WM Market Reports
Brexit, US Elections Hit Financial Centre Scores Of London, New York; Asia Shines

The absolute scores of London and New York in a regular survey were dragged down by political turmoil, but these cities' position in the global pecking order is unchanged, while eurozone cities did not even get into the top 10.
One of the dangers of the controversies around Brexit and the
current president of the US is that one suspects these issues
dominate the airwaves to such an extent that other stark
facts of reality do not intrude as much as they probably
should.
There are frequent reports showing that this or that city
or country is the most desirable or expensive, and another
ranking comes along this week from Z/Yen, a London-based think
tank. In its Global Financial Centres Index 21 report, based on
24 months of responses up to December last year, much play in the
press release is given to the fact that both London and New York
have seen their ranking scores drop heavily from the previous
survey, with the UK’s vote to quit the European Union and the
election of Donald Trump to the US presidency cited as
reasons for these falls.
But what is perhaps noticeable if one examines the data is that
not a single eurozone member country’s big city stands in the top
10, and furthermore, London and New York are still first and
second, respectively, with scores of 782 and 780. In third place
- unchanged from the previous ranking but with a higher score -
is Singapore, followed by Hong Kong and Tokyo. Next in line are
San Francisco, Chicago, Sydney, Boston, Toronto. Zurich is at
11th, while Luxembourg is the only eurozone member to be in the
top 20. Frankfurt is at 23rd spot and Paris at 29th. It might
seem, therefore, that any talk of London losing its pre-eminence
as a financial centre to the continent is premature.
The index was compiled using 101 quantitative factors, gleaned
from organisations such as the World Bank, OECD and Economist
Intelligence Unit. They are mixed with answers to a questionnaire
(there were a total of 3,008 responses). The survey, published in
conjunction with the China Development Institute, rates 88
financial centres. The quantitative factors, for example, look at
areas of competitiveness: business environment, human
capital, infrastructure, sector development and reputation.
(There are sub-groups under these various categories.)
The report found that the gap between third place Singapore and
second place New York continues to close. Singapore rose by eight
points and is now only 20 points behind New York having been 42
points behind in the GFCI 20 report. This is an interesting
finding – as reported by the Economist Intelligence Unit
recently, Singapore remains the world’s costliest city in which
to live.
There is a lot of volatility in Western European financial
centres. Of the 29 Global Financial Centre Index centres in the
region, 16 fell and 12 rose. Geneva recovered some of the ground
it lost in GFCI 20. Ratings for Amsterdam, Vienna and Gibraltar
fell significantly, the report said.
Financial centres in the Middle East and Africa did well in GFCI
21. Apart from a very small decline by Dubai, the other main
centres improved in the ratings. There were strong rises for Abu
Dhabi and Tel Aviv. Latin American centres continue to struggle.
Sao Paulo, Rio de Janeiro and Panama all fell significantly.
Buenos Aires and Santiago remain associate centres having failed
to accumulate a sufficient number of assessments to enter the
main index.
Offshore centres had mixed results. The British Crown
Dependencies remained stable, whilst Caribbean centres had mixed
fortunes with the Cayman Islands and the British Virgin Islands
falling but Bermuda and the Bahamas
rising slightly.
Los Angeles moved up 20 points into the top 20 global centres. In
Canada, Toronto, Montreal and Vancouver all performed well in
GFCI 21. Financial professionals continue to favour safety and
stability in their choices of location.