Here are the business stories making the headlines across Scotland and the UK this morning.
Dons new beach stadium would deliver a £1.6billion economic boost to city
A new, multi-sports community stadium at Aberdeen Beach would inject at least £1.6billion into the local economy over the next 50 years, according to a new report from leading and reputable independent economic consultancy, BiGGAR Economics.
Aberdeen FC commissioned new, more in-depth research into the catalytic impact of the project in a bid to secure the political will and ambition to get it back on track.
The report reveals that a new multi-sports community stadium would generate an additional £32million into the local economy every year, creating and safeguarding 1,170 jobs.
Apple and Samsung users could be due share of £480m payout
Nearly 30 million people in the UK who bought an Apple or Samsung smartphone between 2015 and 2024 may be entitled to about £17 if the consumer campaign group Which? is successful in a case against US tech giant Qualcomm.
The consumer group is taking the tech giant to the Competition Appeal Tribunal in London on Monday.
The trial between Which? and Qualcomm is expected to last five weeks. The consumer group is accusing the chip company of anti-competitive practices.
JLR to restart some production after cyber shutdown
Jaguar Land Rover (JLR) is set to restart some production this week following a major cyber-attack that forced the carmaker to shut down factories and send workers home.
Manufacturing will resume first at JLR's engine factory in Wolverhampton, but it is expected to be several weeks before all operations are running at full capacity, with other sites to return gradually.
Work at JLR's three UK sites in the West Midlands and Merseyside has been suspended since a cyber-attack at the end of August forced the company to shut down.
Harrods sets aside more than £60m for abuse compensation
Harrods has set aside more than £60m in its plan to compensate alleged victims of historical abuse.
More than 100 employees of the luxury department store are expected to claim up to £385,000 each via the redress scheme which is open until March 2026.
The scheme, launched in March, provides to victims who claim they have suffered abuse by former Harrods owner Mohamed Al Fayed, who died in 2023.