What
Was the best Investment of the Past Decade?
February 12, 2002 --- Realty Times feature article by Peter G. Miller
"If
you were an investor in the 1990s would you have done better with stock
or real estate?
No
doubt a lot of money has been made with stocks. At the same time, the
last few years have been a blow-out on Wall Street. Between dot-corns,
cable firms and Enron, predictions that the bow Jones Industrial Average
would one day hit 36,000 now seem far removed. Indeed, the bow has fallen
nearly 15 percent in the past two years, from 11497.12 at the end of
1999 to 10021.50 at the end of 2001.
But
what about real estate? Has it done any better? Speaking before the
National Press Club, Fannie Mae Chairman and CEO Franklin D. Raines
offered this analysis.
It's
January 1990, three individuals have just received a $10,000 year-end
bonus. And they're trying to decide what to do with the windfall. John
decides to invest his $10,000 in the stock market, and being conservative
with his finances, he puts the money in an index fund of S&P 500
stocks.
Bill
is excited by the possibilities of the Internet and all the new technology
companies, so he puts his $10,000 in a Nasdaq index fund.
Mary
has never invested in the stock market. But she's tired of paying rent
every month with nothing to show for it. So she puts her $10,000 down
on a bungalow listing for about $80,000.
It's
about 12 years later. Assuming they all had to pay f or shelter every
month, how would you say John, Bill and Mary did on their $10,000 investment?
Who came out better?
Since
1990, the value of the S&P 500 more than tripled. So from his initial
investment of $10,000, John made about $22,000, pre-tax. During the
same period, the value of the Nasdaq quadrupled. So Bill's gain was
roughly $30,000, pre-tax. What about Mary? During the same period, home
values increased roughly 4 percent per year nationally. At that rate,
the house that Mary bought for $80,000 is now worth about $126,000.
And, if she sold it, she would have a profit of about$46,000. And that
gain would be free of capital gains taxes., "It is extraordinary,"
said Raines, "that after the longest, strongest bull market in
history, the average American built more wealth owning a home than she
did in the stock market." "Most Americans invest and earn
more in their homes than they invest and earn from their savings accounts,
IRAs, stocks, bonds or other investments." "During the past
ten years, the average stockholder earned $23,000 in the stock market,
while the average homeowner earned $44,000 in home equity. Home equity
remains the cornerstone of most family wealth."
But
even if the returns from stock market investments and homeownership
were the same, real estate would still yield a better net result. Why?
While profits from the sale of stock are generally taxable, profits
of up to $500,000 for a married couple (and as much as $250,000 f or
single homeowners) are typically shielded from taxes when a prime residence
is sold"
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Real
estate in Kankakee County has proven to be a very good investment for
many of my customers. I would like to help you and your clients with
their real estate needs.
Below
please find a list of some free services that I offer. Please call me
with any questions or any names of clients that may benefit from our
services: