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Shares jitter at City recruiter Hays after taking chop to operations 

City PM Published Jun 17, 2026 Reviewed Jun 30, 2026 ✓ Reviewed by citations.press editors
Citation-ready fact
Hays revealed it had offloaded operations across six different countries.
6 countries · operations offloaded
Hays, recruiter
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Citation-ready fact
Hays, a FTSE 250 human resources firm, said it had banked £4m on the sale of operations in the Czech Republic, Denmark, Hungary, Luxembourg, Romania and Sweden.
4 £m · banked on sale
Hays, FTSE 250 human resources firm
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Citation-ready fact
Hays expects the transaction to lead to a non-cash loss on sale to be recognised in the second half of 2026.
2026 · recognition of non-cash loss
Hays, group
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Citation-ready fact
The combined operating profit for the 13 countries targeted in Hays' reshaping is expected to break-even in the next financial year with around £85m in net fees.
13 countries · targeted in reshapingabout 85 £m · net fees
Hays, firm
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Hays' stock was up three per cent to nearly 38p on open.
3 % · stock increaseabout 38 p · stock price
Hays, firm
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Accountancy firm BDO’s employment index hit a 15 year low in March.
15 years · low for employment index
BDO, accountancy firm
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Mark Dearnley was unveiled as Hays’ new top boss in May, having served on an interim basis since February 2026, following previous boss Dirk Hahn stepping down after 28 years at the London-listed company.
28 years · Dirk Hahn tenure
article, reporter
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Hays' operating profit came in at £20.1m for the firm in the last financial year, down 25 per cent when compared with the same period the year prior.
20.1 £m · operating profit25 % · operating profit decrease
Hays, firm
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Hays, the recruiter, suffered from a nine per cent drop in fees.
9 % · fees drop
Hays, recruiter
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STEM-focused recruiter SThree revealed a slump across its UK operations this week with fees falling 19 per cent to £11.6m.
19 % · fees falling11.6 £m · fees
SThree, STEM-focused recruiter
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SThree’s group-wide fee slump was softened by 12 per cent growth in the US and 36 per cent in Japan.
12 % · growth36 % · growth
SThree, recruiter
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Shares in Hays see-sawed on Wednesday morning as the recruiter revealed it had offloaded operations across six different countries. 

The FTSE 250 human resources firm said it had banked £4m on the sale of operations in the Czech Republic, Denmark, Hungary, Luxembourg, Romania and Sweden.

The group expects the transaction to lead to a non-cash loss on sale to be recognised in the second half of 2026.

It added it was “exploring options” in Belgium, Brazil, Greater China, the Netherlands and UAE to further shake-up its portfolio.

The combined operating profit for the 13 countries targeted in the reshaping is expected to break-even in the next financial year with around £85m in net fees. 

The firm’s stock was up three per cent to nearly 38p on open before falling into the red as investors digested the move.

Mark Dearnley, chief executive of Hays, said: “Reshaping our portfolio to provide a sharper focus and build scale in high performing and high potential markets remains a key strategic priority for Hays.”

The move comes amid a bruising period for the jobs market. In the UK, acountancy firm BDO’s employment index hit a 15 year low in March as firms remained cautious over cost pressures.

Dearney was unveiled as Hays’ new top boss in May having served on an interim basis since February 2026, following previous boss Dirk Hahn stepping down for “personal reasons” after 28 years at the London-listed company.

Operating profit came in at £20.1m for the firm in the last financial year, down 25 per cent when compared with the same period the year prior.

The recruiter suffered from a nine per cent drop in fees, which it blamed on weak confidence among employers and candidates leading to a low average placement of roles and longer decision-making.

STEM-focused recruiter SThree revealed a slump across its UK operations this week with fees falling 19 per cent to £11.6m. 

SThree’s group-wide fee slump was softened by 12 per cent growth in the US and 36 per cent in Japan.

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