Interpac Business and Migration Solutions Melbourne Australia

Shares outshine property for investors PDF Print E-mail

July 14, 2010

THE property versus shares argument is always a closely fought contest and despite the global financial crisis and the recent share market crash, shares have narrowly outshone property in the past 20 years.

 

However, Australia's love affair with property is still justified, with residential property the top investment in the past 10 years.

 

The share market performance was based on annual after-tax returns, for those on the highest and the lowest marginal tax rates, the Russell Investments and Australian Securities Exchange Long Term Investment Report reveals.

 

It found shares delivered the best after-tax returns of between 7.8 per cent and 9.9 per cent a year for the past two decades, to December 2009.

 

This compares with 7.2 per cent and 9.8 per cent for residential property during the same period. Australian bonds came in third with average annual returns of between 4.5 per cent and 7 per cent.

 

The performances are based on "real'' returns, which take into account the costs involved with each investment and the tax paid on income.

 

Russell consultant Stanley Yeo says after-tax results are increasingly important to investors but many still do not include their impact when they assess their total returns.

 

"It is important for investors to consider that tax is essentially a cost of investing. Our results show what a significant difference it can have on the end outcome for investors,'' Mr Yeo says.

 

For example, on a pre-tax basis, the latest results were switched. Property achieved the highest average annual return of 9.8 per cent, just pipping shares, which returned 9.7 per cent.

 

On a shorter time frame of 10 years, residential property also took the top spot, before and after tax.

 

"The global financial crisis tested the resolve of many investors,'' ASX spokesman Will Wilson says.

 

The report offers an insight into performances of listed investments compared with other investment types and underlines the importance of investing for the long term, Mr Wilson says.

 

Investment returns (20 years to December 2009)
After tax (Top tax rate)
Australian shares 7.8 %
Residential property 7.2%
Listed property trusts 5.6%
Australian bonds 4.5%
International shares 3.4%
(Lowest tax rate)
Australian shares 9.9%
Residential property 8.8%
Australian bonds 7%
Listed property trusts 6.7%
International shares 4.3%

Before tax
Residential property 9.8%
Australian shares 9.7%
Australian bonds 8.9%
Listed property trusts 7.5%
International shares 4.8%

 

(Source from:news.com.au)

 

 

Follow Us on Facebook

News

Scoot ups Qantas competition

(February 8,2012) TOURISM authorities have welcomed an expected boost in inbound visitors from a decision by Singapore Airlines' low-cost subsidiary Scoot to fly to a second destination in Australia. Scoot will fly ...

READMORE

US stocks down as Greek wait continues

(February 7,2012) US stocks have opened slightly lower as investors turned their eyes to Greece, where talks dragged on over terms of new spending cuts. The Dow Jones industrial average lost 37 ...

READMORE

Mining M&A up 50pc in end-of-year burst

(February 6,2012) THE value of merger and acquisition activity in the global mining sector surged by about 50 per cent last year to top $US100 billion, aided by a recovery in ...

READMORE

Macquarie makes Barnaba WA chair

( February 3,2012)MACQUARIE Group today announced the appointment of Mark Barnaba as its chairman in Western Australia. Mr Barnaba co-founded boutique investment advisory firm Azure Capital in 2004 but sold ...

READMORE

WAM Capital predicts share rally to cont

(February 2,2012) WAM Capital chief Geoff Wilson says the month-long rally in equities has further to go despite the company reporting a net loss of $2.6 million for the six months ...

READMORE

ANZ, Westpac, NAB, Commonwealth need to

(February 1,2012) HOME or abroad, Australian banks can't catch a break. Consumers aren't taking out loans, business confidence is flagging and house prices are falling. Overseas, turmoil in Europe is pushing up ...

READMORE

Asian nations positioned to lift growth

(January 31,2012) ASIA has so far proved resilient to the European sovereign-debt crisis and slowing global growth, and countries in the region have room to take growth-boosting steps in case of ...

READMORE

OneSteel gets $64m ahead of carbon tax

(January 30,2012) MANUFACTURER OneSteel will receive $64 million to help it prepare for the introduction of Federal Government's carbon tax in July. Climate Change Minister Greg Combet today announced the advance payment ...

READMORE

Dollar down after strong run

(January 27,2012) THE AUSSIE dollar has retreated slightly from a three-month high after a reassessment of global economic prospects by the currency market. The local currency traded as high as 106.86 early ...

READMORE

US stocks up after solid economic report

(Januayr 26,2012) US stocks are opening higher as solid economic news and strong corporate earnings highlight the economy's growing momentum. The government said overnight that orders to factories for long-lasting manufactured goods ...

READMORE

More in: News

-
+
3

Subscribe RSS feed

Support

Newsletter Subscription




You are here  : Home News Shares outshine property for investors