Should You Hold Most of Your Wealth in Stocks or Homes? One Is a More Powerful Wealth Builder.

Should You Hold Most of Your Wealth in Stocks or Homes? One Is a More Powerful Wealth Builder.

Most of us, unless we’re already wealthy, probably want to become wealthy. But many of us aren’t sure just how to pull it off. Some folks are buying and holding onto stocks, others are putting their faith (and dollars) in real estate, and some are starting businesses.

Any of those strategies (and/or some others) could work quite well. But it might also be helpful to consider what some experts and studies have to say on the matter.

A schoolteacher is smiling with happy elementary school children behind her.
Image source: Getty Images.

Let’s turn to an authoritative source: the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. On its website in April, it posted some graphs and findings reflecting wealth in America. One finding:

The top 0.1% of households… hold $6.5 trillion in assets, which is more than double the total amount of assets held by the bottom 50% (…$3.1 trillion). These two groups had been much closer in terms of total wealth until they began to diverge in the late 2000s.

This is not news to anyone who has followed reports of growing wealth inequality in America. It’s still rather shocking. Imagine it — a mere tenth of the top 1% of U.S. households has more than twice the wealth of the entire bottom 50% of the population. Jeepers.

Here’s another tidbit, and one that’s covered far less frequently in the media:

Notice the inverse relationship between level of wealth and share of nonfinancial assets: On average, about 70% of the assets of the least wealthy tend to be their homes and vehicles. Nonfinancial assets become a progressively smaller share of assets as wealth increases and financial assets become more dominant.

In other words, the wealthiest folks in America hold much more of their assets in financial instruments such as stocks, bank accounts, and pensions. Those in the lowest wealth group hold nearly three-quarters of their wealth in homes and vehicles.

It may surprise some people, but real estate isn’t the best long-term wealth builder. From 1990 through early 2024, the S&P CoreLogic Case-Shiller U.S. National Home Price Index, which measures residential real estate values, rose by about 323%. On an average annual basis, that’s about 4.2% — roughly half the corresponding average of 8.7% for stocks over that period.

Of course, what the Fed findings don’t spell out is that many people simply can’t afford to invest in stocks. That is indeed the case for millions. In a 2024 Bank of America Institute report, more than a quarter of survey respondents strongly agreed that they were living paycheck to paycheck, and more than 40% saw themselves doing so to some degree.

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