Here are the business stories making the headlines across Scotland and the UK this morning.
Topshop will return to High Street in 2026
Topshop will return to the High Street, five years after it closed all of its UK stores.
The brand is going to be available in 32 John Lewis shops from February 2026, while its menswear brand Topman will be sold in six stores.
After its heyday in the 2000s and 2010s, the Topshop chain disappeared following the collapse of Sir Philip Green's retail empire, which owned the brand as well as Burton and Dorothy Perkins.
Aberdeen student opens city’s first women-only wellness centre
A Robert Gordon University student has opened Aberdeen’s first dedicated women-only wellness centre, offering a new kind of safe, inclusive space where women can focus on their mental and physical wellbeing.
Serena Leyni is the founder of Soothe Your Soul Haven, a new studio based at Cults Business Park, which has recently welcomed its first clients.
The 28-year-old has signed a five-year lease for a 1,470 sq ft unit that has been transformed into a calming space, surrounded by nature at the edge of the city.
Read the full story on the P&J website.
West Craibstone Street offices in Aberdeen to become flats
The P&J take a look at plans to transform a former townhouse just off Bon Accord Square back into housing.
The B-listed block went under the hammer last December, selling for £160,000 at auction. Documents reveal that the new owners are Aberdeen City Lets, run by Justinas Gustaitis and Diana Gustaite of Great Northern Road.
Under the new proposals, the 3 West Craibstone Street offices would become seven serviced flats.
Click here to read more.
M&S hackers claim responsibility for Jaguar Land Rover attack
The teenage hacking group that brought down Marks & Spencer has claimed responsibility for the cyber attack that has forced Jaguar Land Rover to shut down assembly lines.
The cyber groups Scattered Spider and Shiny Hunters said they had been able to exploit a flaw in the carmaker’s IT systems. The groups said they had gained access to customer data.
This could leave JLR vulnerable to ransom demands as it scrambles to get its systems back online.