Singapore ranked 4th most costly city

Singapore ranked 4th most costly city
PropertyGuru.com.sg – Fri, Sep 23, 2011

Singapore has been ranked as the fourth most costly destination in Savills’ World Cities Review report, with the average value of luxury homes in the country increasing 144 percent over the past five years.

“Singapore has the highest concentration of millionaire households in the world (16 percent with US$1 million plus), and the capacity to buy residential property is obviously high,” said Savills.

Home values of the super-rich in the top 10 cities worldwide climbed 10 percent in the first six months, according to the report, higher than the average price growth of six percent for ordinary properties in similar cities and lower than the 65 percent growth in ultra-prime properties over the past five years.

“We recently identified ten world class cities whose real estate markets have more in common with each other than the mainstream markets of the counties in which they operate, and they are all attracting billionaires’ dollars, whether generated at home or overseas,” said Yolande Barnes, Director of Residential Research at Savills.

In a league of its own for super prime prices, Hong Kong led the list at £6,700 psf, ahead of Tokyo and Paris at £5,190 psf and £3,290 psf respectively. In addition, prices of ultra-prime properties in Hong Kong are more than double London’s average luxury property prices and over 10 times that in Sydney, which has been ranked the cheapest location for billionaires.

“At the foot of the table, Sydney still offers great value and is extremely well located to take advantage of Asian wealth if and when its policies restricting international buying are relaxed,” said Savills, adding that the average price of Sydney’s ultra-high-value homes stood at £590 psf.

Since 2005, the price growth of ultra-high-value homes has been the highest in the emerging “new world” economies of Singapore at +144 percent, followed by Mumbai at +138 percent, Moscow at +110 percent and Hong Kong at +83 percent. This pattern reflects the geography of the new wealth generation, as well as the creation of new billionaires over that period.

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