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What asset do the top 1% put 61% of their money in?

Mar 04, 2022 · 2 mins read

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New research from Goldman Sachs reveals a stark difference between how the richest invest, and how most people invest.

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The bottom 50% of Americans hold 55% of their net worth in real estate. "Safe as houses", the saying goes.

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That's sensible. An owned home is a source of stability and pride, and can be the basis of generational wealth.

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The problem is that most people stop there. The bottom 50% hold only 4% of their net worth in shares of companies. Equities appear to be optional to them, or are not even considered.

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In total contrast, the richest in society hold only 11% of their worth in real estate... and a massive 61% in equities.

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There are good reasons for this. Equities, unlike real estate, are easily sold for cash, they pay a higher yield, and are low maintenance (no difficult tenants). But the more important reason the wealth invest in equities is the sheer rate of return.

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In the majority of years, stock markets bring returns significantly higher than inflation. These positive years greatly outweigh the negative years by a factor of 5 to 1.

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Stay in the market and keep investing any returns, and compounding starts to have magical effects. Over a 5-year period, the average return is 60%. Over 10 years, its 168%. Over 20 years, and the total compounded return is an astonishing 620%.

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That's the equivalent of 57 years of return, in only a 20 year period. Its counterintuitive, but that's how compounding works.

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Bottom line: the bottom 50% believe equities are too risky, and so stick with real estate. The top 1% know that, over the long term, equities way outperform. It's great you want to own your own home, but to be rich, do what the rich do.

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