Here are the business stories making the headlines in Scotland and the UK this morning.
Concern over debt at Pizza Hut UK
Pizza Hut UK's auditors have fired a warning shot over the company's future amid concerns over its mounting debt pile.
The group, which is the largest British franchise of the US restaurant chain, is in talks to refinance almost £31million of its £73million debt which it must repay by next April.
The Telegraph says it comes after the company secured relaxed terms on its loans with banking partners.
In its latest accounts, Pizza Hut UK warned there was a chance it could still breach its loan agreements in a "severe but plausible downside scenario".
As a result PwC, the firm's auditor, warned that there was "material uncertainty which may cast significant doubt about the company's ability to continue as a going concern".
However, PwC added: "The company enjoys excellent relationships with its lenders, some of whom are equity shareholders in the group and the directors anticipate that any potential breach could be waived in advance of occurring."
No show from Nessie
The mystery of the Loch Ness monster endures despite a weekend of mass-participation Nessie hunting.
About 200 volunteers kept a lookout for mysterious events from the shoreline, but spotted nothing unusual.
Observers on a boat using acoustic equipment reported four unidentified "gloops", but then realised their recording device wasn't plugged in.
The BBC says visitors from around the world joined the hunt despite appalling weather.
France getting rid of surplus wine
The French Government is allocating £171.6million to destroy surplus wine and support producers.
It comes amid a cocktail of problems for the industry, including a falling demand for wine as more people drink craft beer.
Overproduction and the cost-of-living crisis are also hitting the industry.
Most of the financial package will be used to buy excess stock, with the alcohol sold for use in items such as hand sanitiser, cleaning products and perfume.
The BBC says that, in a bid to cut back on the overproduction, money will also be available for wine growers to change to other products, such as olives.
British Museum thefts
About 2,000 treasures are thought to have been stolen from the British Museum, but recovery has begun of some of them, chairman George Osborne has said.
The ex-chancellor accepted the museum's reputation has suffered but said "it is a mess we are going to clear up".
A leading expert in looted antiquities told the BBC the number of objects lost from the museum was "mind-blowing".
A staff member the museum suspects of involvement has been sacked.
And it was announced on Friday that Hartwig Fischer, the museum's director, will step down immediately after accepting a 2021 investigation was mishandled.
The museum, one of the UK's most prestigious cultural institutions, has been under pressure since revealing earlier this month that a number of treasures were reported "missing, stolen or damaged".
Employees at Arm in the money
Employees at the British semiconductor giant Arm are set to get a £2billion windfall from the company's New York flotation as lucrative share awards are unlocked.
Staff have millions of restricted share units - compensation that converts to shares over time - according to company documents.
The Telegraph says it translates to an average reward of more than £300,000 for Arm's 5,963 employees, although the figures include executives who are each likely to secure millions as well as former workers.
Arm, the Cambridge-based company whose microchip designs feature in 99% of the world's smartphones as well as countless other devices, filed for a Nasdaq flotation last week.
New bid for Wilko
A fresh rescue move for Wilko has emerged as efforts to save the retail chain continue.
Private equity firm M2 Capital has confirmed it has made a £90million bid for the business, and has pledged to retain all employees' jobs for two years.
The bid by M2 is one of several offers being considered by administrators.
Around 12,500 jobs and 400 stores are at risk.
M2 managing director Robert Mantse told the BBC that, if the firm's rescue bid was accepted, M2 would "guarantee all employees' jobs for two years".