunder, present fairly
                 in all material respects the information described therein.

          (viii) To such counsel's knowledge, there are no contracts or other
                 documents which are required to be filed as exhibits to the
                 Registration Statement or ADR Registration Statement by the Act
                 or by the Rules and Regulations which have not been filed as
                 exhibits as required.

          (ix)   No consent, approval, authorization or order of, or filing or
                 registration with, any court or governmental agency of the
                 United States or, to such counsel's knowledge, any United
                 States jurisdiction thereof, is required for the execution and
                 delivery of this Agreement by the Company or the consummation
                 of the transactions contemplated hereby except (a) compliance
                 with Blue Sky and state securities laws applicable to the
                 offering and sale of the Shares contemplated by this Agreement
                 and the clearance of the underwriting arrangements relating to
                 such offering and sale by the NASD and (b) for the order of the
                 Commission declaring the Registration Statement effective.

          (x)    Assuming conduct of their business as described in the
                 Registration Statement and the Prospectus, neither the Company
                 nor any of the Subsidiaries is, and assuming the application of
                 the net proceeds from the sale of the Shares as described in
                 the Prospectus under the caption "Use of Proceeds" will be,
                 upon consummation of the transactions contemplated by this
                 Agreement, required to register as an "investment company" as
                 such term is defined under the 1940 Act.

          (xi)   The statements under the caption "Description of American
                 Depositary Receipts" in the Prospectus, insofar as such
                 statements constitute a summary of the terms of the ADSs and
                 the ADRs, fairly and accurately present in all material
                 respects the information called for under the Rules and
                 Regulations with respect to the terms of the ADSs and the ADRs.
                 The statements under the caption "Risk Factors - Future Sales
                 by Existing Shareholders Could Depress the Market Price of Our
                 ADSs," in the Prospectus, and the statements under Item 15 of
                 Part II of the Registration Statement, insofar as they refer to
                 statements of law of the United States or legal conclusions
                 thereunder, present fairly in all material respects the
                 information described therein.

In addition, such counsel shall state that they have participated in conferences
with officers and other representatives of the Company, German and Irish counsel
for the Company, representatives of the independent accountants of the Company,
representatives of the Underwriters and representatives of the German and United
States counsel for the Underwriters, at which the contents of the Registration
Statement, the ADR Registration Statement and the Prospectus and related matters
were discussed and, although such counsel need not pass upon, and need not
assume any responsibility for, the accuracy, completeness or fairness of the
statements contained in the Registration Statement, the ADR Registration
Statement or the

                                      -28-
<PAGE>

Prospectus (except for those referred to in the opinion in subsection (vii)
above) and has made no independent check or verification thereof, such counsel
shall state that on the basis of the foregoing, no facts have come to such
counsel's attention that has led them to believe that the Registration Statement
or the ADR Registration Statement, as of the date hereof, contained an untrue
statement of a material fact or omitted to state any material fact required to
be stated therein or necessary in order to make the statements therein not
misleading or that the Prospectus, as of its date and as of the Closing Date or
the Option Closing Date, as the case may be, contained or contains an untrue
statement of a material fact or omitted or omits to state a material fact
necessary in order to make the statements therein, in light of the circumstances
under which they were made, not misleading, except that such counsel need
express comment or belief with respect to the financial statements and
supporting schedules and other financial and statistical data included therein
or excluded or derived therefrom or the exhibits to the Registration Statement.

     (e) The Representatives shall have received from Oppenhoff & Radler, German
counsel to the Company, a translation certificate and opinion dated the Closing
Date (i) confirming in all material respects fair translation of certain
portions of the US Prospectus (excluding in particular the F-Pages and the MD&A
and all financial tables), and (ii) relating to the due registration and
existence as a limited liability company of Trintech GMBH, the German subsidiary
of the Company, the approval (Billigung) of the German Prospectus and the
approval of listing (Zulassung) of the ADSs of the Company to the regulated
market of the Frankfurt Stock Exchange.

     (f) The Representatives shall have received on the Closing Date a
certificate regarding intellectual property in a form reasonably satisfactory to
the Representatives.

     (g) The Representatives shall have received from Brobeck Hale & Dorr
International, counsel for the Underwriters, an opinion dated the Closing Date
or the Option Closing Date, as the case may be that, substantially to the effect
specified in subparagraphs (vi), (vii) and (x) of Paragraph (c) of this Section
6.  In rendering such opinion, Brobeck Hale & Dorr International may rely as to
all matters governed other than by the laws of the State of Delaware or U.S.
federal laws on the opinions of counsel referred to in Paragraph (b) of this
Section 6.  In addition to the matters set forth above, such opinion shall also
include a statement to the effect that nothing has come to the attention of such
counsel which leads them to believe that (i) the Registration Statement or any
amendment thereto, as of the time it became effective under the Act (but after
giving effect to any modifications incorporated therein pursuant to Rule 430A
under the Act) and as of the Closing Date or the Option Closing Date, as the
case may be, contained an untrue statement of a material fact or omitted to
state a material fact required to be stated therein or necessary to make the
statements therein not misleading, and (ii) the Prospectus, or any supplement
thereto, on the date it was filed pursuant to the Rules and Regulations and as
of the Closing Date or the Option Closing Date, as the case may be, contained an
untrue statement of a material fact or omitted to state a material fact,
necessary in order to make the statements therein, in the light of the
circumstances under which they were made, not misleading (except that such
counsel need express no view as to financial statements and other financial and
statistical information included therein).  With respect to such statement,
Brobeck Hale & Dorr International may state that their belief is based upon the
procedures set forth therein, but is without independent check and verification.

                                      -29-
<PAGE>

     (h) The Representatives shall have received, on each of the date of this
Agreement and the Closing Date and the Option Closing Date, a letter dated the
date of delivery thereof in form and substance satisfactory to you, of Ernst &
Young confirming that they are independent accountants within the meaning of the
Act and the applicable published Rules and Regulations thereunder and stating
that in their opinion the financial statements examined by them and included in
the Registration Statement comply as to form in all material respects with the
applicable accounting requirements of the Act and the related published Rules
and Regulations and disclosing any deviations, if any, from such accounting
requirements, and containing such other statements and information as is
ordinarily included in accountants' "comfort letters" to Underwriters with
respect to the financial statements and certain financial information contained
in the Registration Statement and Prospectus.

     (i) The Representatives shall have received on the Closing Date or the
Option Closing Date, as the case may be, a certificate or certificates furnished
to you, on behalf of the Company, of the Chief Executive Officer and the
Executive Chairman of the Company to the effect that, as of the Closing Date or
the Option Closing Date, as the case may be, as follows:

          (i)   The Registration Statement, the ADR Registration Statement and
                the German Offer Documents have become effective under the Act
                and the applicable German law, as applicable, and no stop order
                suspending the effectiveness of the Registration Statement, the
                ADR Registration Statement or the German Offer Documents has
                been issued, and no proceedings for such purpose have been taken
                or are, to his knowledge, contemplated by the Commission or the
                Deutsche Borse;

          (ii)  He does not know of any litigation instituted or threatened
                against the Company or any of its Subsidiaries of a character
                required to be disclosed in the Registration Statement or the
                German Offer Documents which is not so disclosed; he does not
                know of any material contract required to be filed as an exhibit
                to the Registration Statement or the German Offer Documents
                which is not so filed; and the representations and warranties of
                the Company contained in Section 1 hereof are true and correct
                as of the Closing Date or the Option Closing Date, as the case
                may be;

          (iii) He has carefully examined the Registration Statement, the
                Prospectus and the German Offer Documents and, to his knowledge,
                as of the effective date of the Registration Statement and the
                ADR Registration Statement, the statements contained in the
                Registration Statement, the ADR Registration Statement, the
                Prospectus and the German Offer Documents, were true and
                correct, and such Registration Statement, ADR Registration
                Statement, Prospectus and the German Offer Documents did not
                omit to state a material fact required to be stated therein or
                necessary in order to make the statements therein not misleading
                and, to his knowledge, since the effective date of the
                Registration Statement and the ADR Registration Statement no
                event has occurred which should have been set forth in a
                supplement to or an

                                      -30-
<PAGE>

                amendment of the Prospectus and the German Offer Documents which
                has not been so set forth in such supplement or amendment; and

          (iv)  Since the respective dates as of which information is given in
                the Registration Statement, the ADR Registration Statement,
                Prospectus and the German Offer Documents, to his knowledge
                there has not been any material adverse change or any
                development involving a material prospective adverse change in
                or affecting the condition, financial or otherwise, of the
                Company and the Subsidiaries taken as a whole or the earnings,
                business affairs, management or business prospects of the
                Company and the Subsidiaries taken as a whole, whether or not
                arising in the ordinary course of business.

     (j) The Company and the Selling Shareholders shall have furnished to the
Representatives such further certificates and documents confirming the
representations and warranties contained herein and related matters as the
Representatives may reasonably have requested.

     (k) A Nasdaq National Market Listing Application covering the Firm ADSs and
Option ADSs has been approved by The Nasdaq Stock Market, Inc., and the listing
of the Firm ADSs and the Option ADSs has been approved by the Frankfurt Stock
Exchange for trading on the Neuer Market.

     (l) The Company shall have delivered to you written agreements (the "Lockup
Agreements") described in Section 4(a)(viii).

     (m) All filings required to have been made pursuant to Rules 424 or 430A
under the Act have been made.

The opinions and certificates mentioned in this Agreement shall be deemed to be
in compliance with the provisions hereof only if they are in all material
respects satisfactory to the Representatives and to Brobeck Hale & Dorr
International counsel for the Underwriters.

If any of the conditions hereinabove provided for in this Section 6 shall not
have been fulfilled when and as required by this Agreement to be fulfilled, the
obligations of the Underwriters hereunder may be terminated by the
Representatives by notifying the Company and the Selling Shareholders of such
termination in writing or by telegram at or prior to the Closing Date or the
Option Closing Date, as the case may be.

In such event, the Selling Shareholders, the Company and the Underwriters shall
not be under any obligation to each other (except to the extent provided in
Sections 5 and 8 hereof).

7.  CONDITIONS OF THE OBLIGATIONS OF THE SELLERS.  The obligations of the
    --------------------------------------------
Sellers to sell and deliver the portion of the Shares required to be delivered
as and when specified in this Agreement are subject to the conditions that at
the Closing Date or the Option Closing Date, as the case may be, no stop order
suspending the effectiveness of the Registration Statement or the ADR
Registration Statement shall have been issued and in effect or proceedings
therefor initiated or threatened.

                                      -31-
<PAGE>

8.   INDEMNIFICATION.
     ---------------

     (a) The Company agrees to indemnify and hold harmless each Underwriter and
each person, if any, who controls any Underwriter within the meaning of the Act
against any losses, claims, damages or liabilities to which such Underwriter or
such controlling person may become subject under the Act or otherwise, insofar
as such losses, claims, damages or liabilities (or actions or proceedings in
respect thereof) arise out of or are based upon (i) any untrue statement or
alleged untrue statement of any material fact contained  in the Registration
Statement, the ADR Registration Statement, any Preliminary Prospectus, the
Prospectus, the German Offer Documents, or any amendment or supplement thereto,
or (ii) the omission or alleged omission to state therein a material fact
required to be stated therein or necessary to make the statements therein not
misleading, or (iii) any alleged act or failure to act by any Underwriter in
connection with, or relating in any manner to, the shares or the offering
contemplated hereby, and which is included as part of or referred to in any
loss, claim, damage, liability or action arising out of or based upon matters
covered by clause (i) or (ii) above (provided, that the Company shall not be
liable under this clause (ii) to the extent that it is determined in a final
judgment by a court of competent jurisdiction that such loss, claim, damage,
liability or action resulted directly from any such acts or failures to act
undertaken or omitted to be taken by such Underwriters through its gross
negligence or willful misconduct); and will reimburse each Underwriter and each
such controlling person within thirty (30) days of demand for such reimbursement
for any legal or other expenses reasonably incurred by such Underwriter or such
controlling person in connection with investigating or defending any such loss,
claim, damage or liability, action or proceeding and expenses reasonably
incurred in responding to a subpoena or governmental inquiry whether or not such
Underwriter or controlling person is a party to any action or proceeding,
provided, however, that the Company will not be liable in any such case to the
extent that any such loss, claim, damage or liability arises out of or is based
upon an untrue statement or alleged untrue statement, or omission or alleged
omission made in the Registration Statement, the ADR Registration Statement, any
Preliminary Prospectus, the Prospectus, the German Offer Documents, or such
amendment or supplement, in reliance upon and in conformity with written
information furnished to the Company by or through the Representatives
specifically for use in the preparation thereof; and provided further that the
Company will not be liable to any Underwriter, the directors, officers,
employees or agents of such Underwriter or any person controlling such
Underwriter with respect to any loss, claim, or liability (or actions or
proceedings in respect thereof) arising out of or based on any untrue statement
or alleged untrue statement or omission or alleged omission to state a material
fact in a Preliminary Prospectus or the German Preliminary Sales Prospectus
which is corrected in the Prospectus or the German Admission Prospectus if the
person asserting any such loss, claim, damage or liability purchased Shares from
such Underwriter but was not sent or given a copy of the Prospectus or the
German Admission Prospectus at or prior to the written confirmation of the sale
of such Shares to such person, provided the Company has complied with the
provisions of Section 4(a)(iii).  This indemnity agreement will be in addition
to any liability which the Company may otherwise have.

     (b) Each Selling Shareholder, severally and not jointly, agrees to
indemnify and hold harmless each Underwriter and each person, if any, who
controls any Underwriter within the meaning of the Act against any losses,
claims, damages or liabilities to which such Underwriter or such controlling
person may become subject under the Act or otherwise, insofar as such losses,
claims, damages or liabilities (or actions or proceedings in respect thereof)
arise out of or

                                      -32-
<PAGE>

are based upon any untrue statement or alleged untrue statement of any material
fact contained in the Registration Statement, the ADR Registration Statement,
any Preliminary Prospectus, the Prospectus, the German Offer Documents or any
amendment or supplement thereto, or arise out of or are based upon the omission
or the alleged omission to state therein a material fact required to be stated
therein or necessary to make the statements therein not misleading in the light
of the circumstances under which they were made, and will reimburse within
thirty (30) days of demand any legal or other expenses reasonably incurred by
such Underwriter or such controlling person in connection with investigating or
defending any such loss, claim, damage, liability, action or proceeding;
provided, however, that each Selling Shareholder will be liable in each case to
the extent, but only to the extent, that such untrue statement or alleged untrue
statement or omission or alleged omission has been made in the Registration
Statement, the ADR Registration Statement, any Preliminary Prospectus, the
Prospectus, the German Offer Documents or such amendment or supplement, in
reliance upon and in conformity with written information furnished by such
Selling Shareholder specifically for use in the preparation of the sections set
forth in Section 13 of this Agreement; and provided further that such Selling
Shareholder will not be liable to any Underwriter, the directors, officers,
employees or agents of such Underwriter or any person controlling such
Underwriter with respect to any loss, claim, or liability (or actions or
proceedings in respect thereof) arising out of or based on any untrue statement
or alleged untrue statement or omission or alleged omission to state a material
fact in a Preliminary Prospectus or the German Preliminary Sales Prospectus
which is corrected in the Prospectus or the German Admission Prospectus if the
person asserting any such loss, claim, damage or liability purchased Shares from
such Underwriter but was not sent or given a copy of the Prospectus or the
German Admission Prospectus at or prior to the written confirmation of the sale
of such Shares to such person, provided the Company has complied with the
provisions of Section 4(a)(iii). This indemnity agreement will be in addition to
any liability which such Selling Shareholder may otherwise have.

     (c) Each Underwriter, severally and not jointly, will indemnify and hold
harmless the Company, each of its directors, each of its officers who have
signed the Registration Statement, and the Selling Shareholders and each person,
if any, who controls the Company or the Selling Shareholders within the meaning
of the Act, against any losses, claims, damages or liabilities to which the
Company or any such director, officer, Selling Shareholder or controlling person
may become subject under the Act or otherwise, insofar as such losses, claims,
damages or liabilities (or actions or proceedings in respect thereof) arise out
of or are based upon any untrue statement or alleged untrue statement of any
material fact contained in the Registration Statement, the ADR Registration
Statement, any Preliminary Prospectus, the Prospectus, the German Offer
Documents or any amendment or supplement thereto, or arise out of or are based
upon the omission or the alleged omission to state therein a material fact
required to be stated therein or necessary to make the statements therein not
misleading in the light of the circumstances under which they were made, and
will reimburse within thirty (30) days of demand any legal or other expenses
reasonably incurred by the Company or any such director, officer, Selling
Shareholder or controlling person in connection with investigating or defending
any such loss, claim, damage, liability, action or proceeding; provided,
however, that each Underwriter will be liable in each case to the extent, but
only to the extent, that such untrue statement or alleged untrue statement or
omission or alleged omission has been made in the Registration Statement, the
ADR Registration Statement, any Preliminary Prospectus, the Prospectus, the
German Offer Documents or such amendment or supplement, in reliance upon and in
conformity with written

                                      -33-
<PAGE>

information furnished to the Company by or through the Representatives
specifically for use in the preparation of the sections set forth in Section 13
of this Agreement. This indemnity agreement will be in addition to any liability
which such Underwriter may otherwise have.

