Hong Kong replaced by Singapore as Asia's top finance centre by AFP Staff Writers Hong Kong (AFP) Sept 23, 2022 Hong Kong has lost its crown as Asia's premier finance centre to Singapore in a global ranking list where New York and London maintained their number one and two spots. Singapore jumped three places to third in the twice-a-year Global Financial Centres Index (GFCI) which assesses 119 cities around the world and was published late Thursday. Hong Kong has adhered to a version of China's strict zero-Covid rules throughout the pandemic, battering the economy and deepening a brain drain as rival business hubs reopen. The city still mandates three days of hotel quarantine for all international arrivals while its border with the Chinese mainland is mostly closed. In contrast, Singapore successfully shifted to endemicity earlier this year and has reopened without restrictions. The city-state is hosting a slew of financial and business conferences in the coming months as well as a Formula 1 night race next week, while about four million people are expected to visit this year. In a 600-word statement responding to the latest GFCI ranking, Hong Kong's government focused on the city scoring a higher points rating than the year before. "We will continue to listen to views and be bold in taking forward reforms to consolidate and strengthen Hong Kong's capital market and our role as an international financial centre," the government said. The statement did not mention the coronavirus or the ongoing pandemic controls. San Francisco came in at number five in the survey, up two spots. Shanghai, which was shut down earlier this year under China's coronavirus controls, was number six followed by Los Angeles, Beijing and Shenzhen. Paris took tenth spot, replacing Tokyo which fell to 16th place.
Asian markets tumble further as Fed hikes rates, warns more to come Hong Kong (AFP) Sept 22, 2022 Asian markets extended a painful Wall Street sell-off Thursday after the Federal Reserve unveiled a third straight jumbo interest rate hike, said more were in the pipeline, and warned the battle against inflation was straining the US economy. While the three-quarter-point rise was widely expected, there was some surprise at the central bank's forecast that borrowing costs would likely be held above four percent throughout next year. Fed boss Jerome Powell reiterated his determination to focus on ... read more
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