Here are the business stories making the headlines across Scotland and the UK this morning.
Lineker says emotional farewell on final Match of the Day
Gary Lineker held back tears as he signed off from his final edition of Match of the Day after 26 years in the hot seat and officially left the BBC.
The host announced in November that he would leave the football show at the end of the Premier League season, which concluded on Sunday.
He had been due to remain with the BBC to front coverage of the men's FA Cup and the World Cup, but has now left the corporation completely after apologising for sharing an antisemitic social media post.
Renationalised railways not on track for cheaper fares
The government cannot guarantee train tickets will get cheaper under renationalisation, as South Western Railway (SWR) was brought into public ownership on Sunday.
It is the first train company to be nationalised under Labour, a move which the government called a "new dawn for rail".
While Transport Secretary Heidi Alexander told the BBC she "would love to be able" to promise lower fares, she said the day-to-day running of trains was already heavily subsidised by the taxpayer.
UK food producers have wasted millions on delayed post-Brexit checks
British food and flower producers have wasted millions of pounds in preparing for post-Brexit import checks that now may never be introduced, industry leaders have warned.
The sector had been working toward a July 2025 deadline for the introduction of full sanitary and phytosanitary (SPS) controls on agri-food imports from the European Union.
However, a sudden shift in government policy, tied to the UK-EU “reset” and new trade talks, means the vast majority of those checks have been delayed.
Click here to read more.
'Something has happened to him': Trump slams Putin
US President Donald Trump says he is "not happy" with Vladimir Putin, following Moscow's largest aerial attack yet on Ukraine at the weekend.
Posting on social media platform, Truth Social, Trump says: "I’ve always had a very good relationship with Vladimir Putin of Russia, but something has happened to him.
"He has gone absolutely CRAZY! He is needlessly killing a lot of people, and I’m not just talking about soldiers."
Monsoon owner Adena Brands falls to £7.5m loss amid weak demand
The owner of Monsoon and Accessorize fell into the red last year after a period of weak consumer demand and “steep” wage inflation.
Adena Brands, which also owns East, the womenswear label, posted a pre-tax loss of £7.5million in the year to August 31, compared with a profit of £14.1million the year before. Turnover across the group fell to £204million in the period from £231million.
The group said the results “reflected a challenging environment, with weak consumer demand and steep wage and other cost inflation, but also underperformance in several areas and the results reflect both that underperformance and the investment made to turn the performance around.”
Read more in The Times.