     (d) In case any proceeding (including any governmental investigation) shall
be instituted involving any person in respect of which indemnity may be sought
pursuant to this Section 8, such person (the "indemnified party") shall promptly
notify the person against whom such indemnity may be sought (the "indemnifying
party") in writing.  No indemnification provided for in Section 8(a), (b) or (c)
shall be available to any party who shall fail to give notice as provided in
this Section 8(d) if the party to whom notice was not given was unaware of the
proceeding to which such notice would have related and was materially prejudiced
by the failure to give such notice, but the failure to give such notice shall
not relieve the indemnifying party or parties from any liability which it or
they may have to the indemnified party for contribution or otherwise than on
account of the provisions of Section 8(a), (b) or (c).  In case any such
proceeding shall be brought against any indemnified party and it shall notify
the indemnifying party of the commencement thereof, the indemnifying party shall
be entitled to participate therein and, to the extent that it shall wish,
jointly with any other indemnifying party similarly notified, to assume the
defense thereof, with counsel satisfactory to such indemnified party and shall
pay as incurred the fees and disbursements of such counsel related to such
proceeding.  In any such proceeding, any indemnified party shall have the right
to retain its own counsel at its own expense.  Notwithstanding the foregoing,
the indemnifying party shall pay as incurred the fees and expenses of the
counsel retained by the indemnified party in the event (i) the indemnifying
party and the indemnified party shall have mutually agreed to the retention of
such counsel or (ii) the named parties to any such proceeding (including any
impleaded parties) include both the indemnifying party and the indemnified party
and representation of both parties by the same counsel would be inappropriate
due to actual or potential differing interests between them.  It is understood
that the indemnifying party shall not, in connection with any proceeding or
related proceedings in the same jurisdiction, be liable for the reasonable fees
and expenses of more than one separate firm for all such indemnified parties.
Such firm shall be designated in writing by you in the case of parties
indemnified pursuant to Section 8(a) or (b) and by the Company in the case of
parties indemnified pursuant to Section 8(c).  The indemnifying party shall not
be liable for any settlement of any proceeding effected without its written
consent but if settled with such consent or if there be a final judgment for the
plaintiff, the indemnifying party agrees to indemnify the indemnified party from
and against any loss or liability by reason of such settlement or judgment.  In
addition, the indemnifying party hereunder will not, without the prior written
consent of the indemnified party hereunder, settle or compromise or consent to
the entry of any judgment in any pending or threatened claim, action or
proceeding of which indemnification may be sought hereunder (whether or not any
indemnified party is an actual or potential party to such claim, action or
proceeding) unless such settlement, compromise or consent includes an
unconditional release of each indemnified party from all liability arising out
of such claim, action or proceeding.

     (e) If the indemnification provided for in this Section 8 is unavailable to
or insufficient to hold harmless any indemnified party under Section 8(a), (b)
or (c) above in respect of any losses, claims, damages or liabilities (or
actions or proceedings in respect thereof) referred to therein, then each
indemnifying party shall contribute to the amount paid or payable by such
indemnified party as a result of such losses, claims, damages or liabilities (or
actions or

                                      -34-
<PAGE>

proceedings in respect thereof) in such proportion as is appropriate to reflect
the relative benefits received by the Company, the Selling Shareholders and the
Underwriters from the offering of the Shares. If, however, the allocation
provided by the immediately preceding sentence is not permitted by applicable
law then each indemnifying party shall contribute to such amount paid or payable
by such indemnified party in such proportion as is appropriate to reflect not
only such relative benefits but also the relative fault of the Company, the
Selling Shareholders and the Underwriters in connection with the statements or
omissions which resulted in such losses, claims, damages or liabilities (or
actions or proceedings in respect thereof), as well as any other relevant
equitable considerations. The relative benefits received by the Company, the
Selling Shareholders and the Underwriters shall be deemed to be in the same
proportion as (i) the total net proceeds from the offering (before deducting
expenses) received by the Company, (ii) the total proceeds from the offering
(before deducting expenses) received by the Selling Shareholders, and (iii) the
total underwriting discounts and commissions received by the Underwriters,
respectively, in each case as set forth in the table on the cover page of the
Prospectus and in the German Offer Documents. The relative fault shall be
determined by reference to, among other things, whether the untrue or alleged
untrue statement of a material fact or the omission or alleged omission to state
a material fact relates to information supplied by the Company, the Selling
Shareholders or the Underwriters and the parties' relative intent, knowledge,
access to information and opportunity to correct to prevent such statement or
omission.

The Company, the Selling Shareholders and the Underwriters agree that it would
not be just and equitable if contributions pursuant to this Section 8(e) were
determined by pro rata allocation (even if the Underwriters were treated as one
entity for such purpose) or by any other method of allocation which does not
take account of the equitable considerations referred to above in this Section
8(e).  The amount paid or payable by an indemnified party as a result of the
losses, claims, damages or liabilities (or actions or proceedings in respect
thereof) referred to above in this Section 8(e) shall be deemed to include any
legal or other expenses reasonably incurred by such indemnified party in
connection with investigating or defending any such action or claim.
Notwithstanding the provisions of this subsection (e), (i) no Underwriter shall
be required to contribute any amount in excess of the underwriting discount and
commissions applicable to the Shares purchased by such Underwriter, (ii) the
Selling Shareholders shall not be required to contribute an amount in excess of
the net proceeds of the offering received by the Selling Shareholder, and (iii)
no person guilty of fraudulent misrepresentation (within the meaning of Section
11(f) of the Act) shall be entitled to contribution from any person who was not
guilty of such fraudulent misrepresentation.  The Underwriters' obligations in
this Section 8(e) to contribute are several in proportion to their respective
underwriting obligations and not joint.  The Selling Shareholders' obligations
in this Section 8(e) to contribute are several in proportion to their respective
number of Option ADSs sold and not joint.

     (f) In any proceeding relating to the Registration Statement, the ADR
Registration Statement, any Preliminary Prospectus, the Prospectus, the German
Offer Documents or any supplement or amendment thereto, each party against whom
contribution may be sought under this Section 8 hereby consents to the
jurisdiction of any court having jurisdiction over any other contributing party,
agrees that process issuing from such court may be served upon him or it by any
other contributing party and consents to the service of such process and agrees
that any other

                                      -35-
<PAGE>

contributing party may join him or it as an additional defendant in any such
proceeding in which such other contributing party is a party.

     (g) Notwithstanding anything else to the contrary in this Section 8 or
elsewhere in this Agreement, the aggregate liability of the Selling Shareholder
under this Section 8 shall not exceed the lesser of (i) that portion of the
total losses, claims, damages or liabilities for which indemnification is to be
made hereunder (including legal and other expenses) that is equal to the
proportion of the number of Shares sold hereunder by the Selling Shareholder to
the total number of Shares sold hereunder by the Company and all of the Selling
Shareholder; and (ii) the amount equal to the proceeds from the sale of the
Shares sold hereunder by the Selling Shareholder net of underwriting discounts
and commissions paid with respect thereto.

9.  DEFAULT BY UNDERWRITERS.  If on the Closing Date or the Option Closing Date,
    -----------------------
as the case may be, any Underwriter shall fail to purchase and pay for the
portion of the Shares which such Underwriter has agreed to purchase and pay for
on such date (otherwise than by reason of any default on the part of the Company
or the Selling Shareholders), you, as Representatives of the Underwriters, shall
use your best efforts to procure within 36 hours thereafter one or more of the
other Underwriters, or any others, to purchase from the Company such amounts as
may be agreed upon and upon the terms set forth herein, the Firm ADSs or Option
ADSs, as the case may be, which the defaulting Underwriter or Underwriters
failed to purchase.  If during such 36 hours you, as such Representatives, shall
not have procured such other Underwriters, or any others, to purchase the Firm
ADSs or Option ADSs, as the case may be, agreed to be purchased by the
defaulting Underwriter or Underwriters, then (a) if the aggregate number of
shares with respect to which such default shall occur does not exceed 10% of the
Firm ADSs or Option ADSs, as the case may be, covered hereby, the other
Underwriters shall be obligated, severally, in proportion to the respective
numbers of Firm ADSs or Option ADSs, as the case may be, which they are
obligated to purchase hereunder, to purchase the Firm ADSs or Option ADSs, as
the case may be, which they are obligated to purchase hereunder, to purchase the
Firm ADSS or Option ADSs, as the case may be, which such defaulting Underwriter
or Underwriters failed to purchase, or (b) if the aggregate number of shares of
Firm ADSs or Option ADSs, as the case may be, with respect to which such default
shall occur exceeds 10% of the Firm ADSs or Option ADSs, as the case may be,
covered hereby, the Company or you as the Representatives of the Underwriters
will have the right, by written notice given within the next 36-hour period to
the parties to this Agreement, to terminate this Agreement without liability on
the part of the nondefaulting Underwriters or of the Company or of the Selling
Shareholder except to the extent provided in Section 8 hereof.  In the event of
a default by any Underwriter or Underwriters, as set forth in this Section 9,
the Closing Date or Option Closing Date, as the case may be, may be postponed
for such period, not exceeding seven days, as you, as Representatives, may
determine in order that the required changes in the Registration Statement or in
the Prospectus or in any other documents or arrangements may be effected.  The
term "Underwriter" includes any person substituted for a defaulting Underwriter.
Any action taken under this Section 9 shall not relieve any defaulting
Underwriter from liability in respect of any default of such Underwriter under
this Agreement.

10.  NOTICES.  All communications hereunder shall be in writing and, except as
     -------
otherwise provided herein, will be mailed, delivered, telegraphed or sent by
facsimile and confirmed as follows:  if to the Underwriters, to Deutsche Bank
AG, Taunusamlage 12, D-60325, Frankfurt

                                      -36-
<PAGE>

am Main; Attention: Doug Howland (facsimile: 011-44-173-933-7463); if to the
Company or the Selling Shareholders to Trintech Group PLC, South County Business
Park, Leopardstown, Dublin 18, Ireland, Attention: John F. McGuire (facsimile:
353-1-207-4000), with a copy to Steven V. Bernard, Esq., Wilson Sonsini Goodrich
& Rosati P.C., 650 Page Mill Road, Palo Alto, California 94304-1050 (facsimile:
650-493-6811).

11.  TERMINATION.  This Agreement may be terminated by you by notice to the
     -----------
Company and the Selling Shareholders as follows:

     (a) at any time prior to the earlier of (i) 11:30 a.m. on the first
business day following the date of this Agreement or (ii) the time the ADSs are
released by you for sale by notice to the Underwriters.

     (b) at any time after the date hereof if any of the following has occurred:
(i) since the respective dates as of which information is given in the
Registration Statement, the ADR Registration Statement, the Prospectus and the
German Offer Documents, any material adverse change or any development involving
a prospective material adverse change in or affecting the condition, financial
or otherwise, of the Company and its Subsidiaries taken as a whole or the
earnings, business affairs, management or business prospects of the Company and
its Subsidiaries taken as a whole, whether or not arising in the ordinary course
of business, (ii) any outbreak or escalation of hostilities or declaration of
war or national emergency or other national or international calamity or crisis
or change in economic or political conditions either in the United States, the
Republic of Ireland or Germany if the effect of such outbreak, escalation,
declaration, emergency, calamity, crisis or change in the financial markets of
the United States, Germany or elsewhere would, in your reasonable judgment, make
the offering or delivery of the ADSs impracticable or inadvisable, (iii)
suspension of trading in securities on the New York Stock Exchange, the American
Stock Exchange, the Nasdaq National Market or the Frankfurt Stock Exchange, or
limitation on prices (other than limitations on hours or numbers of days of
trading and other than suspensions relating to information systems failures) for
securities on any such Exchange or Market, (iv) the enactment, publication,
decree or other promulgation of any statute, regulation, rule or order of any
court or other governmental authority which in your opinion materially and
adversely affects or will materially and adversely affect the business or
operations of the Company, (v) declaration of a banking moratorium by the
Republic of Ireland, the United States, Germany or New York State authorities,
or (vi) the taking of any action by any governmental body or agency in respect
of its monetary or fiscal affairs which in your reasonable opinion has a
material adverse effect on the securities markets in the United States or
Germany, or

     (c) as provided in Sections 6 and 9 of this Agreement.

12.  SUCCESSORS.  This Agreement has been and is made solely for the benefit of
     ----------
the Underwriters, the Company and the Selling Shareholders and their respective
successors, executors, administrators, heirs and assigns, and the officers,
directors and controlling persons referred to herein, and no other person will
have any right or obligation hereunder.  No purchaser of any of the ADSs from
any Underwriter shall be deemed a successor or assign merely because of such
purchase.

                                      -37-
<PAGE>

13.  INFORMATION PROVIDED BY UNDERWRITERS.  The Company, the Selling
     ------------------------------------
Shareholders and the Underwriters acknowledge and agree that the only
information furnished or to be furnished by any Underwriter to the Company for
inclusion in the Prospectus or the Registration Statement consists of the
information set forth in the last paragraph on the front cover page of the
Prospectus (for both the United States and international offerings) and the
German Offer Documents (insofar as such information relates to the
Underwriters), information provided in connection with Item 502(d) of Regulation
S-K under the Act, information regarding the names of the Underwriters and the
number of ADSs to be purchased by each Underwriter, all information contained in
the paragraph containing the concession figure appearing under the caption
"Underwriting" in the Prospectus (for the U.S. offering), all information
contained in the paragraph describing the determination and publication of the
offering price appearing under the caption "Underwriting" in the Prospectus (for
the international offering), or "bernahme" in the German Offer Documents, the
information contained in the last four paragraphs under the caption
"Underwriting" in the Prospectus (for the U.S. offering), and the information
contained in the last seven paragraphs under the caption "Underwriting" in the
Prospectus (for the international offering) and "bernahme" in the German Offer
Documents.

14.  MISCELLANEOUS.  The reimbursement, indemnification and contribution
     -------------
agreements contained in this Agreement and the representations, warranties and
covenants in this Agreement shall remain in full force and effect regardless of
(a) any termination of this Agreement, (b) any investigation made by or on
behalf of any Underwriter or controlling person thereof, or by or on behalf of
the Company or its directors or officers and (c) delivery of and payment for the
Shares under this Agreement.  The other covenants of the Company in this
Agreement shall remain in full force and effect regardless of (x) any
investigation made by or on behalf of any Underwriter or controlling person
thereof and (y) delivery of and payment for the Shares under this Agreement.

This Agreement may be executed in two or more counterparts, each of which shall
be deemed an original, but all of which together shall constitute one and the
same instrument.

This Agreement shall be governed by, and construed in accordance with, the laws
of the State of New York (without regard to the choice of law provisions
thereof).

The Company and the Selling Shareholders hereby irrevocably agree that any legal
action, suit, or proceedings against any of them with respect to any of their
obligations, liabilities or any other matter under or arising out of or in
connection with this Agreement may be brought in any state or federal court in
New York and, by execution and delivery of this Agreement, the Company and the
Selling Shareholders hereby irrevocably accept and submit to the non-exclusive
jurisdiction of each of the aforesaid courts in personam generally and
unconditionally with respect to any such action, suit, or proceeding for
themselves and in respect of any of their property.  The Company and the Selling
Shareholders further agree that final judgment against any of them in any
action, suit or proceeding arising out of or in connection with this Agreement
shall be conclusive and may be enforced in any other jurisdiction, within or
outside the United States, by suit or the judgment, a certified or exemplified
copy of each shall be conclusive evidence of the fact and of the amount of their
respective obligations and liabilities.

                                      -38-
<PAGE>

In addition, the Company and the Selling Shareholders hereby irrevocably and
unconditionally waive any objection which they may now or hereafter have to the
laying of venue of any of the aforesaid actions, suits or proceedings arising
out of or in connection with this Agreement brought in any of the aforesaid
courts, and hereby further irrevocably and unconditionally waive and agree not
to plead or claim that any such action, suit or proceeding brought in any such
court has been brought in an inconvenient forum.

Each of the Company and each Selling Shareholder who is not a U.S. corporation
appoints Trintech, Inc. as his, her or its authorized agent (the "Authorized
Agent") to receive service of process in any action based on this Agreement
against the Company or such Selling Shareholder in any state or federal court in
New York by any Underwriter or by any person controlling any Underwriter.  Each
Selling Shareholder who is not a U.S. corporation represents to each Underwriter
that they have notified Trintech, Inc. of such appointment and that Trintech,
Inc. has accepted the same in writing.  Such appointment shall be irrevocable
for a period of five years from and after the Closing Date unless and until a
successor Authorized Agent shall be appointed and such successor shall accept
such appointment for the remainder of such five-year period.  The Company and
each such Selling Shareholder will notify each Underwriter in writing of the
appointment.  The Company and each such Selling Shareholder will take any and
all action, including the filing of any and all documents and instruments, that
may be necessary to continue such appointment or appointments in full force and
effect as aforesaid.  Service of process upon the Authorized Agent (or its
successor) and written notice of such service to the Company or such Selling
Shareholder by mail to the address for the Company or such Selling Shareholder
specified pursuant to Section 10, shall be deemed in every respect, effective
service of process upon the Company and such Selling Shareholder, as the case
may be.  In addition to any other method of service of process on the Company or
a Selling Shareholder under applicable law, service of process on the Company or
a Selling Shareholder by notice sent registered mail return receipt requested or
delivered, by courier or otherwise, to the address for the Company or such
Selling Shareholder, as the case may be, specified pursuant to Section 10, shall
be deemed in every respect, effective service of process upon the Company or
such Selling Shareholder, as the case may be.

If the foregoing Agreement is in accordance with your understanding of our
agreement, please sign and return to us the enclosed duplicates hereof,
whereupon it will become a binding agreement among the Company, the Selling
Shareholders and the several Underwriters in accordance with its terms.

