LONDON/MILAN (REUTERS) - HSBC has sent more than 100 of its London staff home after a worker tested positive for the coronavirus, the first known case at a major company in Europe's main financial hub.

The bank also has an employee in China with the virus who is in a stable condition, according to an internal memo from interim chief executive officer Noel Quinn seen by Reuters.

Banks globally are readying out-of-town offices and isolating some teams to ensure they can keep trading if coronavirus spreads in more major financial centres.

Italy's UniCredit also told some staff to go home after two new infections were reported among its employees - one in Germany and one in Italy.

JPMorgan said in a memo on Thursday that it was moving traders in New York and London to a number of locations.

The US bank runs a British disaster recovery site in Basingstoke, southwest of London, and has an alternative building in central London near the Blackfriars bridge.

"The bank has officially moved from testing to execution,"said a source familiar with the matter, adding the biggest wave of moves would happen on March 9.

Goldman Sachs has been testing a back-up site in Croydon, south London, while Barclays has an office in Northolt, in the north-west of the capital, it is planning to use as a back-up.

The possibility of the coronavirus spreading across the finance industry is worrying regulators, who fear the absence of important staff could lead to liquidity problems in markets if firms cannot operate their trading operations normally.

The European Central Bank has asked euro zone banks to urgently test their large-scale remote working arrangements or other flexible working arrangements for critical staff, a letter dated Tuesday that was seen by Reuters showed.

German and British financial regulators have also said they are watching how prepared banks and other institutions are.

In Spain, BBVA said on Thursday it had transferred up to 100 staff from its Madrid trading floor to a location just outside the city as part of its contingency plan to protect operations from potential disruption related to the coronavirus outbreak.

FINANCIAL DISTRICT

At HSBC, an employee in its research department in London self-isolated on Sunday, sources familiar with the matter told Reuters.

The employee was later confirmed to have the coronavirus and on Thursday morning the bank sent home more than 100 people from the research department, a bank spokeswoman said.

HSBC has told staff who came into contact with the man to work from home as areas affected undergo a thorough clean.

"We have been informed that one of our employees at 8 Canada Square has been diagnosed with Covid-19. This colleague is under medical supervision and has self-isolated," the spokeswoman said.

"All staff whose roles allow remote working have been told they can work from home if preferred."

HSBC's London office is in Canary Wharf, a major financial district that hosts many investment banks, including Citi, JPMorgan, Morgan Stanley and Barclays.

HSBC's headquarters remains open, the bank said.

The lender separately on Wednesday sent home 20 staff from its global banking and markets division as a precaution because one person had come into contact with someone infected with the virus, the HSBC spokeswoman said.

The 20 people have since returned to work, she said.

The bank's coronavirus cases in China and London are unrelated, CEO Quinn told staff in the internal memo.

Commodity pricing agency S&P Global Platts told around 1,200 employees at its Canary Wharf office in London to work from home until further notice after a visitor was diagnosed with the coronavirus, the company said.

NEW CASES AT UNICREDIT

Italy's UniCredit raised the number of its workers infected with coronavirus to three on Thursday and sent home staff who dealt with them.

Unicredit said it had told all employees who have been in contact with a contractor in its Munich office who has since tested positive for the virus to self-quarantine for two weeks.

The bank has closed its Piacenza office, where another employee has tested positive, and a branch in the northern Italian city, Unicredit said in a statement.

It advised all employees who may have been in close contact with the colleague to self-isolate for 14 days and said it would contact all customers who had been in the Piacenza branch in recent days.

Italy has been hit harder by the coronavirus than any other country in Europe, with 107 deaths and more than 3,000 confirmed cases.