Global banking giant HSBC on Monday said it could shift 1,000 jobs to Paris if Britain votes to leave the European Union (EU) in a referendum expected later this year.

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"We are lucky in the sense that we have a major bank in France," group chairman Douglas Flint told BBC Radio 4's Today programme.

"So, if we were to leave and if there were to be restrictions, ultimately on the renegotiation of Britain's position, we have the ability to move activity and people between London and Paris," he said.

Commenting on the bank's decision to remain headquartered in London, Flint warned the result of the referendum "potentially does have an impact on the operating activities of our wholesale bank". "Our strong economic view is that Britain is better within a reformed Europe,"  Flint said.

The bank's chief executive Stuart Gulliver told Sky News that a British departure from the EU could have a "significant impact" on the bank's trading room, corporate banking and investment banking.

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"We have 5,000 people in global banking and markets in London and I could imagine that around 20% of those would move to Paris," Gulliver said.

Any decision on moving jobs would depend on the terms of a British exit, including whether Britain could still access the financial services "passporting" regime allowing member states to trade across national borders.

The Hong Kong and Shanghai Bank employs around 10,000 people in France compared to 48,000 in Britain out of a global workforce of 257,000.

Prime Minister David Cameron is headed to Paris to meet French President Francois Hollande on Monday on a crucial week culminating in a summit in Brussels where he is hoping to renegotiate Britain's EU membership.

Opinion polls indicate a close race between supporters and opponents of Britain staying in the EU and big businesses have voiced concern about the impact of the uncertainty ahead of the vote.