Any person executing and delivering this Agreement as Attorney-in-Fact for a
Selling Shareholder represents by so doing that he has been duly appointed as
Attorney-in-Fact by such Selling Shareholder pursuant to a validly existing and
binding Power of Attorney which authorizes such Attorney-in-Fact to take such
action.

                                    Very truly yours,

                                    TRINTECH GROUP PLC

                                    By:  ______________________________

                                      -39-
<PAGE>

                                         Name:  Cyril McGuire
                                         Title:    President

                                    SELLING SHAREHOLDERS

                                    By:  ______________________________
                                         Name:  Cyril McGuire
                                         Title:    President

                                    As Attorney-in-Fact acting on behalf of each
                                    of the Selling Shareholders

Accepted as of the date hereof at
Frankfurt, Germany

Deutsche Bank AG (London Branch)
Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette Securities
     Corporation
FleetBoston Robertson Stephens, Inc.
WestLB Panmure Limited

By:  ___________________________________
     Deutsche Bank AG (London Branch)

On behalf of each of the Underwriters

                                      -40-
<PAGE>

                                   SCHEDULE I


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                Number of
                                                Total Number of                Option ADSs
                                                   Firm ADSs                 to be Purchased
              Underwriter                       to be Purchased            if Option Exercised
- ---------------------------------------   ---------------------------   -------------------------
<S>                                       <C>                           <C>
Deutsche Bank AG.......................
Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette
 Securities Corporation................
FleetBoston Robertson Stephens Inc.....
Chase Securities Inc...................
    Total..............................
</TABLE>

                                      -41-

<PAGE>

                                                                     EXHIBIT 4.2

================================================================================


                              TRINTECH GROUP PLC



                                      AND



                             THE BANK OF NEW YORK


                                 As Depositary


                                      AND


         OWNERS AND BENEFICIAL OWNERS OF AMERICAN DEPOSITARY RECEIPTS



                               Deposit Agreement



                        Dated as of September 27, 1999

                  As Amended and Restated as of ______, 2000



================================================================================
<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<S>                                                                       <C>
ARTICLE 1.   DEFINITIONS................................................   1

 SECTION 1.1   American Depositary Shares...............................   1
 SECTION 1.2   Article; Section.........................................   2
 SECTION 1.3   Beneficial Owner.........................................   2
 SECTION 1.4   Commission...............................................   2
 SECTION 1.5   Company..................................................   2
 SECTION 1.6   Custodian................................................   2
 SECTION 1.7   Deposit Agreement........................................   2
 SECTION 1.8   Depositary; Corporate Trust Office.......................   3
 SECTION 1.9   Deposited Securities.....................................   3
 SECTION 1.10  Dollars; Euros...........................................   3
 SECTION 1.11  Exchange Act.............................................   3
 SECTION 1.12  Foreign Registrar........................................   3
 SECTION 1.13  Owner....................................................   3
 SECTION 1.14  Receipts.................................................   3
 SECTION 1.15  Registrar................................................   4
 SECTION 1.16  Restricted Securities....................................   4
 SECTION 1.17  Securities Act of 1933...................................   4
 SECTION 1.18  Shares...................................................   4

ARTICLE 2.   FORM OF RECEIPTS, DEPOSIT OF SHARES, EXECUTION AND
DELIVERY, TRANSFER AND SURRENDER OF RECEIPTS............................   4

 SECTION 2.1   Form and Transferability of Receipts.....................   4
 SECTION 2.2   Deposit of Shares........................................   5
 SECTION 2.3   Execution and Delivery of Receipts.......................   6
 SECTION 2.4   Transfer of Receipts; Combination and Split-up of
               Receipts.................................................   7
 SECTION 2.5   Surrender of Receipts and Withdrawal of Shares...........   7
 SECTION 2.6   Limitations on Execution and Delivery, Transfer and
               Surrender of Receipts....................................   8
 SECTION 2.7   Lost Receipts, etc.......................................   9
 SECTION 2.8   Cancellation and Destruction of Surrendered Receipts.....  10
 SECTION 2.9   Pre-Release of Receipts..................................  10

ARTICLE 3.   CERTAIN OBLIGATIONS OF OWNERS OF RECEIPTS..................  10

 SECTION 3.1   Filing Proofs, Certificates and Other Information........  10
 SECTION 3.2   Liability of Owner or Beneficial Owner for Taxes.........  11
 SECTION 3.3   Warranties on Deposit of Shares..........................  11
 SECTION 3.4   Disclosure of Interests..................................  11

ARTICLE 4.   THE DEPOSITED SECURITIES...................................  14

 SECTION 4.1   Cash Distributions.......................................  14
 SECTION 4.2   Distributions Other Than Cash, Shares or Rights..........  15
 SECTION 4.3   Distributions in Shares..................................  15
 SECTION 4.4   Rights...................................................  16
 SECTION 4.5   Conversion of Foreign Currency...........................  17
 SECTION 4.6   Fixing of Record Date....................................  18
 SECTION 4.7   Voting of Deposited Securities...........................  19
 SECTION 4.8   Changes Affecting Deposited Securities...................  22
 SECTION 4.9   Reports..................................................  22
 SECTION 4.10  Lists of Owners..........................................  23
</TABLE>
<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<S>                                                                         <C>
 SECTION 4.11  Withholding.................................................  23

ARTICLE 5.   THE DEPOSITARY, THE CUSTODIANS AND THE ISSUER.................  23

 SECTION 5.1   Maintenance of Office and Transfer Books by the Depositary..  23
 SECTION 5.2   Prevention or Delay in Performance by the Depositary
               or the Company..............................................  24
 SECTION 5.3   Obligations of the Depositary, the Custodian and the
               Company.....................................................  25
 SECTION 5.4   Resignation and Removal of the Depositary...................  26
 SECTION 5.5   The Custodians..............................................  26
 SECTION 5.6   Notices and Reports.........................................  27
 SECTION 5.7   Distribution of Additional Shares, Rights, etc..............  27
 SECTION 5.8   Indemnification.............................................  28
 SECTION 5.9   Charges of Depositary.......................................  28
 SECTION 5.10  Retention of Depositary Documents...........................  29
 SECTION 5.11  Exclusivity.................................................  30
 SECTION 5.12  List of Restricted Securities Owners........................  30

ARTICLE 6.   AMENDMENT AND TERMINATION.....................................  30

 SECTION 6.1   Amendment...................................................  30
 SECTION 6.2   Termination.................................................  30

ARTICLE 7.   MISCELLANEOUS.................................................  31

 SECTION 7.1   Counterparts................................................  31
 SECTION 7.2   No Third Party Beneficiaries................................  32
 SECTION 7.3   Severability................................................  32
 SECTION 7.4   Beneficial Owners and Owners as Parties; Binding Effect.....  32
 SECTION 7.5   Notices.....................................................  32
 SECTION 7.6   Governing Law...............................................  33
 SECTION 7.7   Compliance with U.S. Securities Laws........................  33
</TABLE>

                                      -2-
<PAGE>

                               DEPOSIT AGREEMENT

     DEPOSIT AGREEMENT dated as of September 27, 1999, as amended and restated
as of ________, 2000, among TRINTECH GROUP PLC, incorporated under the laws of
The Republic of Ireland (herein called the Company), THE BANK OF NEW YORK, a New
York banking corporation (herein called the Depositary), and all Owners and
Beneficial Owners from time to time of American Depositary Receipts issued
hereunder.

                             W I T N E S S E T H :

     WHEREAS, the Company desires to provide, as hereinafter set forth in this
Deposit Agreement, for the deposit of Shares (as hereinafter defined) of the
Company from time to time with the Depositary or with the Custodian (as
hereinafter defined) as agent of the Depositary for the purposes set forth in
this Deposit Agreement, for the creation of American Depositary Shares
representing the Shares so deposited and for the execution and delivery of
American Depositary Receipts evidencing the American Depositary Shares; and

     WHEREAS, the American Depositary Receipts are to be substantially in the
form of Exhibit A annexed hereto, with appropriate insertions, modifications and
omissions, as hereinafter provided in this Deposit Agreement;

     NOW, THEREFORE, in consideration of the premises, it is agreed by and
between the parties hereto as follows:

ARTICLE 1.  DEFINITIONS.

     The following definitions shall for all purposes, unless otherwise clearly
indicated, apply to the respective terms used in this Deposit Agreement:

     SECTION 1.1       American Depositary Shares.
                       ---------------------------

          The term "American Depositary Shares" shall mean the securities
representing the interests in the Deposited Securities and evidenced by the
Receipts issued hereunder.  Each American Depositary Share shall represent one-
half (1/2) of one Share, until there shall occur a distribution upon Deposited
Securities covered by Section 4.3 or a change in Deposited Securities covered by
Section 4.8 with respect to which additional Receipts are not executed and
delivered, and thereafter American Depositary Shares shall evidence the amount
of Shares or Deposited Securities specified in such Sections.
<PAGE>

     SECTION 1.2    Article; Section.
                    -----------------

          Wherever references are made in this Deposit Agreement to an "Article"
or "Articles" or to a "Section" or "Sections", such references shall mean an
article or articles or a section or sections of this Deposit Agreement, unless
otherwise required by the context.

     SECTION 1.3    Beneficial Owner.
                    -----------------

          The terms "Beneficial Owner" shall mean each person owning from time
to time any beneficial interest in the American Depositary Shares evidenced by
any Receipt.

     SECTION 1.4    Commission.
                    -----------

          The term "Commission" shall mean the Securities and Exchange
Commission of the United States or any successor governmental agency in the
United States.

     SECTION 1.5    Company.
                    --------

          The term "Company" shall mean Trintech Group PLC, incorporated under
the laws of The Republic of Ireland, and its successors.

     SECTION 1.6    Consultation.
                    -------------

          The term "Consultation" shall mean the good faith attempt by the
Depositary to discuss, if practicable, the relevant issue in a timely manner
with a person employed by the Company reasonably believed by the Depositary to
be empowered by the Company to engage in such discussion on behalf of the
Company.

     SECTION 1.7    Custodian.
                    ----------

          The term "Custodian" shall mean the principal Dublin, Ireland office
of Allied Irish Banks PLC, as agent of the Depositary for the purposes of this
Deposit Agreement, and any other firm or corporation which may hereafter be
appointed by the Depositary pursuant to the terms of Section 5.5, as substitute
or additional custodian or custodians hereunder, as the context shall require
and shall also mean all of them collectively.

     SECTION 1.8    Deposit Agreement.
                    ------------------

          The term "Deposit Agreement" shall mean this Agreement, as the same
may be amended from time to time in accordance with the provisions hereof.

                                      -2-
<PAGE>

     SECTION 1.9    Depositary; Corporate Trust Office.
                    -----------------------------------

          The term "Depositary" shall mean The Bank of New York, a New York
banking corporation and any successor as depositary hereunder.  The term
"Corporate Trust Office", when used with respect to the Depositary, shall mean
the office of the Depositary which at the date of this Agreement is 101 Barclay
Street, New York, New York, 10286.

     SECTION 1.10   Deposited Securities.
                    ---------------------

          The term "Deposited Securities" as of any time shall mean Shares at
such time deposited or deemed to be deposited under this Deposit Agreement and
any and all other securities, property and cash received by the Depositary or
the Custodian in respect thereof and at such time held hereunder, subject as to
cash to the provisions of Section 4.5.

     SECTION 1.11   Dollars; Euros.
                    ---------------

          The term "Dollars" shall mean the lawful currency of the United
States.  The term "Euros" shall mean the common currency of the participating
member countries in the European Monetary Union.

     SECTION 1.12   Exchange Act.
                    -------------

          The term "Exchange Act" shall mean the United States Securities and
Exchange Act of 1934, as from time to time amended.

     SECTION 1.13   Foreign Registrar.
                    ------------------

          The term "Foreign Registrar" shall mean the entity that presently
carries out the duties of registrar for the Shares or any successor as registrar
for the Shares and any other appointed agent of the Company for the transfer and
registration of Shares.

     SECTION 1.14   Owner.
                    ------

          The term "Owner" shall mean the person in whose name a Receipt is
registered on the books of the Depositary maintained for such purpose.

     SECTION 1.15   Receipts.
                    ---------

          The term "Receipts" shall mean the American Depositary Receipts issued
hereunder evidencing American Depositary Shares.

                                      -3-
<PAGE>

     SECTION 1.16   Registrar.
                    ----------

           The term "Registrar" shall mean any bank or trust company having an
office in the Borough of Manhattan, The City of New York, which shall be
appointed to register Receipts and transfers of Receipts as herein provided.

     SECTION 1.17   Restricted Securities.
                    ----------------------

           The term "Restricted Securities" shall mean Shares, or Receipts
representing such Shares, which are acquired directly or indirectly from the
Company or its affiliates (as defined in Rule 144 under the Securities Act of
1933) in a transaction or chain of transactions not involving any public
offering or which are subject to resale limitations under Regulation D under
that Act or both, or which are held by an officer, director (or persons
performing similar functions) or other affiliate of the Company, or which are
subject to other restrictions on sale or deposit under the laws of the United
States or The Republic of Ireland, or under a shareholder agreement or the
Memorandum and Articles of Association of the Company.

     SECTION 1.18   Securities Act of 1933.
                    -----------------------

           The term "Securities Act of 1933" shall mean the United States
Securities Act of 1933, as from time to time amended.

     SECTION 1.19   Shares.
                    -------

           The term "Shares" shall mean ordinary shares in registered form of
the Company, nominal value $0.0027 each, heretofore validly issued and
outstanding and fully paid, nonassessable and as to which any pre-emptive rights
of the holders of outstanding Shares were validly exercised or waived or
hereafter validly issued and outstanding and fully paid, nonassessable and as to
which any pre-emptive rights of the holders of outstanding Shares will have been
validly exercised or waived.

ARTICLE 2. FORM OF RECEIPTS, DEPOSIT OF SHARES, EXECUTION AND DELIVERY,
                      TRANSFER AND SURRENDER OF RECEIPTS.

     SECTION 2.1    Form and Transferability of Receipts.
                    -------------------------------------

           Definitive Receipts shall be substantially in the form set forth in
Exhibit A annexed to this Deposit Agreement, with appropriate insertions,
modifications and omissions, as hereinafter provided.  No Receipt shall be
entitled to any benefits under this Deposit Agreement or be valid or obligatory
for any purpose, unless such Receipt shall have been executed by the Depositary
by the manual or facsimile signature of a duly authorized signatory of the
Depositary and, if a Registrar for the Receipts shall have been

                                      -4-
<PAGE>

appointed, countersigned by the manual or facsimile signature of a duly
authorized officer of the Registrar. The Depositary shall maintain books on
which each Receipt so executed and delivered as hereinafter provided and the
transfer of each such Receipt shall be registered. Receipts bearing the manual
or facsimile signature of a duly authorized signatory of the Depositary who was
at any time a proper signatory of the Depositary shall bind the Depositary,
notwithstanding that such signatory has ceased to hold such office prior to the
execution and delivery of such Receipts by the Registrar or did not hold such
office on the date of issuance of such Receipts.

          The Receipts may be endorsed with or have incorporated in the text
thereof such legends or recitals or modifications not inconsistent with the
provisions of this Deposit Agreement as may be required by the Depositary or
required to comply with any applicable law or regulations thereunder or with the
rules and regulations of any securities exchange upon which American Depositary
Shares may be listed or to conform with any usage with respect thereto, or to
indicate any special limitations or restrictions to which any particular
Receipts are subject by reason of the date of issuance of the underlying
Deposited Securities or otherwise.

          Title to a Receipt (and to the American Depositary Shares evidenced
thereby), when properly endorsed or accompanied by proper instruments of
transfer, shall be transferable by delivery with the same effect as in the case
of a negotiable instrument; provided, however, that the Depositary,
notwithstanding any notice to the contrary, may treat the Owner thereof as the
absolute owner thereof for the purpose of determining the person entitled to
distribution of dividends or other distributions or to any notice provided for
in this Deposit Agreement and for all other purposes.

     SECTION 2.2    Deposit of Shares.
                    ------------------

          Subject to the terms and conditions of this Deposit Agreement, Shares
or evidence of rights to receive Shares may be deposited by delivery thereof to
any Custodian hereunder, accompanied by any appropriate instrument or
instruments of transfer, or endorsement, in form satisfactory to the Custodian,
together with all such certifications as may be required by the Depositary or
the Custodian in accordance with the provisions of this Deposit Agreement, and,
if the Depositary requires, together with a written order directing the
Depositary to execute and deliver to, or upon the written order of, the person
or persons stated in such order, a Receipt or Receipts for the number of
American Depositary Shares representing such deposit.  No Share shall be
accepted for deposit unless accompanied by evidence satisfactory to the
Depositary that any necessary approval has been granted by any governmental body
in The Republic of Ireland which is then performing the function of the
regulation of currency exchange.  If required by the Depositary, Shares
presented for deposit at any time, whether or not the transfer books of the
Company or the Foreign Registrar, if applicable, are closed, shall also be
accompanied by an agreement or assignment, or other instrument satisfactory to
the

                                      -5-
<PAGE>

Depositary, which will provide for the prompt transfer to the Custodian of any
dividend, or right to subscribe for additional Shares or to receive other
property which any person in whose name the Shares are or have been recorded may
thereafter receive upon or in respect of such deposited Shares, or in lieu
thereof, such agreement of indemnity or other agreement as shall be satisfactory
to the Depositary.

          At the request and risk and expense of any person proposing to deposit
Shares, and for the account of such person, the Depositary may receive
certificates for Shares to be deposited, together with the other instruments
herein specified, for the purpose of forwarding such Share certificates to the
Custodian for deposit hereunder.

