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Barclays to hire 200 staff in Paris as City struggles after Brexit

Barclays - PETER NICHOLLS/REUTERS
Barclays - PETER NICHOLLS/REUTERS

Barclays is planning to hire 200 new workers in Paris in the latest blow to the City of London in the wake of Brexit.

The British lender said it expects to increase its headcount in the French capital by about two-thirds over the next two to three years as it increasingly becomes Europe’s main trading hub.

Francesco Ceccato, chief executive of Barclays Europe, said he believes the bank could generate enough business in Paris to add about 200 more staff by 2025 to 2026. It currently employs around 300 people in the French capital.

Mr Ceccato told Bloomberg: “The need to keep hiring traders on the continent is obvious. Europe needs to develop its capital markets to reduce reliance on banks, so we have an opportunity to grow. Over the next few years, we wouldn’t be surprised if there were around 500 people working for Barclays in Paris.”

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It comes as Paris increasingly becomes a significant financial hub after Brexit, with major international banks expanding their presence in the country.

It has also been boosted by the European Central Bank (ECB)‘s raid on the Square Mile, which ordered lenders to base staff in the EU if they are responsible for significant trading activity on the Continent after Britain left the bloc.

It is understood that Barclays’ plan to expand its Parisian office is not related to the ECB’s so-called desk-mapping review.

Goldman Sachs moved into a new, 9,000-square metre Paris headquarters last year, with its headcount more than doubling in the country in recent years.

Barclays employs around 1,800 people across 10 countries in the European Union, compared to more than 40,000 in the UK. Its Paris operation is now nearly as large as its Dublin office.

At the end of 2022, the company had nearly 90,000 employees globally, according to its annual report.

Given its expansion plans in the French capital, Barclays plans to move into a larger Parisian office next year near the Arc de Triomphe.

Memos in the bank’s Paris office are drafted in both English and French and the company has hired external contractors to provide language lessons.

Raoul Salomon, chief executive of Barclays France, told Bloomberg: “People do not see Paris as a short-term gig anymore. They bring their kids and buy country houses.”

In March, Paris extended its lead over London as Europe’s largest stock market as companies continued to flee Britain.

The London market is $250bn (£204bn) smaller than its French rival, according to data from Bloomberg, as fears grow that the London Stock Exchange (LSE) is losing its allure.

Last November, London was stripped of its crown as the largest centre for trading equities in Europe for the first time, after it was leapfrogged by Paris.

Concerns about the City’s position were exacerbated in recent weeks when building material giant CRH became the latest company to leave the London stock market for New York, while British technology darling Arm also said it was shunning the LSE for its bumper listing.

The City watchdog has since announced plans to water down rules to make it easier for companies to list on the LSE.

Meanwhile, investors sold a £2.7bn stake in the LSE on Wednesday as the group which runs it battles to revive the London market.

An investor consortium, including US buyout giant Blackstone and Thomson Reuters, offloaded the shares just months after it disposed of another $2bn in LSE stock.

Shares in the London Stock Exchange Group slumped more than 4pc, valuing the company at £46bn.

Thomson Reuters and Blackstone took a stake in the LSE after selling data company Refinitiv to the UK-listed exchange for £21bn in 2021.

The LSE's acquisition of Refinitiv, under boss David Schwimmer, was supposed to transform the financial group – which was founded in 1801 but has a history dating back to London’s original coffeehouse brokers in the 1700s – from a company that derived its revenue from share trades and listings into an international data and information giant.