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American Cities With The Most Millionaires: 24/7 Wall St.

24/7 Wall St.     First Posted: 07/14/11 04:03 PM ET   Updated: 09/13/11 06:12 AM ET

From 24/7 Wall St: Each year, Capgemini publishes the U.S. Metro Wealth Index, which ranks the number of high-net-worth individuals living within the ten largest metropolitan statistical areas. According to the report, high-net-worth Individuals "are defined as those having investable assets of $1 million or more, excluding primary residence, collectibles, consumables, and consumer durables."

Since the last report, the number of millionaires has increased by 7.3 percent, following a gain of 17.5 percent in 2009, which came after a steep drop in 2008. Despite the rosy state of America's rich, the same cannot be said for the residents of the cities these millionaires call home. A review of the local economies of these cities demonstrates that the fortunes of the rich don't depend on how their neighbors do.

Unemployment remains a significant issue for the country. Half of the cities on this list have unemployment rates above the national average of 9.1 percent. San Jose, San Francisco and Chicago are over 9.3 percent. Los Angeles and Detroit are both over 11 percent.

Read: The American Cities With The Most Millionaires

Housing markets in most of these cities present an even starker contrast. Eight of the ten markets on the list were flat or decreased in value. While Boston, Philadelphia and New York dropped less than 5 percent, in Chicago, Detroit and San Francisco housing dropped in excess of 10 percent.

Despite moribund local economies, millionaires in all of these cities increased in number, in some cases significantly. Houston had 88,200 millionaires in 2009. In one year, the number of millionaires grew 9.6 percent to 96,700. This followed an impressive gain in the prior year, when the number of millionaires in the city grew nearly 30 percent. The number of millionaires in other cities on the list also grew significantly between 2008 and 2009, and less the following year. San Jose's millionaire population increased by 24.5 percent in the first period and only 2.7 percent in the most recent. These initial recoveries have as much to do with the drops in wealth in 2007 as anything else.

While there is a clear disconnect between the fates between the cities' millionaires and their average residents, the reasons why the wealthy became wealthier seem to be the same. In all of the cities on the list industry recovered. In New York and Chicago, finance prevailed. In Houston, energy powered the economy. In San Jose, it was tech. And although gains were seen, in sales and stock price, the fortunes of average workers have remained constant and in some places become worse.

To provide perspective on the local economies on the Capgemini's list, 24/7 Wall St. used Zillow's real estate database for the yearly change in home value for each metropolitan statistical area in June 2011. We also included the most recent unemployment data for each area. Finally, we reviewed the Fortune 500 list to identify the largest publicly traded companies that are headquartered in those cities.

These are the American Cities with the Most Millionaires, provided by 24/7 Wall St.

10. San Jose
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No. millionaires: 88,800
Change in millionaires: 2.7%
Change in home value: flat
Fortune 500 HQ: Cisco, eBay
Unemployment rate: 9.9%

San Jose suffered as much as any large metro area during the recession, with the exception of Detroit, when the tech industry went through a horrendous downturn in business activity. Orders for hardware products, software, and the services offered by firms like EDS and HP fell sharply. Both businesses and individuals cut back tech spending. That tide has only just begun to change as online firms like Facebook and the smartphone business provided the tech sector with new sales.