          Upon each delivery to a Custodian of a certificate or certificates for
Shares to be deposited hereunder, together with the other documents above
specified, such Custodian shall, as soon as transfer and recordation can be
accomplished, present such certificate or certificates to the Company or the
Foreign Registrar, if applicable, for transfer and recordation of the Shares
being deposited in the name of the Depositary or its nominee or such Custodian
or its nominee.

          Notwithstanding anything to the contrary, the Depositary shall have no
obligation to accept Shares for deposit  hereunder from persons identified by
the Company as holding Restricted Securities except upon compliance with the
provisions of Section 5.12 hereof.

          Deposited Securities shall be held by the Depositary or by a Custodian
for the account and to the order of the Depositary or at such other place or
places as the Depositary shall determine.  Neither the Depositary nor the
Custodian shall deliver Shares or Deposited Securities except upon the
cancellation of the Receipt or Receipts evidencing the American Depositary
Shares representing such Shares or Deposited Securities.

     SECTION 2.3    Execution and Delivery of Receipts.
                    -----------------------------------

          Upon receipt by any Custodian of any deposit pursuant to Section 2.2
hereunder (and in addition, if the transfer books of the Company or the Foreign
Registrar, if applicable, are open, the Depositary may in its sole discretion
require a proper acknowledgment or other evidence from the Company that any
Deposited Securities have been recorded upon the books of the Company or the
Foreign Registrar, if applicable, in the name of the Depositary or its nominee
or such Custodian or its nominee), together with the other documents required as
above specified, such Custodian shall notify the Depositary of such deposit and
the person or persons to whom or upon whose written order a Receipt or Receipts
are deliverable in respect thereof and the number of American Depositary Shares
to be evidenced thereby.  Such notification shall be made by letter or, at the
request, risk and expense of the person making the deposit, by cable, telex or

                                      -6-
<PAGE>

facsimile transmission.  Upon receiving such notice from such Custodian, or upon
the receipt of Shares by the Depositary, the Depositary, subject to the terms
and conditions of this Deposit Agreement, shall execute and deliver at its
Corporate Trust Office, to or upon the order of the person or persons entitled
thereto, a Receipt or Receipts, registered in the name or names and evidencing
any authorized number of American Depositary Shares requested by such person or
persons, but only upon payment to the Depositary of the fees of the Depositary
for the execution and delivery of such Receipt or Receipts as provided in
Section 5.9, and of all taxes and governmental charges and fees payable in
connection with such deposit and the transfer of the Deposited Securities.

     SECTION 2.4    Transfer of Receipts; Combination and Split-up of Receipts.
                    -----------------------------------------------------------

          The Depositary, subject to the terms and conditions of this Deposit
Agreement, shall register transfers of Receipts on its transfer books from time
to time, upon any surrender of a Receipt, by the Owner in person or by a duly
authorized attorney, properly endorsed or accompanied by proper instruments of
transfer, and duly stamped as may be required by the laws of the State of New
York and of the United States of America.  Thereupon the Depositary shall
execute a new Receipt or Receipts and deliver the same to or upon the order of
the person entitled thereto.

          The Depositary, subject to the terms and conditions of this Deposit
Agreement, shall upon surrender of a Receipt or Receipts for the purpose of
effecting a split-up or combination of such Receipt or Receipts, execute and
deliver a new Receipt or Receipts for any authorized number of American
Depositary Shares requested, evidencing the same aggregate number of American
Depositary Shares as the Receipt or Receipts surrendered.

          The Depositary may appoint one or more co-transfer agents for the
purpose of effecting transfers, combinations and split-ups of Receipts at
designated transfer offices on behalf of the Depositary.  In carrying out its
functions, a co-transfer agent may require evidence of authority and compliance
with applicable laws and other requirements by Owners or persons entitled to
Receipts and will be entitled to protection and indemnity to the same extent as
the Depositary.

     SECTION 2.5    Surrender of Receipts and Withdrawal of Shares.
                    -----------------------------------------------

          Upon surrender at the Corporate Trust Office of the Depositary of a
Receipt for the purpose of withdrawal of the Deposited Securities represented by
the American Depositary Shares evidenced by such Receipt, and upon payment of
the fee of the Depositary for the surrender of Receipts as provided in Section
5.9 and payment of all taxes and governmental charges payable in connection with
such surrender and withdrawal of the Deposited Securities, and subject to the
terms and conditions of this Deposit Agreement, the Owner of such Receipt shall
be entitled to delivery, to him or

                                      -7-
<PAGE>

upon his order, of the amount of Deposited Securities at the time represented by
the American Depositary Shares evidenced by such Receipt. Delivery of such
Deposited Securities may be made by the delivery of (a) certificates in the name
of such Owner or as ordered by him or by certificates properly endorsed or
accompanied by proper instruments of transfer to such Owner or as ordered by him
and (b) any other securities, property and cash to which such Owner is then
entitled in respect of such Receipts to such Owner or as ordered by him. Such
delivery shall be made, as hereinafter provided, without unreasonable delay.

          A Receipt surrendered for such purposes may be required by the
Depositary to be properly endorsed in blank or accompanied by proper instruments
of transfer in blank, and if the Depositary so requires, the Owner thereof shall
execute and deliver to the Depositary a written order directing the Depositary
to cause the Deposited Securities being withdrawn to be delivered to or upon the
written order of a person or persons designated in such order.  Thereupon the
Depositary shall direct the Custodian to deliver at the principal Dublin,
Ireland office of such Custodian, subject to Sections 2.6, 3.1 and 3.2 and to
the other terms and conditions of this Deposit Agreement, to or upon the written
order of the person or persons designated in the order delivered to the
Depositary as above provided, the amount of Deposited Securities represented by
the American Depositary Shares evidenced by such Receipt, except that the
Depositary may make delivery to such person or persons at the Corporate Trust
Office of the Depositary of any dividends or distributions with respect to the
Deposited Securities represented by the American Depositary Shares evidenced by
such Receipt, or of any proceeds of sale of any dividends, distributions or
rights, which may at the time be held by the Depositary.

          At the request, risk and expense of any Owner so surrendering a
Receipt, and for the account of such Owner, the Depositary shall direct the
Custodian to forward any cash or other property (other than rights) comprising,
and forward a certificate or certificates and other proper documents of title
for, the Deposited Securities represented by the American Depositary Shares
evidenced by such Receipt to the Depositary for delivery at the Corporate Trust
Office of the Depositary.  Such direction shall be given by letter or, at the
request, risk and expense of such Owner, by cable, telex or facsimile
transmission.

          Except as otherwise expressly permitted by this Deposit Agreement
neither the Depositary nor the Custodian shall deliver Deposited Securities (by
physical delivery, book entry or otherwise) or otherwise permit Deposited
Securities to be withdrawn from the facility created hereby, except upon receipt
and cancellation of the relevant Receipts.

                                      -8-
<PAGE>

     SECTION 2.6   Limitations on Execution and Delivery, Transfer and Surrender
                   -------------------------------------------------------------
                   of Receipts.
                   ------------

          As a condition precedent to the execution and delivery, registration
of transfer, split-up, combination or surrender of any Receipt or withdrawal of
any Deposited Securities, the Depositary, Custodian or Registrar may require
payment from the depositor of Shares or the presenter of the Receipt of a sum
sufficient to reimburse it for any tax or other governmental charge and any
stock transfer or registration fee with respect thereto (including any such tax
or charge and fee with respect to Shares being deposited or withdrawn) and
payment of any applicable fees as herein provided, may require the production of
proof satisfactory to it as to the identity and genuineness of any signature and
may also require compliance with any regulations the Depositary may establish
consistent with the provisions of this Deposit Agreement, including, without
limitation, this Section 2.6.

          The delivery of Receipts against deposits of Shares generally or
against deposits of particular Shares may be suspended, or the transfer of
Receipts in particular instances may be refused, or the registration of transfer
of outstanding Receipts generally may be suspended, during any period when the
transfer books of the Depositary are closed, or if any such action is deemed
necessary or advisable by the Depositary or the Company at any time or from time
to time because of any requirement of law or of any government or governmental
body or commission, or under any provision of this Deposit Agreement, the
Memorandum and Articles of Association of the Company or for any other reason,
subject to the provisions of Section 7.7 hereof.  Notwithstanding any other
provision of this Deposit Agreement, the Memorandum and Articles of Association
of the Company or the Receipts, the surrender of outstanding Receipts and
withdrawal of Deposited Securities may not be suspended subject only to (i)
temporary delays caused by closing the transfer books of the Depositary or the
Company or the deposit of Shares in connection with voting at a shareholders'
meeting, or the payment of dividends, (ii) the payment of fees, taxes and
similar charges, and (iii) compliance with any U.S. or foreign laws or
governmental regulations relating to the Receipts or to the withdrawal of the
Deposited Securities.  Without limitation of the foregoing, the Depositary shall
not knowingly accept for deposit under this Deposit Agreement any Shares
required to be registered under the provisions of the Securities Act of 1933,
unless a registration statement is in effect as to such Shares. Without
limitation of the foregoing, the Depositary shall not knowingly accept for
deposit under this Deposit Agreement any Shares, which, if sold by the holder
thereof in the United States (as defined in Regulation S), would be subject to
the registration provisions of the Securities Act of 1933, unless a registration
statement is in effect as to such Shares or such sale would be exempt from such
provisions.  The Depositary shall comply with written instructions of the
Company not to accept for deposit hereunder any Shares identified in such
instructions at such

                                      -9-
<PAGE>

times and under such circumstances as may be specified in such instructions in
order to facilitate the Company's compliance with the securities laws of the
United States.

     SECTION 2.7    Lost Receipts, etc.
                    -------------------

          In case any Receipt shall be mutilated, destroyed, lost or stolen, the
Depositary shall execute and deliver a new Receipt of like tenor in exchange and
substitution for such mutilated Receipt upon cancellation thereof, or in lieu of
and in substitution for such destroyed, lost or stolen Receipt.  Before the
Depositary shall execute and deliver a new Receipt in substitution for a
destroyed, lost or stolen Receipt, the Owner thereof shall have (a) filed with
the Depositary (i) a request for such execution and delivery before the
Depositary has notice that the Receipt has been acquired by a bona fide
purchaser and (ii) a sufficient indemnity bond and (b) satisfied any other
reasonable requirements imposed by the Depositary.

     SECTION 2.8    Cancellation and Destruction of Surrendered Receipts.
                    -----------------------------------------------------

          All Receipts surrendered to the Depositary shall be cancelled by the
Depositary.  The Depositary is authorized to destroy Receipts so cancelled.

     SECTION 2.9    Pre-Release of Receipts.
                    ------------------------

          Unless requested in writing by the Company to cease doing so, the
Depositary may, notwithstanding Section 2.3 hereof, execute and deliver Receipts
prior to the receipt of Shares pursuant to Section 2.2 ("Pre-Release").  The
Depositary may, pursuant to Section 2.5, deliver Shares upon the receipt and
cancellation of Receipts which have been Pre-Released, whether or not such
cancellation is prior to the termination of such Pre-Release or the Depositary
knows that such Receipt has been Pre-Released.  The Depositary may receive
Receipts in lieu of Shares in satisfaction of a Pre-Release.  Each Pre-Release
will be (a) preceded or accompanied by a written representation from the person
to whom Receipts are to be delivered that such person, or its customer, owns the
Shares or Receipts to be remitted, as the case may be, (b) at all times fully
collateralized with cash or such other collateral as the Depositary deems
appropriate, (c) terminable by the Depositary on not more than five (5) business
days notice, and (d) subject to such further indemnities and credit regulations
as the Depositary deems appropriate.  The number of American Depositary Shares
which are outstanding at any time as a result of Pre-Releases will not normally
exceed thirty percent (30%) of the Shares deposited hereunder; provided,
however, that the Depositary reserves the right to change or disregard such
limit from time to time as it deems appropriate.

          The Depositary may retain for its own account any compensation
received by it in connection with the foregoing.

                                      -10-
<PAGE>

ARTICLE 3.  CERTAIN OBLIGATIONS OF OWNERS OF RECEIPTS.

     SECTION 3.1    Filing Proofs, Certificates and Other Information.
                    --------------------------------------------------

          Any person presenting Shares for deposit or any Owner or Beneficial
Owner of a Receipt may be required from time to time to file with the Depositary
or the Custodian such proof of citizenship or residence, exchange control
approval, or such information relating to the registration on the books of the
Company or the Foreign Registrar, if applicable, to execute such certificates
and to make such representations and warranties, as the Company or the
Depositary may deem necessary or proper or as the Company may require by written
request to the Depositary or the Custodian.  The Depositary may  withhold the
delivery or registration of transfer of any Receipt or the distribution of any
dividend or sale or distribution of rights or of the proceeds thereof or the
delivery of any Deposited Securities until such proof or other information is
filed or such certificates are executed or such representations and warranties
made.  Copies of any documentation which the Depositary receives pursuant to
this Section 3.1 shall be provided by the Depositary to the Company upon the
Company's written request.

     SECTION 3.2    Liability of Owner or Beneficial Owner for Taxes.
                    -------------------------------------------------

          If any tax or other governmental charge shall become payable with
respect to any Receipt or any Deposited Securities represented by any Receipt,
such tax or other governmental charge shall be payable by the Owner or
Beneficial Owner of such Receipt to the Depositary.  The Depositary may refuse
to effect any transfer of such Receipt or any withdrawal of Deposited Securities
represented by American Depositary Shares evidenced by such Receipt until such
payment is made, and may withhold any dividends or other distributions, or may
sell for the account of the Owner or Beneficial Owner thereof any part or all of
the Deposited Securities represented by the American Depositary Shares evidenced
by such Receipt, and may apply such dividends or other distributions or the
proceeds of any such sale in payment of such tax or other governmental charge
and the Owner or Beneficial Owner of such Receipt shall remain liable for any
deficiency.

     SECTION 3.3    Warranties on Deposit of Shares.
                    --------------------------------

          Every person depositing Shares under this Deposit Agreement shall be
deemed thereby to represent and warrant that the person making such deposit is
duly authorized so to do.  Every such person shall also be deemed to represent
that the deposit of such Shares and the sale of Receipts evidencing American
Depositary Shares representing such Shares by that person are not restricted
under the Securities Act of 1933.  Such representations and warranties shall
survive the deposit of Shares and issuance of Receipts.

                                      -11-
<PAGE>

     SECTION 3.4   Disclosure of Interests.
                   -----------------------

          (a) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Deposit Agreement, the
Memorandum and Articles of Association of the Company or applicable Irish law,
each Owner agrees to be bound by and subject to applicable Irish law provisions
of the Irish Companies Act, 1990, and the Memorandum and Articles of Association
of the Company in each case as in effect on the date hereof, to the same extent
as if such Owner held Shares directly. Each Owner agrees to comply with requests
from the Company or the Depositary made under the Irish Companies Act, 1990 and
the Memorandum and Articles of Association of the company, to provide
information, inter alia, as to the capacity in which such Owner owns Receipts
and regarding the identity of any other person interested (as defined in the
Irish Companies Act, 1990) in such Receipts and the nature of such interest. The
Company has informed the Depositary that the following information is accurate,
as of the date hereof, and the Depositary has made no independent investigation
regarding such information.

              Sections 67 to 79 of the Irish Companies Act, 1990 provide that a
person (including a company and other legal entities) that acquires an interest
of 5 per cent or more of any class of shares (including through American
Depositary Receipts) that comprise part of a public company's "relevant share
capital" (i.e., the Company's issued share capital carrying the right to vote in
          ---
all circumstances at a general meeting of the Company) is required to notify the
company in writing in a prescribed manner of its interest within five days
following the day on which the obligation arises. After the 5 per cent level is
exceeded, similar notifications must be made in respect of any change in such
person's interest following which the percentage level of interest previously
notified has changed until after, if ever, the percentage level drops below 5
per cent. Fractional numbers are rounded down for the purposes of establishing
changes in percentage levels. Failure to notify the acquisition of an interest,
no right or interest whatsoever in respect of any of the relevant shares will be
enforceable, whether directly or indirectly, by action or legal proceeding by
the person having such an interest. Application may be made to the Irish High
Court to remove this restriction, and if the court is satisfied that the failure
to notify was accidental or due to inadvertence, or some other sufficient cause,
or that it is just and equitable to grant relief then the court may grant such
relief as is sees fit.

              For purposes of such notification obligation, the interest of a
person in shares means any kind of interest in shares including interests in any
shares (a) in which a spouse, or child under the age of 18, is interested, (b)
in which a corporate body is interested and either (i) that corporate body or
its directors are accustomed to act in accordance with that person's directions
or instructions or (ii) that person is entitled to exercise or to control one-
third or more of the voting power of that corporate body or (c) in which another
party is interested and the person and that other party are parties to a
"concert party" agreement under Section 73 of the Irish Companies Act, 1990. A
concert party agreement is one which provides for one or more parties to acquire
interests in the

                                      -12-
<PAGE>

relevant share capital of a particular public company and imposes obligations or
restrictions on any of the parties as to the use, retention or disposal of such
interests acquired pursuant to such agreement. An interest in the Company's
shares must also in fact be acquired by any of the parties pursuant to the
agreement. The agreement must be legally binding or involve mutuality.

