Here are the business stories making the headlines across Scotland and the UK this morning.
Adidas says customer data stolen in cyber attack
Adidas has disclosed it's been hit by a cyber attack in which customers' personal information has been stolen.
The sportswear giant said criminals had obtained "certain consumer data" which "mainly consists" of the contact information of people who had been in touch with its help desk.
Adidas said passwords and credit card and other payment data were not compromised.
Read more on the BBC website.
Putin is playing with fire, warns Trump
President Trump said that President Putin was “playing with fire” as he stepped up his rhetorical campaign to bring the Russian leader to peace talks.
Trump’s post came after he called Putin “absolutely CRAZY!” on Sunday after the largest Russian drone attack on Kyiv since the 2022 invasion, and warned that Moscow risked new sanctions.
The US president has given Putin the benefit of the doubt throughout his peace initiative launched in January — but now appears to be running out of patience as Russia stalls on joining a 30-day ceasefire as agreed by Ukraine. Instead, Putin has stepped up attacks on Ukraine that have resulted in numerous civilian deaths.
Read the fully story on The Times website.
Six police chiefs warn prime minister crime pledges are in peril
Sir Keir Starmer has been warned by six of Britain’s most senior police chiefs that he will be unable to deliver his flagship pledges to cut crime without serious investment in his upcoming spending review.
They said pledges to halve knife crime, rates of violence against women and girls and recruiting 13,000 additional police officers into neighbourhood policing are all at risk. They warned that failure to give policing sufficient funding will signal a return to austerity that crippled police forces and shrunk officer numbers from 2010 onwards.
In an article in The Times as negotiations over the June 11 spending review enter the final stages, the senior policing figures said it was “the most important moment in decades for the government to choose to back policing”. They warned that their ability to “secure outcomes for victims is at risk” without “substantial investments”.
The full story can be found on The Times website.
Former RGU students union on Schoolhill goes under the hammer
The former RGU students’ union on Schoolhill is set to be auctioned – starting at a tenth of the price it previously sold for.
The giant lot is actually two buildings – 54-70 Schoolhill and The Clarke Building – and encompasses 88,794 square feet of space.
It also has a central courtyard.
Get the full story on the P&J website.
Summer strike threat at Glasgow and Edinburgh airports
Strike action could hit Scotland's largest airports over the summer after hundreds of ground services crew rejected pay offers.
The union Unite said about 300 workers at Glasgow and a similar number at Edinburgh had turned down two separate offers from their employer Menzies Aviation.
The staff include dispatchers, allocators, flight manifest controllers and airside agents.
The full article is available on the BBC website.
Tesco shoppers mock 'VAR'-style cameras at self-checkout
Tesco's introduction of AI technology to some self-checkouts has led to customers joking that it bears a striking resemblance to the Video Assistant Referee (VAR) technology used in football.
The supermarket is aiming to reduce shoplifting by installing overhead cameras to identify when shoppers fail to scan an item properly, and then showing a live-action replay of the item not scanning.
While some shoppers mocked the tech, others complained it was a step too far, with some saying they would not use self-checkout again.
Read the full article on the BBC site.
King's Canadian speech doesn't mention you-know-who
King Charles III was given a heartfelt standing ovation in Canada's parliament in Ottawa after a historic speech in support of the country staying "strong and free".
Outside the Senate building later, another voice from the crowd shouted: "Thanks for coming King Charles" in a voice full of emotion - as the King himself had sounded at the end of his speech.
But what was never mentioned was what the speech was really about: US President Donald Trump.
Get the full story from the BBC.