The Barclays headquarters building is seen in the Canary Wharf business district of east London February 6, 2013.
REUTERS/Neil Hall/File PhotoLONDON, Aug 3 (Reuters) - British bank Barclays (BARC.L) is weighing up whether to move its continental Europe headquarters from Dublin to Paris, in a potential further boon for the French capital as it seeks to expand as a global financial centre after Brexit.
Barclays said in an interim earnings filing for its Barclays Bank Ireland business - known internally as Barclays Europe -that it was exploring switching its European Union headquarters in order to "be closer to the balance of operations" of the division on the continent.
Any potential move by Barclays would result in a "small number of roles" moving to Paris, the document said, adding initial engagement with regulators and other stakeholders was underway.
It would also not impact the group's UK activities, it added, where the bank's global headquarters are in London.
Persons:
Neil Hall, Iain Withers, Huw Jones, Kirsten Donovan
Organizations:
Barclays, REUTERS, Brexit, Barclays Bank Ireland, European Union, Thomson
Locations:
Canary Wharf, London, British, Europe, Dublin, Paris, Barclays Europe