          In addition, Section 81 of the Irish Companies Act, 1990 provides that
a public company may by written notice require a person whom the company knows,
or has reasonable cause to believe, to be or to have been, at any time during
the three years immediately preceding the date on which the notice is issued,
interested in shares consisting of the company's "relevant share capital" to
confirm that fact or to indicate whether or not that is the case, and where such
person holds or during the relevant time had held an interest in such shares, he
may be required to give such further information as may be required relating to
such interest and any other interest in the shares of which such person is
aware.

          Where notice is served by the Company under the foregoing provisions
on a person who is or was interested in the Shares and that person fails to give
the Company any information required by the notice within such time as is
specified in the notice, the Company may apply to the Irish court for an order
directing that the Shares in question be subject to restrictions prohibiting,
among other things, (i) any transfer of those Shares, (ii) the exercise of the
voting rights in respect of such Shares, (iii) the taking up of rights in
respect of such Shares, and (iv) other than in liquidation, payments in respect
of such Shares. If the information requested in the notice is not provided, the
Articles of Association of the Company also enable the service of a restriction
notice (as described below) imposing sanctions on the shareholder without the
need for court involvement.

          A person who fails to fulfil the obligation imposed by Section 81 of
the Irish Companies Act, 1990 described above may be subject to criminal
penalties.

          The Directors of the Company also have the power, pursuant to the
Articles of Association of the Company, to serve a notice (a "Disclosure
Notice") on any shareholder, or any other person appearing to be interested in
issued Shares, requiring such person to disclose to the Company such information
as they shall require relating to the ownership of any interest in such Shares
as lies within the knowledge of the relevant person.  This can include
information which the Issuer is entitled to seek pursuant to Section 81 of the
Irish Companies Act, 1990.

          If a shareholder, or a person appearing to be interested in Shares
held by such shareholder, has been duly served with a notice under Section 81 of
the Irish Companies Act, 1990 or a Disclosure Notice requesting information
pursuant to the Articles and is in default in supplying the Company with the
information thereby

                                      -13-
<PAGE>

required, the Issuer may serve a further notice (a "Restriction Notice") on that
shareholder. After the expiration of 14 days from the date of service of the
Restriction Notice and for so long as the Restriction Notice remains in effect,
no holder or holders of the relevant shares shall be entitled to attend, speak
or vote at any general meeting, either in person or by proxy. In addition, where
the relevant shares represent 0.25% of the total number of the issued shares of
the class of shares concerned the Restriction Notice may also direct that any
dividend or other money which would otherwise be payable on such shares shall be
retained by the Company without liability to pay interest and no transfer of
shares by the shareholder (unless such transfer is an arm's length sale) or any
renunciation of or any allotment of new shares or debentures made in respect
thereof shall be registered.

          (b) At the request of the Company and at the Company's expense, the
Depositary shall forward to any Owner any request by the Company for information
or any other communications relating to the application of the provisions
summarized in this Section 3.4.  Owners seeking to communicate with the Company
or the Directors of the Company on matters relating to the application of the
provision summarized in this Section 3.4 may send their communications to the
Depositary for forwarding to the Company.

              If the Company requests information from the Depositary or the
Custodian, as the holders of Shares, pursuant to the Articles of Association of
the Company or the Irish Companies Acts, the obligations of the Depositary or
the Custodian, as the case may be, shall be limited to disclosing to the Company
such information relating to the Shares in question's as has in each case been
recorded by it pursuant to the terms of the Deposit Agreement.

ARTICLE 4.  THE DEPOSITED SECURITIES.

     SECTION 4.1   Cash Distributions.
                   ------------------

          Whenever the Depositary shall receive any cash dividend, other cash
distribution or net proceeds from the sale of securities, property or rights on
any Deposited Securities, the Depositary shall, subject to the provisions of
Section 4.5, convert such dividend or distribution into Dollars and shall
distribute the amount thus received (net of the fees of the Depositary as
provided in Section 5.9 hereof, if applicable) to the Owners entitled thereto,
in proportion to the number of American Depositary Shares representing such
Deposited Securities held by them respectively; provided, however, that in the
event that the Company or the Depositary shall be required to withhold and does
withhold from such cash dividend or such other cash distribution an amount on
account of taxes, the amount distributed to the Owner of the Receipts evidencing
American Depositary Shares representing such Deposited Securities shall be

                                      -14-
<PAGE>

reduced accordingly. The Depositary shall distribute only such amount, however,
as can be distributed without attributing to any Owner a fraction of one cent.
Any such fractional amounts shall be rounded to the nearest whole cent and so
distributed to Owners entitled thereto. The Company or its agent will remit to
the appropriate governmental agency in The Republic of Ireland, the United
States, Germany or elsewhere, all amounts withheld and owing to such agency. The
Depositary will forward to the Company or its agent such information from its
records as the Company may reasonably request to enable the Company or its agent
to file necessary reports with governmental agencies, and the Depositary or the
Company or its agent may file any such reports necessary to obtain benefits
under the applicable tax treaties for the Owners of Receipts.

     SECTION 4.2   Distributions Other Than Cash, Shares or Rights.
                   -----------------------------------------------

          Subject to the provisions of Section 4.11 and Section 5.9, whenever
the Depositary shall receive any distribution other than a distribution
described in Sections 4.1, 4.3 or 4.4, the Depositary shall cause the securities
or property received by it to be distributed to the Owners entitled thereto, in
proportion to the number of American Depositary Shares representing such
Deposited Securities held by them respectively, in any manner that the
Depositary may deem equitable and practicable for accomplishing such
distribution; provided, however, that if in the opinion of the Depositary such
distribution cannot be made proportionately among the Owners entitled thereto,
or if for any other reason (including, but not limited to, any requirement that
the Company or the Depositary withhold an amount on account of taxes or other
governmental charges or that such securities must be registered under the
Securities Act of 1933 in order to be distributed to Owners or Beneficial Owners
of Receipts) the Depositary, after Consultation with the Company, deems such
distribution not to be feasible, the Depositary may, after Consultation with the
Company, adopt such method as it may deem equitable and practicable for the
purpose of effecting such distribution, including, but not limited to, the
public or private sale of the securities or property thus received, or any part
thereof, and the net proceeds of any such sale (net of the fees of the
Depositary as provided in Section 5.9) shall be distributed by the Depositary to
the Owners entitled thereto as in the case of a distribution received in cash.

     SECTION 4.3   Distributions in Shares.
                   -----------------------

          If any distribution upon any Deposited Securities consists of a
dividend in, or free distribution of, Shares, the Depositary may, and shall if
the Company shall so request, distribute to the Owners of outstanding Receipts
entitled thereto, in proportion to the number of American Depositary Shares
representing such Deposited Securities held by them respectively, additional
Receipts evidencing an aggregate number of American Depositary Shares
representing the amount of Shares received as such dividend or free
distribution, subject to the terms and conditions of the Deposit Agreement with
respect to

                                      -15-
<PAGE>

the deposit of Shares and the issuance of American Depositary Shares evidenced
by Receipts, including the withholding of any tax or other governmental charge
as provided in Section 4.11 and the payment of fees of the Depositary as
provided in Section 5.9. In lieu of delivering Receipts for fractional American
Depositary Shares in any such case, the Depositary shall sell the amount of
Shares represented by the aggregate of such fractions and distribute the net
proceeds, all in the manner and subject to the conditions described in Section
4.1. If additional Receipts are not so distributed, each American Depositary
Share shall thenceforth also represent the additional Shares distributed upon
the Deposited Securities represented thereby.

     SECTION 4.4   Rights.
                   ------

          In the event that the Company shall offer or cause to be offered to
the holders of any Deposited Securities any rights to subscribe for additional
Shares or any rights of any other nature, the Depositary shall, after
consultation with the Company, have discretion as to the procedure to be
followed in making such rights available to any Owners or in disposing of such
rights on behalf of any Owners and making the net proceeds available to such
Owners or, if by the terms of such rights offering or for any other reason, the
Depositary may not either make such rights available to any Owners or dispose of
such rights and make the net proceeds available to such Owners, then the
Depositary shall allow the rights to lapse. If at the time of the offering of
any rights the Depositary determines in its discretion that it is lawful and
feasible to make such rights available to all Owners or to certain Owners but
not to other Owners, the Depositary may distribute to any Owner to whom it
determines the distribution to be lawful and feasible, in proportion to the
number of American Depositary Shares held by such Owner, warrants or other
instruments therefor in such form as it deems appropriate.

          In circumstances in which rights would otherwise not be distributed,
if an Owner of Receipts requests the distribution of warrants or other
instruments in order to exercise the rights allocable to the American Depositary
Shares of such Owner hereunder, the Depositary will make such rights available
to such Owner upon written notice from the Company to the Depositary that (a)
the Company has elected in its sole discretion to permit such rights to be
exercised and (b) such Owner has executed such documents as the Company has
determined in its sole discretion are reasonably required under applicable law.

          If the Depositary has distributed warrants or other instruments for
rights to all or certain Owners, then upon instruction from such an Owner
pursuant to such warrants or other instruments to the Depositary from such Owner
to exercise such rights, upon payment by such Owner to the Depositary for the
account of such Owner of an amount equal to the purchase price of the Shares to
be received upon the exercise of the rights, and upon payment of the fees of the
Depositary and any other charges as set forth in such warrants or other
instruments, the Depositary shall, on behalf of such Owner,

                                      -16-
<PAGE>

exercise the rights and purchase the Shares, and the Company shall cause the
Shares so purchased to be delivered to the Depositary on behalf of such Owner.
As agent for such Owner, the Depositary will cause the Shares so purchased to be
deposited pursuant to Section 2.2 of this Deposit Agreement, and shall, pursuant
to Section 2.3 of this Deposit Agreement, execute and deliver Receipts to such
Owner. In the case of a distribution pursuant to the second paragraph of this
section, such Receipts shall be legended in accordance with applicable U.S.
laws, and shall be subject to the appropriate restrictions on sale, deposit,
cancellation, and transfer under such laws.

          If the Depositary determines in its discretion that it is not lawful
and feasible to make such rights available to all or certain Owners, it may,
after Consultation with the Company, sell the rights, warrants or other
instruments in proportion to the number of American Depositary Shares held by
the Owners to whom it has determined it may not lawfully or feasibly make such
rights available, and allocate the net proceeds of such sales (net of the fees
of the Depositary as provided in Section 5.9 and all taxes and governmental
charges payable in connection with such rights and subject to the terms and
conditions of this Deposit Agreement) for the account of such Owners otherwise
entitled to such rights, warrants or other instruments, upon an averaged or
other practical basis without regard to any distinctions among such Owners
because of exchange restrictions or the date of delivery of any Receipt or
otherwise.

          The Depositary will not offer rights to Owners unless both the rights
and the securities to which such rights relate are either exempt from
registration under the Securities Act of 1933 with respect to a distribution to
all Owners or are registered under the provisions of such Act; provided, that
nothing in this Deposit Agreement shall create, any obligation on the part of
the Company to file a registration statement with respect to such rights or
underlying securities or to endeavor to have such a registration statement
declared effective. If an Owner of a Receipt or Receipts requests the
distribution of warrants or other instruments, notwithstanding that there has
been no such registration under such Act, the Depositary shall not effect such
distribution unless it has received an opinion from recognized counsel in the
United States for the Company upon which the Depositary may rely that such
distribution to such Owner is exempt from such registration.

          The Depositary shall not be responsible for any failure to determine
that it may be lawful or feasible to make such rights available to Owners in
general or any Owner in particular.

     SECTION 4.5   Conversion of Foreign Currency.
                   ------------------------------

          Whenever the Depositary shall receive foreign currency, by way of
dividends or other distributions or the net proceeds from the sale of
securities, property or rights, and if at the time of the receipt thereof the
foreign currency so received can in the

                                      -17-
<PAGE>

judgment of the Depositary be converted on a reasonable basis into Dollars and
the resulting Dollars transferred to the United States, the Depositary shall
convert or cause to be converted, by sale or in any other manner that it may
determine, such foreign currency into Dollars, and such Dollars shall be
distributed to the Owners entitled thereto or, if the Depositary shall have
distributed any warrants or other instruments which entitle the holders thereof
to such Dollars, then to the holders of such warrants and/or instruments upon
surrender thereof for cancellation. Such distribution may be made upon an
averaged or other practicable basis without regard to any distinctions among
Owners on account of exchange restrictions, the date of delivery of any Receipt
or otherwise and shall be net of any expenses of conversion into Dollars
incurred by the Depositary as provided in Section 5.9.

          If such conversion or distribution can be effected only with the
approval or license of any government or agency thereof, the Depositary shall
file such application for approval or license, if any, as it may deem desirable.

          If at any time the Depositary shall determine that in its judgment any
foreign currency received by the Depositary is not convertible on a reasonable
basis into Dollars transferable to the United States, or if any approval or
license of any government or agency thereof which is required for such
conversion is denied or in the opinion of the Depositary is not obtainable, or
if any such approval or license is not obtained within a reasonable period as
determined by the Depositary, the Depositary may distribute the foreign currency
(or an appropriate document evidencing the right to receive such foreign
currency) received by the Depositary to, or in its discretion may hold such
foreign currency uninvested and without liability for interest thereon for the
respective accounts of, the Owners entitled to receive the same and shall
distribute such foreign currency upon the request of each such Owner.

          If any such conversion of foreign currency, in whole or in part,
cannot be effected for distribution to some of the Owners entitled thereto, the
Depositary may in its discretion make such conversion and distribution in
Dollars to the extent permissible to the Owners entitled thereto and may
distribute the balance of the foreign currency received by the Depositary to, or
hold such balance uninvested and without liability for interest thereon for the
respective accounts of, the Owners entitled thereto and shall distribute such
foreign currency upon the request of each such Owner.

     SECTION 4.6   Fixing of Record Date.
                   ---------------------

          Whenever any cash dividend or other cash distribution shall become
payable or any distribution other than cash shall be made, or whenever rights
shall be issued with respect to the Deposited Securities, or whenever for any
reason the Depositary causes a change in the number of Shares that are
represented by each American Depositary Share, or whenever the Depositary shall
receive notice of any

                                      -18-
<PAGE>

meeting of holders of Shares or other Deposited Securities, the Depositary shall
fix a record date, which shall be the record date, if any, established by the
Company for such purpose or, if different, as close thereto as practicable, (a)
for the determination of the Owners who shall be (i) entitled to receive such
dividend, distribution or rights or the net proceeds of the sale thereof or (ii)
entitled to give instructions for the exercise of voting rights at any such
meeting, or (b) on or after which each American Depositary Share will represent
the changed number of Shares. Subject to the provisions of Sections 4.1 through
4.5 and to the other terms and conditions of this Deposit Agreement, the Owners
on such record date shall be entitled, as the case may be, to receive the amount
distributable by the Depositary with respect to such dividend or other
distribution or such rights or the net proceeds of sale thereof in proportion to
the number of American Depositary Shares held by them respectively and to give
voting instructions and to act in respect of any other such matter.

     SECTION 4.7   Voting of Deposited Securities.
                   ------------------------------

          Upon receipt of notice of any meeting of holders of Shares or other
Deposited Securities, if requested in writing by the Company, the Depositary
shall, as soon as practicable thereafter, mail to the Owners a notice, the form
of which notice shall be in the sole discretion of the Depositary, which shall
contain (a) all of the information contained in such notice of meeting received
by the Depositary from the Company, (b) a statement that the Owners as of the
close of business on a specified record date will be entitled, subject to any
applicable provision of Irish law and of the Memorandum and Articles of
Association of the Company, to instruct the Depositary as to the exercise of the
voting rights, if any, pertaining to the amount of Shares or other Deposited
Securities represented by their respective American Depositary Shares, (c) a
statement that Owners who instruct the Depositary as to the exercise of their
voting rights will be deemed to have instructed the Depositary or its authorized
representative to call for a poll with respect to each matter for which such
instructions are given, subject to any applicable provisions of Irish law and of
the Memorandum and Articles of Association of the Company and (d) if applicable,
a statement as to the manner in which such instructions may be given, including
an express indication that instructions may be given or deemed given in
accordance with the last sentence of this paragraph if no instruction is
received, to the Depositary to give a discretionary proxy to a person designated
by the Company.  Upon the written request of an Owner on such record date,
received on or before the date established by the Depositary for such purpose,
the Depositary shall endeavor, in so far as practicable, to vote or cause to be
voted the amount of Shares or other Deposited Securities represented by the
American Depositary Shares evidenced by such Receipt in accordance with the
instructions set forth in such request.  Accordingly, pursuant to the Company's
Memorandum and Articles of Association and applicable Irish law, the Depositary
will cause its authorized representative to attend each meeting of holders of
Shares and call for a poll as instructed in accordance with clause (c) above for
the

                                      -19-
<PAGE>

purpose of effecting such vote.  The Depositary shall not vote or attempt to
exercise the right to vote that attaches to the Shares or other Deposited
Securities, other than in accordance with such instructions or deemed
instructions.  If no instructions are received by the Depositary from any Owner
with respect to any of the Deposited Securities represented by the American
Depositary Shares evidenced by such Owner's Receipts on or before the date
established by the Depositary for such purpose, the Depositary will deem such
Owner to have instructed the Depositary to give a discretionary proxy to a
person designated by the Company with respect to such Deposited Securities and
the Depositary will give a discretionary proxy to a person designated by the
Company to vote such Deposited Securities; provided, that no such instructions
                                           --------
will be deemed given and no such discretionary proxy will be given when the
Company notifies the Depositary (and the Company agrees to provide such notice
as promptly as practicable in writing) that the matter to be voted upon is one
of the following:

          1.   is a matter not submitted to shareholders by means of a proxy
               statement comparable to that specified in Schedule 14-A of the
               Commission;

          2.   is the subject of a counter-solicitation, or is part of a
               proposal made by a shareholder which is being opposed by
               management (i.e., a contest);

          3.   relates to a merger or consolidation (except when the Company's
               proposal is to merge with its own wholly-owned subsidiary,
               provided its shareholders dissenting thereto do not have rights
               of appraisal);

          4.   authorizes mortgaging of property;

          5.   authorizes or creates indebtedness or increases the authorized
               amount of indebtedness;

          6.   authorizes or creates preferred shares or increases the
               authorized amount of existing preferred shares;

          7.   alters the terms or conditions of any shares of the Company's
               stock then outstanding or existing indebtedness;

          8.   involves waiver or modification of preemptive rights (except when
               the Company's proposal is to waive such rights with respect to
               Shares being offered pursuant to stock option or purchase plans
               involving the additional issuance of not more than 5% of the
               Company's outstanding Shares (see Item 12 below));

                                      -20-
<PAGE>

          9.   alters voting provisions or the proportionate voting power of a
               class of shares, or the number of its votes per share (except
               where cumulative voting provisions govern the number of votes per
               share for election of directors and the Company's proposal
               involves a change in the number of its directors by not more than
               10% or not more than one)

          10.  changes existing quorum requirements with respect to shareholder
               meetings;

          11.  authorizes issuance of Shares, or options to purchase Shares, to
               directors, officers, or employees in an amount which exceeds 5%
               of the total amount of the class outstanding (when no plan is
               amended to extend its duration, the Company shall factor into the
               calculation the number of Shares that remain available for
               issuance, the number of Shares subject to outstanding options and
               any Shares being added; should there be more than one plan being
               considered at the same meeting, all Shares are aggregated).

