In total, 3,167 jobs will be affected, but almost 1,000 of those employees will be redeployed to other jobs. The net job loss will be 2,217, HSBC said.

The redundancies will mainly affect HSBC's retail bank, plus head office functions and some other areas, Reuters reported on Wednesday.

A first wave of layoffs - part of Chief Executive Stuart Gulliver's plan to shed 30,000 jobs globally by the end of 2013 - cut almost 7,000 staff in 2011. That left HSBC with some 288,000 employees at end-December, including 52,000 in Britain.

The majority of UK staff leaving in the coming months will be senior or middle managers, the bank said. Few customer-facing employees would be cut and that its UK retail branch network would be "largely unaffected".

HSBC said it was targeting "unnecessary bureaucracy" and reducing layers of management. Gulliver has also said he wants to streamline the bank for changes in British regulation.

About a quarter of the staff cuts are related to the impact on business from the Retail Distribution Review - a change to the way banks charge retail clients from next year - HSBC said.

Unite union said it would fiercely campaign against the job losses.

"There is no justification for this awful treatment of staff. How can the bank announce 3,167 staff cuts when it was the workforce that delivered it a profit of 13.8 billion pounds last year?" David Fleming of Unite said.

(Reporting by Steve Slater and Sarah White; Editing by Jane Merriman and Sophie Walker)