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OPPORTUNITIES FOR EVERYONE...EVERY DAY
EARLY IDENTIFICATION OF OPPORTUNITY
TREND ANALYSIS
Town, West Palm Beach a Global 'Wealth Hub'

Report: Area cities boast stronger
growth than Dubai, Silicon Valley
By Kimberly Miller
Palm Beach Post | USA TODAY NETWORK
Mounting affluence in West Palm Beach and Palm Beach landed the cities in the Top 5 fastest growing "wealth hubs" worldwide, beating out leading contenders that included Dubai and San Francisco's Silicon Valley, according to a wealth tracking report released this week.
The two Palm Beach County cities experienced a 12% increase in millionaires between 2014 and 2024, ranking them in fourth place internationally in the Henley & Partners World's Wealthiest Cities Report 2025.
That's a jump from Ith place last year and an indication that the cities are maintaining a growth spurt that began during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Ranking ahead of West Palm Beach and Palm Beach are the first-place finish-Shenzhen, China, runner up Scottsdale, Arizona, and third place Bengaluru, India. Dubai ranked sixth on the list with the Bay Area, in cluding San Francisco and Silicon Valley, coming in seventh. Miami ranked in eighth.
I'm not surprised by the move up, and it's a pretty substantial move," said Florida Atlantic University economics Professor Bryan Cutsinger about the Top 5
placement. "It's a very attractive place for a lot of reasons: No income tax, very friendly business environment, educated
workforce.
In sheer numbers, the wealth report found that West Palm Beach and Palm Beach combined have lI,500 milionaires, 78 centimillionaires (people with $100 million-plus) and 1O bilionaires.
The Business Development Board of Palm Beach County estimates there are 60 billionaires countywide, while an analysis of Forbes data by the Palm Beach Daily News found there are 68 billionaires with strong residential ties to the Town of
Palm Beach.
While West Palm Beach was growing previous to 2020, the pandemic served as a catalyst for a hefty migration of peopie moving to Florida lured by fewer COVID-19 restrictions, lower taxes and sunshine.
"When the pandemic hit, (West Palm Beach) was this really unique place that was essentially a blank canvas," said Frisbie Group managing partner Rob Frisbie during a Palm Beach Chamber of Commerce forumin March. "It was this sponge that was so ready to absorb this growth and that's one of the driving factors that sets it apart from these other growth centers around the country.
Heavy-hitter financial companies
such as Goldman Sachs, Millennium Management, Point 72 Asset Management and Citadel opened offices in West Palm Beach, bolstering the city's reputation as "Wall Street South." More firms followed. Last year, financial firm Edward D. Jones, private equity firm Alvarez & Marsal and telecom firm Dycom Industries signed leases in downtown West Palm Beach buildings.
The downtown is also getting a new hospital from Cleveland Clinic, and a new graduate business school from Vanderbilt University.
Related Ross, West Palm Beach's dominant developer, is also working on a deal to buy 55 acres of city land to build a private school and housing.
"I always knew the city would grow, but Inever thought we would grow to this extent in such a small period of time" said Kenneth Baboun, who is building the waterfront Alba Palm Beach condominium on North Flagler Drive in West Palm Beach Baboun said he recently sold a $l0.6 million unit in Alba. He said the buyers could afford Palm Beach, but prefer West Palm, which just added another notable perk-an estiatorio Milos restaurant.
"My friends were like, 'Oh, and now you have Milos' That was a big thing" Baboun said, "Its grown into a very interesting city."
While West Palm Beach and Palm
Beachare ranked high for growing wealth, they are still lower on the list for the number of affluent residents.
The Top 5 cities globally with the most millionaires are first-place New York City, followed by the Bay Area (San Francisco, Silicon Valley), Tokyo, Singapore and Los Angeles.
However, West Palm Beach and Palm Beach are considered a "hot spot" for centimillionaires with a "high growth" potential Business Development Board President Kelly Smallridge agrees with the
growth assessment.
Although she said there may be some "potential pain to rightsizing and onshoring" under the Trump administration, she's been fielding more calls from international companies interested in opening
local facilities.
"I remember a time when companies
were saying they can't do business here because it's too expensive, now I'm getting more calls from international companies than I have in a long time," Smallridge
said. "They realize they are going to havd to open up something in the US".
Kmberly Miller is have for The Palm Beach Post, part of the USA Today Network of Florida. She covers real estate, weather, and the environment.
Subscribe to The Dirt for a weekly real estate round-up. If you have news tips, please send them to kmiller@pbpost. com.
Help support our local joumalism, subscribe today.
The Palm Beach Post
Kmberly Miller is have for The Palm Beach Post, part of the USA Today Network of Florida. She covers real estate, weather, and the environment.
Subscribe to The Dirt for a weekly real estate round-up. If you have news tips, please send them to kmiller@pbpost. com.
Help support our local joumalism, subscribe today.
https://www.palmbeachpost.com/


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