          12.  authorizes

               (a) a new profit-sharing or special remuneration plan, or a new
               retirement plan, the annual cost of which will amount to more
               than 10% of average annual income before taxes for the preceding
               five years, or

               (b) the amendment of an existing plan which would bring its costs
               above 10% of such average annual income before taxes (should
               there be more than one plan being considered at the same meeting,
               all costs are aggregated; exceptions may be made in cases of (a)
               retirement plans based on agreement or negotiations with labor
               unions (or which have been or are to be approved by such unions);
               and (b) any related retirement plan for benefit of non-union
               employees having terms substantially equivalent to the terms of
               such union-negotiated plan, which is submitted for action of
               stockholders concurrently with such union-negotiated plan);

          13.  changes the purposes or powers of the Company to an extent which
               would permit it to change a materially different line of business
               and it is the Company's stated intention to make such a change;

                                      -21-
<PAGE>

          14.  authorizes the acquisition of property, assets, or a company,
               where the consideration to be given has a fair value of 20% or
               more of the market value of the previously outstanding shares;

          15.  authorizes the sale or other disposition of assets or earning
               power of 20% or more of those existing prior to the transaction;

          16.  authorizes a transaction not in the ordinary course of business
               in which an officer, director or substantial security holder has
               a direct or indirect interest;

          17.  reduces earned surplus by 51% or more, or reduces earned surplus
               to an amount less than the aggregate of three years' Share
               dividends computed at the current dividend rate.

For the avoidance of doubt, a signed but unmarked proxy that includes the
statement "IF NO MARK IS MADE, THE SHARES REPRESENTED BY THIS PROXY WILL BE
VOTED [FOR/AGAINST] EACH OF THE PROPOSALS ON THE REVERSE SIDE HEREOF AND FOR
SUCH OTHER MATTERS AS MAY PROPERLY COME BEFORE THE MEETING AS THE PROXIES DEEM
ADVISABLE" or words of similar intent shall constitute an instruction by the
signatory thereof to vote in accordance with such statement.  In accordance with
the Articles of Association of the Company and Irish law, failure by an Owner,
or a person holding an interest in Shares through an Owner, to comply with the
Company's request for information of the nature referred to in Section 3.5 may
result, inter alia, in withdrawal of the voting rights of the Shares underlying
        ----- ----
the Receipts held by that Owner and consequently of the rights described in this
Section 4.7 to direct the voting of the Deposited Securities underlying such
Receipts.

          There can be no assurance that Owners generally or any Owner in
particular will receive the notice described in this Section 4.7 sufficiently
prior to the date established by the Depositary to ensure that the Depositary
will vote the Shares or Deposited Securities in accordance with the provisions
set forth in this Section 4.7.

     SECTION 4.8   Changes Affecting Deposited Securities.
                   --------------------------------------

          In circumstances where the provisions of Section 4.3 do not apply,
upon any change in nominal value, change in par value, split-up, consolidation
or any other reclassification of Deposited Securities, or upon any
recapitalization, reorganization, merger or consolidation or sale of assets
affecting the Company or to which it is a party, any securities which shall be
received by the Depositary or a Custodian in exchange for or in conversion of or
in respect of Deposited Securities, shall be treated as new Deposited Securities
under this Deposit Agreement, and American Depositary Shares shall thenceforth
represent, in addition to the existing Deposited Securities, the right to

                                      -22-
<PAGE>

receive the new Deposited Securities so received in exchange or conversion,
unless additional Receipts are delivered pursuant to the following sentence.  In
any such case the Depositary may, and shall if the Company shall so request,
execute and deliver additional Receipts as in the case of a dividend in Shares,
or call for the surrender of outstanding Receipts to be exchanged for new
Receipts specifically describing such new Deposited Securities.

     SECTION 4.9    Reports.
                    -------

          The Depositary shall make available for inspection by Owners at its
Corporate Trust Office any reports and communications, including any proxy
soliciting material, received from the Company which are both (a) received by
the Depositary as the holder of the Deposited Securities and (b) made generally
available to the holders of such Deposited Securities by the Company.  The
Depositary shall also send to the Owners copies of any such reports furnished by
the Company pursuant to Section 5.6.  Any such reports and communications,
including any such proxy soliciting material, furnished to the Depositary by the
Company shall be furnished in English.

     SECTION 4.10   Lists of Owners.
                    ---------------

          Promptly upon request by the Company, the Depositary shall, at the
expense of the Company, furnish to it a list, as of a recent date, of the names,
addresses and holdings of American Depositary Shares by all persons in whose
names Receipts are registered on the books of the Depositary.

     SECTION 4.11   Withholding.
                    -----------

          In the event that the Depositary determines that any distribution in
property (including Shares and rights to subscribe therefor) is subject to any
tax or other governmental charge which the Depositary is obligated to withhold,
the Depositary may by public or private sale dispose of all or a portion of such
property (including Shares and rights to subscribe therefor) in such amounts and
in such manner as the Depositary deems necessary and practicable to pay any such
taxes or charges and the Depositary shall distribute the net proceeds of any
such sale after deduction of such taxes or charges to the Owners entitled
thereto in proportion to the number of American Depositary Shares held by them
respectively.

ARTICLE 5.  THE DEPOSITARY, THE CUSTODIANS AND THE ISSUER.

     SECTION 5.1    Maintenance of Office and Transfer Books by the Depositary.
                    ----------------------------------------------------------

          Until termination of this Deposit Agreement in accordance with its
terms, the Depositary shall maintain in the Borough of Manhattan, The City of
New York,

                                      -23-
<PAGE>

facilities for the execution and delivery, registration, registration
of transfers and surrender of Receipts in accordance with the provisions of this
Deposit Agreement.

          The Depositary shall keep books for the registration of Receipts and
transfers of Receipts which at all reasonable times shall be open for inspection
by the Owners and the Company, provided that such inspection shall not be for
the purpose of communicating with Owners in the interest of a business or object
other than the business of the Company or a matter related to this Deposit
Agreement or the Receipts.

          The Depositary may close the transfer books, at any time or from time
to time, after Consultation with the Company, when deemed expedient by it in
connection with the performance of its duties hereunder.

          The Company shall have the right to inspect the transfer and
registration records of the Depositary relating to Receipts and, at the
Company's expense, to make copies thereof and to require the Depositary, the
Registrar and any co-transfer agents or co-Registrars to supply copies of such
portions of such records as the Company may request in writing.

          If any Receipts or the American Depositary Shares evidenced thereby
are listed on one or more stock exchanges in the United States or Germany, the
Depositary shall act as Registrar or appoint a Registrar or one or more co-
registrars for registry of such Receipts in accordance with any requirements of
such exchange or exchanges.

     SECTION 5.2    Prevention or Delay in Performance by the Depositary or the
                    -----------------------------------------------------------
                    Company.
                    -------

          Neither the Depositary nor the Company nor any of their respective
directors, employees, agents or affiliates shall incur any liability to any
Owner or Beneficial Owners of any Receipt, if by reason of any provision of any
present or future law or regulation of the European Union, the United States, or
any other country, or of any governmental or regulatory authority or stock
exchange, or by reason of any provision, present or future, of the Memorandum
and Articles of Association of the Company, or by reason of any act of God or
war or other circumstances beyond its control, the Depositary or the Company
shall be prevented or forbidden from, or be subject to any civil or criminal
penalty on account of, doing or performing any act or thing which by the terms
of this Deposit Agreement or the Deposited Securities it is provided shall be
done or performed; nor shall the Depositary or the Company or any of their
respective directors, employees, agents or affiliates incur any liability to any
Owner or Beneficial Owners of any Receipt by reason of any non-performance or
delay, caused as aforesaid, in the performance of any act or thing which by the
terms of this Deposit Agreement it is provided shall or may be done or
performed, or by reason of any exercise of, or failure to exercise, any
discretion provided for in this Deposit Agreement.  Where,

                                      -24-
<PAGE>

by the terms of a distribution pursuant to Sections 4.1, 4.2, or 4.3 of the
Deposit Agreement, or an offering or distribution pursuant to Section 4.4 of the
Deposit Agreement, or for any other reason, such distribution or offering may
not be made available to Owners, and the Depositary may not dispose of such
distribution or offering on behalf of such Owners and make the net proceeds
available to such Owners, then the Depositary shall not make such distribution
or offering, and shall allow any rights, if applicable, to lapse.

     SECTION 5.3    Obligations of the Depositary, the Custodian and the
                    ----------------------------------------------------
                    Company.
                    -------

          The Company assumes no obligation nor shall it be subject to any
liability under this Deposit Agreement to Owners or Beneficial Owners of
Receipts, except that it agrees to perform its obligations specifically set
forth in this Deposit Agreement without negligence or bad faith.

          The Depositary assumes no obligation nor shall it be subject to any
liability under this Deposit Agreement to any Owner or Beneficial Owners of any
Receipt (including, without limitation, liability with respect to the validity
or worth of the Deposited Securities), except that it agrees to perform its
obligations specifically set forth in this Deposit Agreement without negligence
or bad faith.

          Neither the Depositary nor the Company shall be under any obligation
to appear in, prosecute or defend any action, suit or other proceeding in
respect of any Deposited Securities or in respect of the Receipts, which in its
opinion may involve it in expense or liability, unless indemnity satisfactory to
it against all expense and liability shall be furnished as often as may be
required, and the Custodian shall not be under any obligation whatsoever with
respect to such proceedings, the responsibility of the Custodian being solely to
the Depositary.

          Neither the Depositary nor the Company shall be liable for any action
or nonaction by it in reliance upon the advice of or information from legal
counsel, accountants, any person presenting Shares for deposit, any Owner or any
other person believed by it in good faith to be competent to give such advice or
information.

          The Depositary shall not be liable for any acts or omissions made by a
successor depositary whether in connection with a previous act or omission of
the Depositary or in connection with any matter arising wholly after the removal
or resignation of the Depositary, provided that in connection with the issue out
of which such potential liability arises the Depositary performed its
obligations without negligence or bad faith while it acted as Depositary.

          The Depositary shall not be responsible for any failure to carry out
any instructions to vote any of the Deposited Securities, or for the manner in
which any such

                                      -25-
<PAGE>

vote is cast or the effect of any such vote, provided that any such action or
nonaction is in good faith.

          No disclaimer of liability under the Securities Act of 1933 is
intended by any provision of this Deposit Agreement.

     SECTION 5.4    Resignation and Removal of the Depositary.
                    -----------------------------------------

          The Depositary may at any time resign as Depositary hereunder by
written notice of its election so to do delivered to the Company, such
resignation to take effect upon the appointment of a successor depositary and
its acceptance of such appointment as hereinafter provided.

          The Depositary may at any time be removed by the Company by written
notice of such removal effective upon the appointment of a successor depositary
and its acceptance of such appointment as hereinafter provided.

          In case at any time the Depositary acting hereunder shall resign or be
removed, the Company shall use its best efforts to appoint a successor
depositary, which shall be a bank or trust company having an office in the
Borough of Manhattan, The City of New York.  Every successor depositary shall
execute and deliver to its predecessor and to the Company an instrument in
writing accepting its appointment hereunder, and thereupon such successor
depositary, without any further act or deed, shall become fully vested with all
the rights, powers, duties and obligations of its predecessor; but such
predecessor, nevertheless, upon payment of all sums due it and on the written
request of the Company shall execute and deliver an instrument transferring to
such successor all rights and powers of such predecessor hereunder, shall duly
assign, transfer and deliver all right, title and interest in the Deposited
Securities to such successor, and shall deliver to such successor a list of the
Owners of all outstanding Receipts.  Any such successor depositary shall
promptly mail notice of its appointment to the Owners.

          Any corporation into or with which the Depositary may be merged or
consolidated shall be the successor of the Depositary without the execution or
filing of any document or any further act.

     SECTION 5.5    The Custodian.
                    -------------

          The Custodian shall be subject at all times and in all respects to the
directions of the Depositary and shall be responsible solely to it.  Any
Custodian may resign and be discharged from its duties hereunder by written
notice of such resignation delivered to the Depositary at least 30 days prior to
the date on which such resignation is to become effective.  If upon such
resignation there shall be no Custodian acting hereunder, the Depositary shall,
promptly after receiving such notice, appoint a substitute

                                      -26-
<PAGE>

custodian or custodians, each of which shall thereafter be a Custodian
hereunder. Whenever the Depositary in its discretion determines that it is in
the best interest of the Owners to do so, it may appoint substitute or
additional custodian or custodians, which shall thereafter be one of the
Custodians hereunder. Upon demand of the Depositary any Custodian shall deliver
such of the Deposited Securities held by it as are requested of it to any other
Custodian or such substitute or additional custodian or custodians. Each such
substitute or additional custodian shall deliver to the Depositary, forthwith
upon its appointment, an acceptance of such appointment satisfactory in form and
substance to the Depositary.

          Upon the appointment of any successor depositary hereunder, each
Custodian then acting hereunder shall forthwith become, without any further act
or writing, the agent hereunder of such successor depositary and the appointment
of such successor depositary shall in no way impair the authority of each
Custodian hereunder; but the successor depositary so appointed shall,
nevertheless, on the written request of any Custodian, execute and deliver to
such Custodian all such instruments as may be proper to give to such Custodian
full and complete power and authority as agent hereunder of such successor
depositary.

     SECTION 5.6    Notices and Reports.
                    -------------------

          On or before the first date on which the Company gives notice, by
publication or otherwise, of any meeting of holders of Shares or other Deposited
Securities, or of any adjourned meeting of such holders, or of the taking of any
action in respect of any cash or other distributions or the offering of any
rights, the Company agrees to transmit to the Depositary and the Custodian a
copy of the notice thereof in the form given or to be given to holders of Shares
or other Deposited Securities.

          The Company will arrange for the translation into English and the
prompt transmittal by the Company to the Depositary and the Custodian of such
notices and any other reports and communications which are made generally
available by the Company to holders of its Shares.  The Depositary will arrange
for the mailing, at the Company's expense, of copies of such notices, reports
and communications to all Owners.  The Company will timely provide the
Depositary with the quantity of such notices, reports, and communications, as
requested by the Depositary from time to time, in order for the Depositary to
effect such mailings.

     SECTION 5.7    Distribution of Additional Shares, Rights, etc.
                    ----------------------------------------------

          The Company agrees that in the event of any issuance or distribution
of (1) additional Shares, (2) rights to subscribe for Shares, (3) securities
convertible into Shares, or (4) rights to subscribe for such securities, (each a
"Distribution") the Company will promptly furnish to the Depositary a written
opinion from U.S. counsel for the Company,

                                      -27-
<PAGE>

which counsel shall be satisfactory to the Depositary, stating whether or not
the Distribution requires a Registration Statement under the Securities Act of
1933 to be in effect prior to making such Distribution available to Owners
entitled thereto. If in the opinion of such counsel a Registration Statement is
required, such counsel shall furnish to the Depositary a written opinion as to
whether or not there is a Registration Statement in effect which will cover such
Distribution.

          The Company agrees with the Depositary that neither the Company nor
any company controlled by, controlling or under common control with the Company
will at any time deposit any Shares, either originally issued or previously
issued and reacquired by the Company or any such affiliate, unless a
Registration Statement is in effect as to such Shares under the Securities Act
of 1933 or unless such Shares are accompanied by an opinion on which the
Depositary may rely, satisfactory to the Depositary from recognized U.S. counsel
for the Company, that upon deposit of such Shares, such Shares and the American
Depositary Shares issued in respect thereof will not be "restricted securities"
as such term is defined under Rule 144(a)(3) of the Securities Act of 1933 and
that the offer and sale of such securities would not require registration under
such Act.

