Tuesday, 7 July 2026

ausbiz TV: Housing market latest

ausbiz TV

I joined Andrew G at ausbiz TV to discuss the latest housing market trends.

Tune in here (or click on the image below):


---

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    3. Subscribe for my free daily blog

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By the way, I'm an 8-times published author on finance, investing, and business, so you can check out some of my books here

My new book, co-authored with Cate Bakos is available to buy here or on Amazon here - check out our free Buy Right podcast series here

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Oil prices reverse their gains; construction collapses

Round trip for oil

Since the open/hot war phase of the conflict in Iran began in February 2026, Aussie households have endured three interest rate hikes taking the cash rate target back up to a cycle high of 4.35 per cent, as the central bank tackled the anticipated wave of inflation. 

And yet futures markets have seen all of the wartime increases in oil futures erased. 

Today, crude oil prices are trading all the way back down at $68/barrel. 

Bloomberg described how a peace deal has unleashed a wave of oil supply, overwhelming buyer demand for oil.

Confidence crunched

Today, the Melbourne Institute released its monthly inflation gauge for the month of June, which came in at -0.4 per cent for the month, helped by lower fuel prices.

The annual headline inflation figure fell sharply from 4.4 per cent to 3.9 per cent, while the trimmed mean inflation figure also declined sharply, all the way back into the target range at 2.78 per cent.

Shane Oliver from AMP with the chart:

Source: Shane Oliver, AMP, Melbourne Institute

Obviously this index isn't watched as closely now the ABS has a monthly inflation index of its own, but if this result is even remotely replicated in the ABS measures in June that will be a very good thing.

It also raises the question of how soon interest rates will be on the way back down again to prop up the ailing Aussie economy. 

Confidence in the Aussie economy has been crunched since the Federal Budget was released in May, with housing market activity also drying up.

Last week the ABS reported a new series of underemployment and underutilisation measures, which underscored that the youth underemployment issue is becoming significantly very quickly.

Justin Fabo of Antipodean Macro showed how the slowdown in hiring is disproportionately impacted younger Aussies. 

Source: Justin Fabo, Antipodean Macro, ABS

It's also worth noting that measures of construction activity have completely collapsed since the Federal Budget. 

Noted AIG:

Source: AIG

Markets a still pricing a chance of a hike later in 2026, for now, but it looks like the economy is going to pretty cooked in the current environment. 

---

1. Download our property buying guide

Download our free property buying guide here

You can also check out a few of our recent property purchases here

Get in contact with us today if strategic property investment is your thing. 

    2. Subscribe to our Top 10 Podcasts for Investors

Listen in to our podcasts

The Australian Property Podcast is rapidly becoming one of Australia's biggest business podcasts, now with over 50,000 audio downloads per month, and growing fast.

And our popular Low Rates High Returns Show also remains available on Spotify.

    3. Subscribe for my free daily blog

Subscribe for my free daily blog here

You can also catch up with me daily on Twitter here, where I'm far too active daily and have over 18k followers. 

By the way, I'm an 8-times published author on finance, investing, and business, so you can check out some of my books here

My new book, co-authored with Cate Bakos is available to buy here or on Amazon here - check out our free Buy Right podcast series here

4. Work with me privately

For a limited time you can book in a free diagnosis call with me here, so book in a call today.

Sunday, 5 July 2026

Podcast: Budget fallout, SMSF lending ban, & the property-versus-shares debate

Australian Property Podcast

Here's what we covered on the podcast this week:

In this episode of Australian Property Podcast, Pete Wargent and Chris Bates break down the latest property-market shake-up and what it means for buyers, investors and borrowers. The conversation centres on the Federal Budget fallout, the ban on SMSF lending into property, weaker auction conditions and the way sentiment has turned across key housing markets.

Pete and Chris unpack why Sydney and Melbourne were already softening before the policy changes, how investor demand is fading in the established market, and why rental yields and mortgage rates still matter more than headlines. They also explain where they are still seeing activity, from first-home buyers and upgraders to smaller renovation projects, while caution remains high around leveraged property investing.

The episode finishes with two practical listener questions: whether to sell a negatively geared investment property when cash flow is tight, and when property can still make sense versus shares in 2026. Along the way, Pete and Chris explore refinancing dynamics, the role of super, the trade-offs between liquidity and leverage, and how to think about risk when conditions are changing fast. If you want a grounded weekly read on the Australian housing market, mortgage trends and investing decisions, this episode is a useful snapshot of where the market stands right now.
Tune in here (or click on the image below):


You can also watch the YouTube version here:


---

1. Download our property buying guide

Download our free property buying guide here

You can also check out a few of our recent property purchases here

Get in contact with us today if strategic property investment is your thing. 

