I buy fixer houses putting as little as 20% down. I usually put about $40,000 in to fix up, cover finance costs and cover selling costs. My typical interest rate is between 7% - 9% on my loans. Since it is short term, interest rate is not important to me really. I am usually able to net about $40,000 after I have sold the house. The $40,000 is taxable.
Without regard to the risk (I am well aware of how risky it is):
1) How do I figure out what a comparable rate of return I would need from stocks?
That is, I get into a house with 20% down (sometimes less) and I control $250,000 worth of investment. I add $40,000 and the value goes up enough to give me $40,000 net when I sell. The length of time on the project can be 4 months. So, I guess one way to look at it is that I net $10,000 per month on the average project.
My understanding is that getting into stocks I have to buy at 100% "down". I can't do anything to improve the value of the stock (or no-load mutual fund), (other than to buy their products) and it seems to be just as risky. (If not more so.)
It seems to me that:
A) Stocks are more liquid than Real Estate
B) Both are equally risky
C) "They aren't making any more land"
D) I control more "product" with Real Estate than I could with Stocks
E) Warren Buffet did "ok" not owning Real Estate
F) If the dollar falls against the Euro and Yen, it doesn't seem to affect my Real Estate but it does affect Stocks.
Are these accurate, and If So, why are not more people "rehabbing" houses?