     SECTION 5.8    Indemnification.
                    ---------------

          The Company agrees to indemnify the Depositary, its directors,
employees, agents and affiliates and any Custodian against, and hold each of
them harmless from, any liability or expense (including, but not limited to, the
reasonable fees and expenses of counsel) which may arise out of any registration
with the Commission of Receipts, American Depositary Shares or Deposited
Securities or the offer or sale thereof in the United States or out of acts
performed or omitted, in accordance with the provisions of this Deposit
Agreement and of the Receipts, as the same may be amended, modified or
supplemented from time to time, (i) by either the Depositary or a Custodian or
their respective directors, employees, agents and affiliates, except for any
liability or expense arising out of the negligence or bad faith of either of
them, or (ii) by the Company or any of its directors, employees, agents and
affiliates.

          The Depositary agrees to indemnify the Company, its directors,
employees, agents and affiliates and hold them harmless from any liability or
expense (including, but not limited to, the reasonable fees and expenses of
counsel) which may arise out of acts performed or omitted by the Depositary or
its Custodian or their respective directors, employees, agents and affiliates
due to their negligence or bad faith.

     SECTION 5.9    Charges of Depositary.
                    ---------------------

          The Company agrees to pay the fees, reasonable expenses and out-of-
pocket charges of the Depositary and those of any Registrar only in accordance
with

                                      -28-
<PAGE>

agreements in writing entered into between the Depositary and the Company from
time to time. The Depositary shall present its statement for such charges and
expenses to the Company once every three months. The charges and expenses of the
Custodian are for the sole account of the Depositary.

          The following charges shall be incurred by any party depositing or
withdrawing Shares or by any party surrendering Receipts or to whom Receipts are
issued (including, without limitation, issuance pursuant to a stock dividend or
stock split declared by the Company or an exchange of stock regarding the
Receipts or Deposited Securities or a distribution of Receipts pursuant to
Section 4.3), whichever applicable: (1) taxes and other governmental charges,
(2) such registration fees as may from time to time be in effect for the
registration of transfers of Shares generally on the Share register of the
Company or Foreign Registrar and applicable to transfers of Shares to the name
of the Depositary or its nominee or the Custodian or its nominee on the making
of deposits or withdrawals hereunder, (3) such cable, telex and facsimile
transmission expenses as are expressly provided in this Deposit Agreement, (4)
such expenses as are incurred by the Depositary in the conversion of Foreign
Currency pursuant to Section 4.5, (5) a fee of $5.00 or less per 100 American
Depositary Shares (or portion thereof) for the execution and delivery of
Receipts pursuant to Section 2.3, 4.3 or 4.4, and the surrender of Receipts
pursuant to Section 2.5 or 6.2, (6) a fee of $.02 or less per American
Depositary Share (or portion thereof) for any cash distribution made pursuant to
the Deposit Agreement including, but not limited to, Sections 4.1 through 4.4
hereof, and (7) a fee for the distribution of securities pursuant to Section
4.2, such fee being in an amount equal to the fee for the execution and delivery
of American Depositary Shares referred to above which would have been charged as
a result of the deposit of such securities (for purposes of this clause (7)
treating all such securities as if they were Shares), but which securities are
instead distributed by the Depositary to Owners.

          The Depositary, subject to Section 2.9 hereof, may own and deal in any
class of securities of the Company and its affiliates and in Receipts.

     SECTION 5.10   Retention of Depositary Documents.
                    ---------------------------------

          The Depositary is authorized to destroy those documents, records,
bills and other data compiled during the term of this Deposit Agreement at the
times permitted by the laws or regulations governing the Depositary unless the
Company requests that such papers be retained for a longer period or turned over
to the Company or to a successor depositary.

                                      -29-
<PAGE>

     SECTION 5.11   Exclusivity.
                    -----------

          The Company agrees not to appoint any other depositary for issuance of
American Depositary Receipts so long as The Bank of New York is acting as
Depositary hereunder.

     SECTION 5.12   List of Restricted Securities Owners.
                    ------------------------------------

          From time to time, the Company shall provide to the Depositary a list
setting forth, to the actual knowledge of the Company, those persons or entities
who beneficially own Restricted Securities and the Company shall update that
list on a regular basis.  The Company agrees to advise in writing each of the
persons or entities so listed that such Restricted Securities are ineligible for
deposit hereunder.  The Depositary may rely on such a list or update but shall
not be liable for any action or omission made in reliance thereon.

ARTICLE 6. AMENDMENT AND TERMINATION.

     SECTION 6.1    Amendment.
                    ---------

          The form of the Receipts and any provisions of this Deposit Agreement
may at any time and from time to time be amended by agreement between the
Company and the Depositary without the express consent of Owners or Beneficial
Owners in any respect which the Company and the Depositary may deem necessary or
desirable.  Any amendment which shall impose or increase any fees or charges
(other than taxes and other governmental charges, registration fees, cable,
telex or facsimile transmission costs, delivery costs or other such expenses),
or which shall otherwise prejudice any substantial existing right of Owners,
shall, however, not become effective as to outstanding Receipts until the
expiration of thirty days after notice of such amendment shall have been given
to the Owners of outstanding Receipts.  Every Owner at the time any amendment so
becomes effective shall be deemed, by continuing to hold such Receipt, to
consent and agree to such amendment and to be bound by the Deposit Agreement as
amended thereby.  In no event shall any amendment impair the right of the Owner
of any Receipt to surrender such Receipt and receive therefor the Deposited
Securities represented thereby, except in order to comply with mandatory
provisions of applicable law.

     SECTION 6.2    Termination.
                    -----------

          The Depositary shall at any time at the direction of the Company
terminate this Deposit Agreement by mailing notice of such termination to the
Owners of all Receipts then outstanding at least 90 days prior to the date fixed
in such notice for such termination.  The Depositary may likewise terminate this
Deposit Agreement by mailing notice of such termination to the Company and the
Owners of all Receipts then

                                      -30-
<PAGE>

outstanding if at any time 90 days shall have expired after the Depositary shall
have delivered to the Company a written notice of its election to resign and a
successor depositary shall not have been appointed and accepted its appointment
as provided in Section 5.4. On or after the date of termination, the Owner of a
Receipt will, upon (a) surrender of such Receipt at the Corporate Trust Office
of the Depositary, (b) payment of the fee of the Depositary for the surrender of
Receipts referred to in Section 2.5, and (c) payment of any applicable taxes or
governmental charges, be entitled to delivery, to him or upon his order, of the
amount of Deposited Securities represented by the American Depositary Shares
evidenced by such Receipt. If any Receipts shall remain outstanding after the
date of termination, the Depositary thereafter shall discontinue the
registration of transfers of Receipts, shall suspend the distribution of
dividends to the Owners thereof, and shall not give any further notices or
perform any further acts under this Deposit Agreement, except that the
Depositary shall continue to collect dividends and other distributions
pertaining to Deposited Securities, shall sell rights as provided in this
Deposit Agreement, and shall continue to deliver Deposited Securities, together
with any dividends or other distributions received with respect thereto and the
net proceeds of the sale of any rights or other property, in exchange for
Receipts surrendered to the Depositary (after deducting, in each case, the fee
of the Depositary for the surrender of a Receipt, any expenses for the account
of the Owner of such Receipt in accordance with the terms and conditions of this
Deposit Agreement, and any applicable taxes or governmental charges). At any
time after the expiration of one year from the date of termination, the
Depositary may sell the Deposited Securities then held hereunder and may
thereafter hold uninvested the net proceeds of any such sale, together with any
other cash then held by it hereunder, unsegregated and without liability for
interest, for the pro rata benefit of the Owners of Receipts which have not
theretofore been surrendered, such Owners thereupon becoming general creditors
of the Depositary with respect to such net proceeds. After making such sale, the
Depositary shall be discharged from all obligations under this Deposit
Agreement, except to account for such net proceeds and other cash (after
deducting, in each case, the fee of the Depositary for the surrender of a
Receipt, any expenses for the account of the Owner of such Receipt in accordance
with the terms and conditions of this Deposit Agreement, and any applicable
taxes or governmental charges). Upon the termination of this Deposit Agreement,
the Company shall be discharged from all obligations under this Deposit
Agreement except for its obligations to the Depositary under Sections 5.8 and
5.9 hereof.

ARTICLE 7. MISCELLANEOUS.

     SECTION 7.1    Counterparts.
                    ------------

          This Deposit Agreement may be executed in any number of counterparts,
each of which shall be deemed an original and all of such counterparts shall
constitute one and the same instrument.  Copies of this Deposit Agreement shall
be filed with the

                                      -31-
<PAGE>

Depositary and the Custodians and shall be open to inspection by any Beneficial
Owners or Owner during business hours.

     SECTION 7.2    No Third Party Beneficiaries.
                    ----------------------------

          This Deposit Agreement is for the exclusive benefit of the parties
hereto and shall not be deemed to give any legal or equitable right, remedy or
claim whatsoever to any other person.

     SECTION 7.3    Severability.
                    ------------

          In case any one or more of the provisions contained in this Deposit
Agreement or in the Receipts should be or become invalid, illegal or
unenforceable in any respect, the validity, legality and enforceability of the
remaining provisions contained herein or therein shall in no way be affected,
prejudiced or disturbed thereby.

     SECTION 7.4    Beneficial Owners and Owners as Parties; Binding Effect.
                    -------------------------------------------------------

          The Beneficial Owners and Owners of Receipts from time to time shall
be parties to this Deposit Agreement and shall be bound by all of the terms and
conditions hereof and of the Receipts by acceptance thereof.

     SECTION 7.5    Notices.
                    -------

          Any and all notices to be given to the Company shall be deemed to have
been duly given if personally delivered or sent by mail or cable, telex or
facsimile transmission confirmed by letter, addressed to Trintech Group PLC,
Trintech Building, South County Business Park, Leopardstown, Dublin 18, Ireland,
or any other place to which the Company may have transferred its principal
office.

          Any and all notices to be given to the Depositary shall be deemed to
have been duly given if in English and personally delivered or sent by mail or
cable, telex or facsimile transmission confirmed by letter, addressed to The
Bank of New York, 101 Barclay Street, New York, New York 10286, Attention:
American Depositary Receipt Administration, or any other place to which the
Depositary may have transferred its Corporate Trust Office.

          Any and all notices to be given to any Owner shall be deemed to have
been duly given if personally delivered or sent by mail or cable, telex or
facsimile transmission confirmed by letter, addressed to such Owner at the
address of such Owner as it appears on the transfer books for Receipts of the
Depositary, or, if such Owner shall have filed with the Depositary a written
request that notices intended for such Owner be mailed to some other address, at
the address designated in such request.

                                      -32-
<PAGE>

          Delivery of a notice sent by mail or cable, telex or facsimile
transmission shall be deemed to be effected at the time when a duly addressed
letter containing the same (or a confirmation thereof in the case of a cable,
telex or facsimile transmission) is deposited, postage prepaid, in a post-office
letter box.  The Depositary or the Company may, however, act upon any cable,
telex or facsimile transmission received by it, notwithstanding that such cable,
telex or facsimile transmission shall not subsequently be confirmed by letter as
aforesaid.

     SECTION 7.6    Governing Law.
                    -------------

          This Deposit Agreement and the Receipts shall be interpreted and all
rights hereunder and thereunder and provisions hereof and thereof shall be
governed by the laws of the State of New York.

     SECTION 7.7    Compliance with U.S. Securities Laws.
                    ------------------------------------

          Notwithstanding anything in this Deposit Agreement to the contrary,
the Company and the Depositary each agrees that it will not exercise any rights
it has under this Deposit Agreement to permit the withdrawal or delivery of
Deposited Securities in a manner which would violate the U.S. securities laws,
including, but not limited to, Section I.A.(1) of the General Instructions to
the Form F-6 Registration Statement, as amended from time to time, under the
Securities Act of 1933.

                                      -33-
<PAGE>

     IN WITNESS WHEREOF, TRINTECH GROUP PLC and THE BANK OF NEW YORK have duly
executed this agreement as of the day and year first set forth above and all
Owners shall become parties hereto upon acceptance by them of Receipts issued in
accordance with the terms hereof.

                                       TRINTECH GROUP PLC

                                       By:________________________
                                          Name:
                                          Title:


                                       THE BANK OF NEW YORK,
                                        as Depositary

                                       By:________________________
                                          Name:
                                          Title:

                                      -34-

<PAGE>

                                                                  EXHIBIT 5.1


                        [LETTERHEAD OF A & L GOODBODY]



                 DRC/TS                                      11th April, 2000
               TR1007 0014


                        Trintech Group plc ("Trintech")



Dear Sirs,

We act as Irish counsel for Trintech, a public limited company incorporated
under the laws of Ireland in connection with the proposed offer for sale by
Trintech and certain shareholders in Trintech of certain American Depository
Shares of Trintech (together the "ADSs" and each an "ADS") each ADS representing
one-half of one ordinary share, par value US$0.0027 of Trintech (the "Ordinary
Shares") to be offered for sale pursuant to and by Trintech and the Selling
Shareholders named in a Registration Statement registration, number 333-32762
and the related prospectus (the "Registration Statement") filed by Trintech
under the Securities Act, 1933 (as amended) (the "Act").

In connection with this opinion, we have examined and have assumed the truth and
accuracy of the contents of such documents and certificates of officers of and
advisers to Trintech and of public officials as to factual matters as we have
deemed necessary or appropriate for the purposes of this opinion but have made
no independent investigation regarding such factual matters. In our examination,
we have assumed the genuineness of all signatures, the authenticity of all
documents submitted to us as originals, the conformity to original documents
submitted of all documents submitted to us as certified or photostatic copies
and the authenticity of the originals of such documents. We have further
assumed that none of the resolutions and authorities of the shareholders or
directors of Trintech upon which we have relied have been varied, amended or
revoked in any respect or had expired at the time of issue of the relevant
Ordinary Shares and that all of the Ordinary Shares currently in issue and
outstanding which will underlie the ADS's in the proposed offering were issued
in accordance with such resolutions and authorities.

We are admitted to practice law only in Ireland and accordingly, we express no
opinion on the laws of any jurisdiction other than the laws (and the
interpretation thereof) of Ireland in force as at the date hereof.

Based upon the foregoing, we are of the opinion that:

1.    Trintech is duly incorporated and validly existing under the laws of
      Ireland.

2.    The Ordinary Shares currently in issue and outstanding which will underlie
      the ADSs in the proposed offering were duly authorised, validly issued and
      are fully paid.

3.    The issue of the additional Ordinary Shares which will underlie the ADSs
      in the proposed offering has been approved in principle by the Company and
      upon issue, and subject to payment, such Ordinary Shares will be duly
      authorized, validly issued and fully paid.

We hereby consent to the filing of this opinion with the United States
Securities and Exchange Commission as an exhibit to the Registration Statement
and to the references to our firm under the caption "Legal Matters" in the
Registration Statement and in the Prospectus. Our consent to such references
does not constitute a consent under Section 7 of the Act, as in consenting to
such references, we have not certified any part of the Registration Statement
and do not otherwise come within the categories of persons whose consent is
required under Section 7 or under the rules and regulations of the United States
Securities and Exchange Commission thereunder.

This opinion is to be construed in accordance with and governed by the laws of
Ireland.

                               Yours faithfully,


                               /s/ A & L Goodbody



The Directors
Trintech Group plc,
South County Business Park
Leopardstown,
Dublin 18.


<PAGE>

                                                                   EXHIBIT 10.17

                            RSA DATA SECURITY, INC.
                         100 Marine Parkway, Suite 500
                          Redwood City, CA 94065 USA

                                March 31, 1998

Trintech Group                            * - Material has been omitted
Trintech House                            pursuant to a request for
South County Business Park,               confidential treatment.  This material
Leopardstown, Dublin 18, Ireland          has been filed separately.

Re:  Marketing Arrangements between RSA Data Security. Inc. ("RSA"), its parent,
     Security Dynamics Technologies, Inc. ("SDTI"), Trintech Manufacturing, Ltd.
     ("Trintech") and Trintech Inc. a U.S. subsidiary of Trintech ("Trintech
     Inc.").

Ladies and Gentlemen:

In connection with the Software Source Code License Agreement (the "License
Agreement") of even date herewith between RSA and Trintech, the parties will
engage in the following marketing, activities in order to publicize the
relationship between RSA and Trintech, and to encourage sales of Trintech
products which: (i) incorporate RSA's S/PAY(TM) technology, and/or (ii) which
are S/PAY enabled (such Trintech products collectively, the "S/PAY Products").

1)   Trade Show Participation Trintech Demo Space.
     ---------------------------------------------

     a)  Trade Show Participation. The parties shall share equally the cost of
         ------------------------
         participation in the Internet Electronic Commerce ("IEC") Show which
         will take place in April in New York City. These costs include costs
         associated with booth rental, mutually agreeable signage and shipping
         of necessary materials to the trade show. Such costs are estimated to
         be approximately $20,000 in the aggregate. Notwithstanding the
         foregoing, each party shall assume all travel, food and lodging costs
         incurred by its personnel in connection with such party's participation
         in the trade show.

     b)  Trintech Demo Space. RSA will reserve space in the IEC booth for
         -------------------
         demonstration by Trintech of its products (including the S/PAY
         Products), and in connection therewith, Trintech will keep one person
         in the IEC booth at all times during the hours of operation of the
         trade show.

     c)  Public Communications. The parties will work together to create
         ---------------------
         mutually acceptable marketing materials for purposes of communicating
         the substance of this joint marketing arrangement to the industry and
         press.

