Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Why Chile's Santiago Outranks Brazil's São Paulo As A Global Financial Centre


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Key Points

- Santiago (91st, 658 points) outranks São Paulo (98th, 651) in the Global Financial Centres Index 39 - a country with one-tenth the GDP and one-eleventh the population scores higher on financial competitiveness

- The reason is not size but predictability: Chile offers regulatory stability, low sovereign risk (102 bps EMBI), pension fund depth, and institutional continuity that Brazil - with its fiscal volatility, Master scandal, and political noise - cannot match

- Latin America's average GFCI rating fell 2.5% - the worst of any region in the world - with eight centres dropping. Buenos Aires improved its score but remains dead last at 120th of 120

Brazil's economy is six times larger than Chile's. Its stock market is deeper, its banking sector bigger, its corporate base denser. And yet, when 5,218 financial professionals were asked to rank the world's financial centres, Santiago beat São Paulo. The reason tells you everything about what's holding Latin America back.

The Global Financial Centres Index 39 (GFCI), published March 26, placed Santiago at 91st and São Paulo at 98th among 120 LATAM financial centres ranked worldwide - making them the only two Latin American cities in the top 100. The index, compiled by Z/Yen Partners and the China Development Institute using 147 quantitative indicators and 34,468 professional assessments, evaluates business environment, human capital, infrastructure, financial sector development, and reputation. On every dimension that matters to capital allocators, a $340 billion economy outscored a $2.2 trillion one.

Why Predictability Beats Size

São Paulo has the scale: Latin America's largest stock exchange, its deepest banking sector, Embraer, Petrobras, Vale, and the corporate headquarters of most multinationals operating in the region. But scale is not what the GFCI measures. It measures the conditions under which capital operates - and on those terms, Santiago wins.

Chile offers what Brazil cannot: regulatory continuity across administrations, the region's lowest sovereign risk (102 basis points on the EMBI, versus Brazil's 197), a deep private pension system that creates structural demand for financial services, and a political culture that - despite the turbulence of the 2019 protests and the failed constitutional rewrites - has maintained institutional stability. Chile's central bank is genuinely independent. Its fiscal rules have survived left-right transitions. Its capital markets regulator is respected internationally.

Brazil, by contrast, enters the GFCI assessment period carrying the Banco Master scandal - the largest banking fraud in its history - a fiscal deficit that remains elevated, political uncertainty around Lula's 2026 reelection campaign, and a tax reform still in transition. São Paulo's financial infrastructure is world-class; the institutional framework it operates within is not. "The leadership of Santiago and São Paulo in Latin America is not explained by the size of their economies, but by their capacity to offer something scarce in the region: predictability," said Renato Campos, CEO of Greyhound Trading.

The Full LATAM Ranking

Beyond the top 100, eight more Latin American and Caribbean cities were assessed: Rio de Janeiro 105th (642 points), Mexico City 106th (639), Bahamas 111th (631), Barbados 113th (623), Panama 115th (616), Trinidad and Tobago 116th (605), Bogotá 119th (589), and Buenos Aires 120th (565). Caribbean offshore centres - Bermuda (57th), Cayman Islands (68th), and the British Virgin Islands (97th) - also made the top 100 but are British Overseas Territories, not sovereign LATAM economies.

The region's average GFCI rating fell 2.5% - the steepest decline of any region globally, compared to the worldwide average decline of 1.82%. Eight LATAM centres dropped in the rankings. Only Buenos Aires improved its rating, likely reflecting the market optimism around Milei's fiscal reforms - though at 120th out of 120, it remains dead last in the index.

The Global Picture

The global top four - New York (767), London (766), Hong Kong (765), and Singapore (764) - are separated by just one point each, reflecting intense competition at the apex. Dubai and Tokyo entered the top 10 for the first time, displacing Chicago and Los Angeles. Six of the top 10 centres are in Asia-Pacific. The index authors noted that data predates the Iran-Hormuz conflict and warned that "the economic repercussions will significantly affect future editions."

In fintech, Hong Kong leads globally, followed by Shenzhen, New York, Singapore, and London - with five American and six Chinese centres in the top 20. No Latin American city appears in the fintech rankings, a gap that underscores the region's challenge in competing for the technology-driven financial services that are increasingly defining where capital flows.

The Lesson for the Region

The GFCI matters because it directly influences where global capital is allocated. Pension funds, sovereign wealth managers, and multinational treasurers use the index as a reference for investment decisions. LATAM's 2.5% decline - at a time when Eastern Europe and Central Asia fell only 0.56% - signals the region is losing ground. The Chile-Brazil comparison crystallizes why: in the competition for capital, institutional quality outweighs economic mass. Brazil has everything a financial centre needs except the one thing investors value most - the confidence that the rules won't change between when they invest and when they exit. Until that changes, a country with 19 million people and copper mines will keep outranking a country with 215 million and the eighth-largest economy on Earth.

Sources: Z/Yen Partners, China Development Institute, GFCI 39 Report, Bloomberg Línea, Long Finance, Mondovisione, Allianz Global Wealth Report 2025

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The Rio Times

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