Read more at 24/7 Wall St.
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From 24/7 Wall St: Each year, Capgemini publishes the U.S. Metro Wealth Index, which ranks the number of high-net-worth individuals living within the ten largest metropolitan statistical areas. Accord...
From 24/7 Wall St: Each year, Capgemini publishes the U.S. Metro Wealth Index, which ranks the number of high-net-worth individuals living within the ten largest metropolitan statistical areas. Accord...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
makebofapay
12:58 PM on 08/08/2011
What entertainment industry? Most of it has left the country for Canada, the UK, China, India and AU/NZ. The remainder has gone to right to work states to avoid the unions.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mike Davis 747
05:16 PM on 07/25/2011
In an earlier article in the Wall Street Journal about billionaires, the article stated that if Beverly Hills was part of the City of Los Angeles, Los Angeles would have the second largest number of billionaires second only to Moscow. Beverly Hills is surrounded on three sides by the City of Los Angeles and one side by the City of West Hollywood.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
martay46
Marky Mark
11:00 AM on 07/23/2011
Whem Obama is out of office, Who will America blame all this crap on !!
12:16 PM on 07/19/2011
Would it be too hard to ask the HP to find an updated shot of downtown Philly? Way to use an old 1994 photo minus the Comcast tower.
05:12 AM on 07/18/2011
I wonder if they are counting Billionaires as Millionaires in NYC?
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ibsteve2u
Someone who cares - to his unending regret
03:45 AM on 07/18/2011
Thinking that everybody in Congress could be counted as a millionaire, boosting D.C.'s count somewhat...if not now, then after they leave office when they start raking in the delayed graft that is called "speaking fees".
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dbos
Single payer universal health insurance agent
09:33 AM on 07/17/2011
Congress = millionaires
04:37 PM on 07/16/2011
720,000 millionaires in NYC alone. That's impressive. I need to move to NYC.
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ibsteve2u
Someone who cares - to his unending regret
03:46 AM on 07/18/2011
lollll...just run for Congress, and those NYC millionaires will come to you.
RJB Boston
Candor vendor
04:28 PM on 07/16/2011
its like a list of the top 10 cities in the US in terms of most things....i mean come on, la, nyc, boston, dc, chicago, san francisco, houston, philli.......
04:39 PM on 07/16/2011
Interesting the these top millionaire cities tend to vote  Democrat like NYC, LA, Detroit and Chicago. So much for that rich elitist GOP nonsense.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Broknrekord3
Snake oil futures are up.
10:00 PM on 07/17/2011
Urban areas usually reflect higher in other things such as education, which skews the majority vote to be liberal (take a sample from nearly any college). We're discussing millionaires, maybe 10% of the city, which means little in terms of voting power. Second, the term 'millionaire' seems to be a bit vague here-- 1 million in assets? I can't imagine that 1 in 6 people in Boston are millionaires otherwise. Compiling this vague term with the fact that millionaire does not necessarily connote vast wealth (as the cost of a condo in any city's posh area is going to run nearly 1 million alone), we've effectively eliminated any 'proof' you're providing for your argument.
Linda from Deerfield
Paying attention
08:43 AM on 07/16/2011
How do they know? Really, how does some reporter find out whether or not someone has a $million invested?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
VictorLudorum
Chrysler .The 100 Year Contract..
02:03 AM on 07/16/2011
What will you do with Millions when the city does not cater to millionaires ,perhaps only only burbank CA has visiting manicurists!
04:15 PM on 07/15/2011
Wouldn't per captia millioniares per city be a more telling picture?
12:21 AM on 07/16/2011
Yes!
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ignacio sanabria
Mirror synapses at work
03:41 PM on 07/15/2011
And what are the cities with the poorest of the poor?
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FoxIslander
Fox Island...no relation to Fox News
06:33 PM on 07/15/2011
...same ones.
oilfield
small manufacturing business owner
02:51 PM on 07/15/2011
detroit must pass local taxes to stop the wealth gap. there are so many unemployed poor people there that something must be done at once.
rafaelkafka
"Dubito, ergo cogito, ergo sum!"
09:20 PM on 07/16/2011
You are right. They will be better raising taxes. They did that for decades and worked flawless.
04:37 PM on 07/18/2011
If you work in the city, you pay city taxes. Although with the decline in the population of Detroit proper, they could discontinue to do so. It's unlikely that Mayor Bing and City Council will pursue that, and also unlikely that the auto execs that pay will pursue it, either.
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oftenon
cartoons are the best explanation
01:37 PM on 07/15/2011
All show increased wealth despite home worth decline across the board.
This is known in financial parlance as Unreal Estate.