Vacant Investment Protection

Tuesday, August 9, 2011



Top ten residential real estate cities named

August 9, 2011 6:17 AM EDT


There are ten world cities in a class of their own when it comes to residential real estate according to international property advisors Savills in its World Class Index of premier global residential property locations published today (Monday 08 August).

Average values across the index have risen by 77% since December 2005, despite the intervening financial crisis, with growth of 6% in the first six months of 2011.
But the index average hides a big difference between emerging new world economies and the indebted old world.

A clear gap can be seen between what might be called the old economies of Tokyo, London, Paris, Sydney and New York, which have grown by 32% since 2005, and the new, or emerging economies of Shanghai, Singapore, Hong Kong, Moscow and Mumbai which grew, on average, by 123% over the same period.
Within the old world the more cosmopolitan cities have fared much better than those that restrict foreign purchasers.
It becomes apparent that the debt induced crisis of 2008 was suffered most by the old world cities and not the new world ones. The biggest old world value rebounds have been experienced in the cities most open to new world investment, notably London and Paris,’ explained Yolande Barnes, head of Savills Residential Research.
A shift has occurred in the global real estate premier league since 2005 according to Savills. Hong Kong remains the most expensive and values are now 107% above the 10 cities index average, and 63% more expensive than second place London, which is grouped alongside Tokyo, Singapore and Paris.
Singapore has seen growth over the last five and a half years at 123% so it has come up the ranks from seventh position in 2005 to fourth in 2011.
‘With its strategic location in a time zone between Europe and North America, Hong Kong has emerged as one of the world’s elite financial centres, and as a gateway to China has prompted increased capital and talent inflow over the past decade,’ said Simon Smith, head of Savills research in Asia Pacific.
At the other end of the scale, Mumbai is the least expensive world class city, costing 43% less than the average of all the 10 cities. But it is the great pretender having grown by 154% off this low base, and recording the highest rate of growth over the period, marginally ahead of Shanghai’s 143%.
On an individual basis, cities have performed very differently. Against Mumbai, Singapore and Shanghai’s stellar growth, New York grew by just 7% and now along with Sydney represents the best value by a considerable amount in the old world.
Neither was there uniformity in the pattern and timings of price movements. Some cities have grown steadily over the whole survey period while others have shown pronounced peaks and troughs, at different times.