2)   Promotion of Trintech Products; Referral Fee.
     --------------------------------------------

     a)  Promotion or Trintech products. RSA and its parent, Security Dynamics
         -------------------------------
     Technologies, Inc. ("SDTI"), will use reasonable efforts to promote to
     their customers the S/PAY

                                      -1-
<PAGE>

          Products. In the event that RSA or SDTI identifies a prospective
          customer for the S/PAY Products, RSA or SDTI, as the case may be,
          shall refer that customer to Trintech so that Trintech may enter into
          a license agreement with such customer for the S/PAY Products.
          Trintech shall have sole and exclusive control over the terms and
          conditions of such license agreements.

     b)   Referral Fee. Upon execution of any license agreement for S/PAY
          -------------
          Products resulting from a Qualified Lead, Trintech shall pay RSA or
          SDTI, as appropriate, a referral fee ("Referral Fee") equal to * of
          the software license fees payable by the licensee to Trintech in the
          first year of that license agreement, net of any license fees paid by
          Trintech to third parties who have licensed to Trintech technology
          embedded in the S/PAY Products. Amounts due to RSA and SDTI hereunder
          shall be paid within forty-five (45) days following the end of any
          calendar quarter in which Trintech receives software license fees from
          customers for which a Referral Fee is due. For the purposes of this
          Section, a "Qualified Lead" is defined in Attachment "B", attached
          hereto

     c)   Amounts Due Upon Termination. Upon termination of this Agreement,
          ----------------------------
          Trintech shall pay RSA and SDTI all amounts due to such parties
          hereunder.

3)   Delivery of Product Documentation and Training. In order to facilitate the
     ----------------------------------------------
     promotional efforts referred to in the foregoing Paragraph, Trintech will
     furnish RSA and SDTI with copies of Trintech's product collateral,
     technical documentation, and other materials for the S/PAY Products. In
     addition, Trintech will train RSA and SDTI sales personnel regarding the
     features, selling points and distribution strategy of the S/PAY Products.
     Such training will take place at RSA and SDTI's facilities located in the
     United States.

4)   Cross Linking of Internet Sites. During the term of this Agreement, each of
     --------------------------------
     RSA and Trintech shall maintain on their respective Internet sites a link
     to the other party's Internet site. Each link shall be located in a
     reasonably prominent position not more than one level away from the first
     page of each party's Internet site.

5)   Transfer of Sales Leads. During the ninety (90) day period following
     ------------------------
     execution of this Agreement, RSA will transfer to Trintech all sales leads
     for the S/PAY Products. To that end, as soon as practicable following
     execution of this Agreement, RSA shall deliver to Trintech a list of all
     current sales leads for such products, together with a description of the
     status of each such lead.

6)   SET Compliance Testing. RSA will use its reasonable engineering efforts to
     -----------------------
     assist Trintech Inc. in modifying the cardholder, merchant and acquirer
     entities of S/PAY: (i) to perform the minimum required functionality that
     conforms to the SET 1.0 Specification, as defined in the License Agreement
     and as further detailed in Attachment "A" hereto, and (ii) such that each
     of the cardholder, merchant and acquirer entities of S/PAY are capable of
     passing the compliance testing as defined by SETco, a company created to
     test compliance on behalf of MasterCard and Visa. For the purposes of this
     Section, "reasonable engineering efforts" means:

                                      -2-
<PAGE>

     (A)  RSA making available to Trintech Inc. (i) up to five (5) engineers
          beginning on the effective date hereof and continuing until April 30,
          1998; (ii) up to three (3) engineers and one (1) quality assurance
          testing person as needed from May 1, 1998 through August 31, 1998; and
          (iii) one (1) engineer from September 1, 1998, through November 1,
          1998. Such engineering resources shall only be available to Trintech
          Inc., either at Trintech Inc.'s or RSA's U.S. facilities, and Trintech
          Inc. agrees to reimburse RSA for reasonable travel and related
          expenses incurred by RSA in providing such engineering resources; and

     (B)  RSA hosting up to five (5) Trintech Inc. engineers at RSA's bay area
          facility beginning on the effective date hereof and continuing through
          July 1, 1998; provided RSA be given reasonable advance notice of the
          individuals' names, nationality, anticipated dates and duration of
          their respective visits to RSA.

    Any software created as a result of these efforts by RSA will be delivered
    to Trintech Inc. and considered a Derivative Work of the License Software
    created by of Trintech, Inc. under the License Agreement and so licensed
    thereunder according to the terms thereof.

7)  Best Customer Pricing. In the event that RSA offers an SSL-enabled product
    ----------------------
    generally available on a commercial basis, then RSA shall offer Trintech a
    license to such technology on substantially similar terms and conditions,
    which are no less favorable than offered to other licensees of such
    technology.

8)  Confidentiality.
    ----------------

    a)  "Confidential Information" means any information: (i) disclosed by one
         ------------------------
        Party (the "Disclosing Party") to the other (the "Receiving Party"),
                    ----------------                      ---------------
        which, if in written, graphic, machine-readable or other tangible form
        is marked as "Confidential" or "Proprietary", or which, if disclosed
        orally or by demonstration, is identified at the time of initial
        disclosure as confidential and reduced to writing and marked
        "Confidential" within thirty (30) days of such disclosure: or (ii) which
        is otherwise deemed to be confidential by the terms of this Agreement.

    b)  Exclusions. Notwithstanding the generality of the foregoing,
        ----------
        Confidential Information shall exclude information that the Receiving
        Party can demonstrate: (i) was independently developed by the Receiving
        Party without any use of the Disclosing Party's Confidential Information
        or by the Receiving Party's employees or other agents for independent
        contractors hired by the Receiving Party) who have not been exposed to
        the Disclosing Party's Confidential Information: (ii) becomes known to
        the Receiving Party, without restriction, from a source other than the
        Disclosing Party without breach of this Agreement and that had a right
        to disclose it; (iii) was in the public domain at the time it was
        disclosed or becomes in the public domain through no act or omission of
        the Receiving Party; or (iv) was rightfully known to the Receiving
        Party, without restriction, at the time of disclosure.

    c)  Compelled Disclosure, if the Confidential Information of a Disclosing
        --------------------
        Party must be disclosed by the Receiving Party pursuant to the order or
        requirement of a court.

                                      -3-
<PAGE>

        administrative agency, or other governmental body, the Receiving Party
        shall (i) provide prompt notice thereof to the Disclosing Party and (ii)
        use its best efforts to obtain a protective order or otherwise prevent
        public disclosure of such information.

     d) Confidentiality Obligation. The Receiving Party shall treat as
        --------------------------
        confidential all of the Disclosing Party's Confidential Information and
        shall not use such Confidential Information except as expressly
        permitted under this Agreement. Without limiting the foregoing, the
        Receiving Party shall use at least the same degree of care which it uses
        to prevent the disclosure of its own confidential information of like
        importance, but in no event with less than reasonable care, to prevent
        the disclosure of the Disclosing Party's Confidential Information.

     e) Confidentiality of Agreement. Each Party agrees that the terms and
        ----------------------------
        conditions, but not the existence, of this Agreement shall be treated as
        the other's Confidential Information and that no reference to the terms
        and conditions of this Agreement or to activities pertaining thereto can
        be made in any form of public or commercial advertising without the
        prior written consent of the other Party; provided, however, that each
                                                  --------  -------
        Party may disclose the terms and conditions of this Agreement: (i) as
        required by any court, or other governmental body; (ii) as otherwise
        required by law; (iii) to legal counsel of the Parties; (iv) in
        connection with the requirements of an initial public offering or
        securities filing (v) in confidence, to accountants, bunks, and
        financing sources and their advisors; (vi) in confidence, in connection
        with the enforcement of this Agreement or rights under this Agreement;
        or (vii) in confidence, in connection with a merger or acquisition or
        proposed merger or acquisition, or the like.

     f) Remedies. Unauthorized use by a Party of the other Party's Confidential
        --------
        Information will diminish the value of such information. Therefore, if a
        Party breaches any of its obligations with respect to confidentiality or
        use of Confidential Information hereunder, the other Party shall be
        entitled to seek equitable relief to protect its interest therein,
        including but not limited to injunctive relief, as well as money
        damages.

9)   LIMITATIONS OF LIABILITY. NEITHER PARTY HERETO SHALL BE LIABLE FOR ANY
     ------------------------
     CONSEQUENTIAL, INCIDENTAL, INDIRECT, SPECIAL OR PUNITIVE DAMAGES ARISING
     OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THIS AGREEMENT, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE
     POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES. SUCH LIMITATIONS OF LIABILITY SHALL APPLY
     REGARDLESS OF THE CAUSE OF ACTION UNDER WHICH SUCH DAMAGES ARE SOUGHT,
     INCLUDING, WITHOUT LIMITATION, BREACH OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
     LIABILITY, OR OTHER TORT.

10)  Term and Termination.
     --------------------

     a)  Term. This Agreement shall remain in full force and effect for two (2)
         ----
         years from the date set forth above, unless terminated earlier pursuant
         to this Section 11. Thereafter, the term of this Agreement shall
         automatically extend for successive twelve (12) month renewal terms
         unless either party gives the other written notice, at least sixty (60)
         days

                                      -4-
<PAGE>

         prior to the expiration of the then-current term of its intention to
         terminate the Agreement effective 31 the end of the then-current term.

     b)  Termination Event. This Agreement will terminate on the occurrence of
         -----------------
         any or the following conditions:

         i)  at either party's option upon not less than thirty (30) days prior
             written notice to the other party if the other party has materially
             breached any of the terms and conditions of this Agreement and has
             failed to cure such breach within thirty (30) days of its receipt
             of written notice from the non-breaching party describing such
             breach; or

         ii) upon the mutual written consent of Trintech and RSA.

11)  MISCELLANEOUS PROVISIONS

     a)  Governing Law and Jurisdiction. THIS AGREEMENT WILL BE GOVERNED BY AND
         ------------------------------
         CONSTRUED IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE LAWS OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA,
         IRRESPECTIVE OF ITS CHOICE OF LAW PRINCIPLES. All disputes arising out
         of this Agreement will be subject to the exclusive jurisdiction and
         venue of the California state courts and the United States District
         Court for the Northern District of California, and the parties consent
         to the personal and exclusive jurisdiction of these courts. The Parties
         agree that the United Nations Convention on Contracts for the
         International Sale of Goods shall not apply to this Agreement and
         hereby exclude such application.

     b)  Binding upon Success and Assigns. Neither Party shall assign or
         --------------------------------
         delegate this Agreement or any right or obligation hereunder, by
         operation of law or otherwise, and any purported assignment or
         delegation shall be void and without force or effect, except (i)
         Following the written consent of the other Party or (ii) in connection
         with a Change of Control of such Party: provided that (i) any permitted
         successor to a Party shall be bound by each and every obligation and
         restriction to which such Party is bound hereunder, (ii) no license
         granted hereunder shall apply to any conduct or product of any such
         successor prior to the relevant assignment of this Agreement and (iii)
         the assigning Party shall provide the other Party with prompt notice of
         the relevant assignment this Agreement. Notwithstanding any other
         provision hereof, neither (1) a sale of assets unrelated to this
         Agreement, (2) any merger or other transaction to which a Party is the
         surviving entity nor (3) any reincorporation shall be considered an
         assignment or delegation hereof. For purposes of this paragraph,
         "Change of Control" of a Party shall mean the direct or indirect
         acquisition of either (i) the majority of such Party's voting stock or
         (ii) all or substantially all of the assets of such Party to which this
         Agreement relates in a single transaction or a series of related
         transactions. Notwithstanding any other provision of this Agreement,
         Trintech may assign or sublicense this agreement or any right of
         Trintech hereunder to any Affiliate, as that term is defined in the
         License Agreement.

     c)  Severability. If any provision or this Agreement is found to be invalid
         ------------
         or unenforceable, such provision shall be severed from the Agreement
         and the remainder of this Agreement

                                      -5-
<PAGE>

         shall be interpreted so as best to reasonably effect the intent of the
         Parties. Entire Agreement.
                  ----------------

     d)  Entire Agreement. This Agreement, together with its exhibits,
         constitutes the entire understanding and agreement of the Parties with
         respect to the subject matter hereof and supersedes all prior and
         contemporaneous agreements, representations and understandings between
         the Parties.

     e)  Amendment and Waiver. Any term or provision of this Agreement may be
         amended, and the observance of any term of this Agreement may be
         waived, only by a writing signed by the Party to be bound. The failure
         of either Party to enforce at any time any of the previsions of this
         Agreement, or the failure to require at any time performance by the
         other Party of any of the provisions of this Agreement, shall in no way
         be construed to be a present or future waiver of such provisions, nor
         in any way affect the ability of either Party to enforce each and every
         such provision thereafter. The express waiver by either Party of any
         provision, condition or requirement of this Agreement shall not
         constitute a waiver of any future obligation to comply with such
         provision, condition or requirement.

     f)  Notices. Any notice, demand, or request with respect to this Agreement
         -------
         shall be in writing and shall be effective only if it is delivered by
         hand or mailed, certified or registered mail, postage prepaid, return
         receipt requested, addressed to the appropriate Party at its address
         first set forth above. Such communications shall be effective when they
         are received by the addressee; but if sent by certified or registered
         mail in the manner set forth above, they shall be effective not later
         than three (3) days after being deposited in the mail. Any Party may
         change its address for such communications by giving notice to the
         other Party in conformity with this paragraph.

     g)  Export Compliance and Foreign Reshipment Liability. THIS AGREEMENT IS
         --------------------------------------------------
         EXPRESSLY MADE SUBJECT TO ANY LAWS, REGULATIONS, ORDERS OR OTHER
         RESTRICTIONS ON THE EXPORT FROM THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA OF THE
         LICENSED SOFTWARE OR LICENSED PRODUCTS OR OF INFORMATION ABOUT THE
         LICENSED SOFTWARE OR LICENSED PRODUCTS WHICH MAY BE IMPOSED FROM TIME
         TO TIME BY THE GOVERNMENT OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA.
         NOTWITHSTANDING ANYTHING CONTAINED IN THIS AGREEMENT TO THE CONTRARY,
         NEITHER TRINTECH NOR TRINTECH INC SHALL EXPORT OR REEXPORT, DIRECTLY OR
         INDIRECTLY, ANY LICENSED SOFTWARE OR LICENSED PRODUCTS OR INFORMATION
         PERTAINING THERETO TO ANY COUNTRY TO WHICH SUCH EXPORT OR REEXPORT IS
         RESTRICTED OR PROHIBITED, OR AS TO WHICH SUCH GOVERNMENT OR ANY AGENCY
         THEREOF REQUIRES AN EXPORT LICENSE OR OTHER GOVERNMENTAL APPROVAL AT
         THE TIME OF EXPORT OR REEXPORT WITHOUT FIRST OBTAINING SUCH LICENSE OR
         APPROVAL

     h)  Remedies Non-Exclusive. Except as otherwise expressly provided, any
         ----------------------
         remedy provided for in this Agreement is deemed cumulative with, and
         not exclusive of, any other remedy provided for in this Agreement or
         otherwise available at law or in equity. The exercise

                                      -6-
<PAGE>

     k)  Counterparts. This Agreement may he executed in counterparts or
         ------------
         duplicate originals, both of which shall be regarded as one and the
         same instrument, and which shall be the official and governing version
         in the interpretation of this Agreement.

          IN WITNESS WHEREOF, each of RSA, SDTI and Trintech have executed this
Agreement by their duly authorized officers.

RSA Data Security, Inc.                 Trintech Manufacturing, Ltd.

By:   /s/ [ILLEGIBLE]^^                 By:        /s/ [ILLEGIBLE]^^
    ------------------------------              -------------------------
Title:  Chief Operating Officer         Title:    DIRECTOR
       ---------------------------              -------------------------
Phone:  (650) 595-8782                  Phone:    353-1-2956766
       ---------------------------              -------------------------
Fax:    (650) 595-5198                  Fax:      353-1-2954735
      ----------------------------              -------------------------

Security Dynamics Technologies, Inc.    Trintech, Inc.

By:  /s/ [ILLEGIBLE]^^                  By:     /s/ [ILLEGIBLE]^^
   -------------------------------              -------------------------
Title: Senior Vice President            Title:   DIRECTOR
      ----------------------------              -------------------------
Phone:  (650) 595-8782                  Phone:    408 879 1901
       ---------------------------              -------------------------
Fax:    (650) 595-5198                  Fax:      408 559 9537
      ----------------------------              -------------------------

                                      -7-
<PAGE>

                                 Attachment A

- ------------------------------------------------------
                           Work in Process
- ------------------------------------------------------
    S/PAY                      BCI/CRL
                         Certificate Renewal
                            Root History
                              Bug Fixes
                            Release Notes
- ------------------------------------------------------

                                      -8-
<PAGE>

                                 Attachment B

                          "Qualified Lead" Definition

Qualification of interest in Trintech Products including S/PAY requires the
following:


1.  Provide potential customer with Product information from Trintech

2.  Provide formal introduction for Trintech sales personnel

3.  Deliver joint sales presentation and Product demonstration

4.  Deliver a follow-up presentation to customer/prospect

5.  Assist Trintech personnel in contract negotiation and closing

                                      -9-

<PAGE>


                                                              EXHIBIT 23.1

                     CONSENT OF INDEPENDENT AUDITORS

   We consent to the reference to our firm under the captions "Experts" and
"Selected Consolidated Financial Data" and to the use of our report dated
March 16, 2000 with respect to the consolidated financial statements and the
financial statement schedule included in Amendment No. 1 to the Registration
Statement on Form F-1 (No. 333-32762) and related Prospectus of Trintech Group
PLC for the registration of 6,000,000 American Depositary shares representing
3,000,000 Ordinary Shares.

                                          Ernst & Young

Dublin, Ireland

April 11, 2000


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