Here are the business stories making the headlines across Scotland and the UK this morning.
Jamie's Italian to return six years after collapse
Jamie's Italian will return to the UK dining scene next year, six years after the chain went into administration.
Its founder, celebrity chef Jamie Oliver, will reopen the first new site in central London backed by the investors behind another Italian restaurant chain, Prezzo.
They plan to expand the brand further, a return Oliver said was "incredibly important" for him personally.
Netflix-Warner Bros market share could be a problem, Trump says
President Trump has cautioned that Netflix’s $72billion deal to buy Warner Bros Discovery’s TV and film studios creates a streaming company with a market share that regulators could deem anti-competitive.
The combined company is expected to have about 30% of the US streaming market. Netflix is hoping regulators will take a broader view, arguing that it competes not just with Disney+, Max, and Prime Video but also with YouTube, TikTok, broadcast TV and video games.
Trump, who confirmed he recently met Netflix’s co-chief executive, Ted Sarandos, said the deal has to go through a process: “We’ll see what happens. But it is a big market share. It could be a problem.”
Sweaty Betty faces second claim it ‘stole’ advertising slogans
The activewear brand Sweaty Betty faces a second claim that it “stole” taglines used in its advertising.
The women’s sports label became the subject of a viral video last month in which an influencer claimed she had been “silenced by threats” from its legal team after it adopted one of her slogans without crediting her.
Now the founder of the leak-proof pants and leggings brand Nixi Body has also said there is something familiar about Sweaty Betty’s publicity material.
Zelensky due at Downing Street for high-level Ukraine talks
President Volodymyr Zelensky will meet key European leaders in London on Monday, as Ukraine's allies plan their response to an ongoing US push for Kyiv to accept concessions in peace talks.
The leaders of France and Germany will join Zelensky and Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer at No 10 as they seek to ensure any deal deters a future Russian attack.
The high-level meeting follows three days of talks in Florida, where Zelensky's chief negotiator pushed for changes to a White House plan widely considered to accommodate central Kremlin demands.