Industry Surveys
New York Among Four Global Wealth Management Hotspots ā GFCI Survey

New York, London, Hong Kong and Singapore are the four main hotspot centers for wealth management and private banking, according to the 2013 Global Finance Centre Index by Z/Yen Group ā the UK-based think tank.
The survey, led by research group Long Finance, reveals that Hong Kong and Singapore are now only two points apart. There is a 48 point spread between London in ļ¬rst place and Singapore in fourth. There is then a gap of 36 points, where Zurich sits in ļ¬fth place.
Meanwhile, offshore centers ācontinue to gain groundā in the 2013 index. Of these, as in last yearās results, Jersey and Guernsey remain as the leading two centers. They are followed closely by Monaco, which ranks 35th in the index, up by 25 ranks since GFCI 2012.
GFCI uses responses to an ongoing online questionnaire completed by international ļ¬nancial services professionals. Responses from 2,379 ļ¬nancial services professionals were collected in the 24 months to December 2012. The report was sponsored by the Qatar Financial Centre Authority and produced by Z/Yen Group.
The eurozone crisis lingers on
Although the index shows that ļ¬nancial centers in Europe are still in turmoil as the eurozone crisis continues, some areas have seen a rise since 2012. Zurich, in fifth place, and Geneva, in seventh, conļ¬rmed their position in the GFCI top ten. Meanwhile, Frankfurt, in 10th place, and Paris, in 26th, have both moved up by three ranks since GFCI 2012. Luxembourg, Vienna, Milan and Rome also showed improvements and moved slightly closer to London.
Lisbon, Reykjavik, Budapest and Athens, however, have declined, and remain near the bottom of the GFCI rankings. Athens in 79th place is now 68 points adrift of the 78th centre Budapest, the firm said.
Asia-Pacific picks up pace
The index for 2013 shows that all Asia-Paciļ¬c ļ¬nancial centers - with the exception of Beijing - have seen marked improvements in this yearās ratings. Kuala Lumpur moved up three ranks, from 26th to 21st. Singapore remained at fourth place and Tokyo moved up one rank to sixth place. Beijing, however, suffered the largest decline in the GFCI 2013, down by 15 places to 43rd place.
Mixed bag for the Americas
Centers in the Americas saw their ratings improve, although Chicago, Toronto and San Francisco fell slightly in the rankings. Boston entered the GFCI top ten, climbing to eighth place, having previously been in 11th place, and has now moved just above Seoul, Chicago and Toronto.
The index shows that Latin American centers have made signiļ¬cant progress in terms of both rankings and ratings. Sao Paulo and Rio de Janeiro are now in the GFCI top 50, both having climbed four places, and Buenos Aires makes a signiļ¬cant gain of 55 points, to sit in 53rd place.