Tag: most expensive city

  • Singapore Overtakes Hong Kong As 2nd-Most Pricey Asian City

    Singapore Overtakes Hong Kong As 2nd-Most Pricey Asian City

    Living the high life in Singapore will need pretty deep pockets, according to the latest wealth report by private Swiss bank Julius Baer.

    “Singapore has overtaken Hong Kong as the second most expensive city in Asia as the latter remains out of favour with Chinese tourists,” said the report which was released yesterday. Hong Kong was in third position.

    Shanghai remains the most expensive city – the same as last year – despite its relatively cheaper BMW price. Especially pricey there are hospital stays, watches, botox, cigars and high-end skin cream.

    The findings are part of Julius Baer’s lifestyle index, which reveals the costs of luxury living by looking at 20 goods and services across 11 cities in Asia. Data was collected from June last year to June this year.

    On the other hand, when it comes to high-end homes, Singapore has become markedly more affordable, with prices slumping 26.4 per cent compared with last year, in local currency terms.

    In Mumbai, prices fell 21.9 per cent, and in Tokyo, prices dropped 11.9 per cent. Julius Baer compared homes in prime locations of about 4,000 sq ft in area.

    The private bank said Singapore property prices remained soft, as previously imposed stamp duties and property loan restrictions deterred non-resident investors and dampened speculative activity.

    “However, we are starting to see signs of a bottoming of activity, particularly in the prime districts where sales volumes have increased sharply in the first half of 2016 due to the various incentives and discounts offered by developers.”

    Julius Baer believes that over the medium term, Singapore’s reputation for quality health care services, and as a liveable and business city, will continue to attract foreign homebuyers.

    It also noted that the gradual easing of prices in the property markets is a prudent measure that has “likely forestalled a more aggressive economic adjustment”.

    Golf club memberships here could be considered “cheap” relative to the region, with prices dipping 4.2 per cent, after buyers stopped trading in memberships, on the back of government announcements that it was taking back the land from three clubs and that two others would not have their leases renewed.

    The bank also added a high-end skin cream to the lifestyle index this year. It added that Asia makes up 36 per cent of the global beauty market, and is expected to grow 4.5 per cent every year until 2019, far faster than the global market.

    With the certificate of entitlement (COE) system in Singapore, it is no surprise that a brand new BMW 7 Series sedan here costs the most among the 11 cities surveyed.

    A new BMW 7 Series sedan costs about US$430,000 (S$589,000) here, owing to import duties and regulatory taxes.

    In Shanghai, “a distant second”, the same car is about US$300,000. It also expects the assets of high net worth individuals – people with net investable wealth of US$1 million or more, excluding property used as their main residence – across the region, to grow to US$14.5 trillion by 2020.

    Julius Baer Group chief executive Boris Collardi said: “This year’s lifestyle index demonstrates that there remains enormous demand for luxury goods and services in Asia, but it equally signals that asset price fluctuations can be a potential drag on spending.”

     

    Source: The Straits Times

  • Singapore Remains The Most Expensive City In The World

    Singapore Remains The Most Expensive City In The World

    Singapore maintained its global ranking as the most expensive city for a second straight year on higher prices of items from wine to cars, according to the Economist Intelligence Unit.

    The island nation beat Paris, Oslo, Zurich and Sydney, which also retained their spots in the ranking, the EIU’s 2015 Worldwide Cost of Living Survey released Tuesday showed. The report compares the price of products and services including food, clothing, transport, private schools and domestic help in 140 cities with New York City as a base.

    Singapore, smaller in size than New York City, has seen home prices surge to records in recent years amid rising wealth and an influx of foreigners. A vehicle-permit system makes cars more expensive than in other countries, while the expansion of the island’s private banking industry and the presence of regional hubs for global companies have drawn top talent, boosting salaries.

    “The situation of an unchanged top five is very rare for the Worldwide Cost of Living Survey and disguises some significant global drivers that are impacting the cost of living everywhere,” Jon Copestake, chief retail and consumer goods analyst at EIU, said in a statement. Beyond the appearance of stability, “things are changing quickly, especially with the fall in oil prices,” he said.

    Singapore’s transport costs are almost three times higher than New York and it’s the most expensive place to buy clothes globally, along with Seoul, the EIU report said. Car buyers must pay for excise and registration duties that more than double the vehicle’s market value. They must also bid for a limited number of permits that are auctioned by the government.

    Hong Kong and Seoul are the other Asian cities that make up the Top 10, even as deflation and a devaluation of the Japanese yen have dragged Tokyo and Osaka lower, according to the report. The unpegging of the Swiss franc from the euro means that, at today’s exchange rates, Zurich and Geneva would be the world’s most expensive cities, it said.

    At the other end of the scale, Karachi and Bengaluru, formerly known as Bangalore, offer the best value for money, the EIU report showed. Asian cities make up six of the bottom 10, it said.

     

    Source: www.bloomberg.com