Investment
Contents
Stocks vs Real Estate
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Equity index appreciation vs property — rental yield, leverage, and liquidity compared.
Visual Comparison
Key Differences
| Feature | Stocks / Equity | Real Estate |
|---|---|---|
| Liquidity | Very high — sell in seconds | Very low — months to sell |
| Capital required | ₹500+ | ₹20 lakh+ (typically crores) |
| Leverage | No (typically) | Yes — home loan (5–10× leverage) |
| Rental income | Dividends (0–2%) | Rental yield (2–4%) |
| Historical return | 12–15% CAGR (NIFTY 50) | 8–12% CAGR (prime locations) |
When to Choose Which
Choose Stocks / Equity
- You have limited capital to start
- Need liquidity
- Want diversified market exposure
- Building wealth without EMI burden
Choose Real Estate
- You have high income to service EMI
- Want leveraged returns with stability
- Rental income is part of retirement plan
- Own-use property (home)
Frequently Asked Questions
Both have merit. Stocks offer liquidity and lower capital entry. Real estate offers leverage and rental income. A balanced portfolio can include both.
In many markets over the past 20 years, NIFTY 50 has outperformed real estate on price appreciation excluding rental yield and leverage.
Real estate is illiquid but historically holds value. Key risks: location, legal title, market cycles, and ongoing maintenance costs.
Rental yield = annual rent / property value. Most cities offer 2–4% gross yield. Net yield after expenses is typically 1.5–3%.
Yes — via REITs (Real Estate Investment Trusts) listed on exchanges. They pay 90% of distributable income as dividends.