Here are the business stories making the headlines across Scotland and the UK this morning.
Second batch of Mandelson files to be published on Monday
The second tranche of documents relating to Lord Mandelson's appointment as the UK's ambassador to the US will be published on Monday, three sources involved in the process have told the BBC.
While Number 10 has refused to confirm the publication date, a government spokesperson said the latest batch "will be among the largest publications ever laid in Parliament".
Lord Mandelson was sacked as ambassador last year after the emergence of new revelations about the extent of his relationship with the late convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
Ex-M&S chief to help government tackle youth unemployment
The former chief executive of Marks & Spencer has been brought in by the government to help get more young people into work after a review warned of a "lost generation".
The review, authored by former minister Alan Milburn, found that one in six young people is set to be out of work, education or training in five years unless action is taken.
Marc Bolland has been tasked with bringing business leaders together to expand opportunities for young people.
Put a £5 deposit on vapes to stop fires, say waste companies
Waste companies have called for a deposit of up to £5 to be charged on vapes to encourage people to dispose of them properly.
Disposable vapes were banned a year ago, partly because of the fires they can cause in bin lorries and waste facilities when thrown away with general rubbish.
But the industry body for waste companies says vape recycling has not improved enough, so a small, refundable deposit at the point of purchase is a "simple, fair, efficient and cost-neutral solution".
Nvidia announces new AI chip for personal computers
Nvidia has announced a new chip for personal computers as it moves into the consumer market for devices integrated with artificial intelligence (AI) technology.
"This reinvention of the computer is as big of a deal as the reinvention of the phone into what we now know as the smartphone," Nvidia's chief executive Jensen Huang said as he unveiled the RTX Spark chip.
Huang made the announcement on Monday as he delivered a keynote speech ahead of the opening of the Computex technology show in Taipei, Taiwan.