Catering giant Compass on Tuesday said it planned to cut up to 4,000 jobs owing to a deteriorating European outlook and as it warned over Brexit's impact.
"There will be... no more than 4,000 job cuts" over the next two years, or less than one percent of Compass' global workforce, a spokesman told AFP after the company said it would look to cut costs after a drop in annual profits.
"There is some weakness in some key European markets like Germany, France and the UK," the spokesman said.
"Key manufacturing clients are laying off people."
Compass, which supplies contract catering services to offices, schools, hospitals and sports centres, employs 600,000 staff worldwide.
The group on Tuesday revealed that net profit fell almost two percent to £1.11 billion ($1.4 billion, 1.3 billion euros) in the 12 months to the end of September, compared with £1.13 billion last time around. Revenues rose more than six percent to £24.9 billion.
"Despite this good performance, we are not immune to the macro environment," chief executive Dominic Blakemore said in the results statement. "Deteriorating business and consumer confidence in Europe has impacted" the group.
"Given these trends, we are taking prompt action in Europe" and elsewhere "to capitalise on future growth opportunities".