08-10-2008 07:32 PM | |
totoMan-- |
2885 sg 4d and toto... toto starts from 300k , if snowball then i see every 2 weeks will produce 1 millionair , 1 year = 24 millionairs |
20-02-2008 11:49 PM | |
thetmonaye--- |
895 hrmmm...i wonder know why there is alot of millionares? haha |
09-02-2008 08:30 PM | |
firefly--- |
831 Wealth is comparative. If everyone is wealthy, then everyone is poor. The rich exist because there is comparatively poorer people around. |
01-07-2007 04:09 PM | |
Sarah Tan--- |
264 Masindi That's because the poor lacks financial literacy to make more money. Having more money doesn't mean spending more time on part time jobs. It also requires saving, investing and working smart. The poor gets poorer because they only complain and not take active steps to get rich. |
29-06-2007 10:01 AM | |
Roys--- |
263 Must be the ministerial pay hike that is helping to bump up the numbers hehehe |
29-06-2007 09:35 AM | |
Masindi--- |
262 But the poor gets poorer |
29-06-2007 12:40 AM | |
Salary.sg |
Lots of millionaires in Singapore A wealth report released by Merrill Lynch and Capgemini puts Singapore as home to the world's fastest-growing population of millionaires. Here's a quick summary of what I found out from the report: - Singapore saw the highest growth (21.2%) in High Net Worth Individuals (HNWIs), followed by India (20.5%), Indonesia (16.0%), Russia (15.5%), UAE (15.4%), South Korea (14.1%), South Africa (13.3%), Israel (12.9%), Czech Republic (12.6%) and Hong Kong (12.2%). HNWIs are people with US$1 million in financial assets. - Despite Asian countries featuring quite strongly in the above list, Asia-Pacific is ranked 4th by continental regions, behind Africa, Middle East and Latin America. - The growth rate globally is 8.3%. - But in absolute numbers, Russia has 119,000 HNWIs - the highest. This is followed by India (100,000), South Korea (99,000), Hong Kong (87,000), UAE (68,000), and then Singapore (67,000). - "HNWIs in Asia-Pacific nearly doubled their allocations to real estate, from 16% in 2005 to 29% in 2006. Consistent with the investor behavior often seen in emerging economies, HNWIs in Asia-Pacific tended to invest in tangible assets." http://www.salary.sg/2007/lots-of-mi...-in-singapore/ |