    2. Subscribe to our Top 10 Podcasts for Investors

Listen in to our podcasts

The Australian Property Podcast is rapidly becoming one of Australia's biggest business podcasts, now with over 50,000 audio downloads per month, and growing fast.

And our popular Low Rates High Returns Show also remains available on Spotify.

    3. Subscribe for my free daily blog

Subscribe for my free daily blog here

You can also catch up with me daily on Twitter here, where I'm far too active daily and have over 18k followers. 

By the way, I'm an 8-times published author on finance, investing, and business, so you can check out some of my books here

My new book, co-authored with Cate Bakos is available to buy here or on Amazon here - check out our free Buy Right podcast series here

4. Work with me privately

For a limited time you can book in a free diagnosis call with me here, so book in a call today.

Wednesday, 1 July 2026

Unit approvals trend lower

Data centres surge

The ABS released the May building approvals figures, which showed solid enough figures for detached houses - mainly driven by double-digit growth across Greater Perth - with pretty flat figures for elsewhere. 


Attached dwelling approvals remained tepid in Sydney and Melbourne, with south-east Queensland remaining the one area of relative strength in the country (notably: Brisbane, Redcliffe, Gold Coast, Maroochydore). 


Overall, house approvals are trending higher - essentially thanks to Perth - and unit approvals are now trending lower, with higher mortgage rates and surging building costs now acting as headwinds for the medium-density sector. 


Over the year, there were around 201,000 dwellings approved. 


Over the past two years, about 16,000 dwellings have been approved per month, approximately 20 per cent lower than would be required to meet the government's target of 1.2 million new homes over 5 years. 

I doubt the government will mention the Housing Accord target much from here on out, and it was probably not that much of a serious target anyway.


Going forward, dwelling approvals and dwelling starts are likely to fall away, driven by Sydney and Melbourne, in the aftermath of the Federal Budget changes to property tax legislation. 

It's worth noting that the focus of construction work will likely now pivot away from housing and towards data centres in Sydney and Melbourne. 

The value of building approvals for data centres has surged, as we've previously seen reflected in the private new CapEx figures.

Reported the ABS this morning:

"Approved non-residential building rose 41 per cent (to $10.83 billion), following a 22.9 per cent April rise. This was a record high for non-residential building and was driven by a rise in large data centre approvals located in New South Wales and Victoria.
The value of total residential building value dropped 5.7 per cent (to $10.24 billion)."
James Foster ran through the building approvals figures in more detail here.

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Cotality also released its latest monthly home values index this morning. 

Detached house prices over the year to date are down significantly in two cities, namely Sydney (-4.2 per cent) and Melbourne (-4.4 per cent), with small declines for unit prices also recorded. 


It's typically a quiet time of year for the rental market, but in June we saw the first potential signs of an increase in rental price growth, with rents rising by a seasonally adjusted 0.5 per cent over the month, to be 5.9 per cent higher over the year.


Source: Cotality

Rents have increased by around 42 per cent over the past five years, Cotality reported. 

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The WTI crude oil price fell below $68.50 today for the first time in 4 months. 

---

1. Download our property buying guide

Download our free property buying guide here

You can also check out a few of our recent property purchases here

Get in contact with us today if strategic property investment is your thing. 

    2. Subscribe to our Top 10 Podcasts for Investors

Listen in to our podcasts

The Australian Property Podcast is rapidly becoming one of Australia's biggest business podcasts, now with over 50,000 audio downloads per month, and growing fast.

And our popular Low Rates High Returns Show also remains available on Spotify.

    3. Subscribe for my free daily blog

Subscribe for my free daily blog here

You can also catch up with me daily on Twitter here, where I'm far too active daily and have over 18k followers. 

By the way, I'm an 8-times published author on finance, investing, and business, so you can check out some of my books here

My new book, co-authored with Cate Bakos is available to buy here or on Amazon here - check out our free Buy Right podcast series here

4. Work with me privately

For a limited time you can book in a free diagnosis call with me here, so book in a call today.

Tuesday, 30 June 2026

New home sales evaporate into thin air...

Credit aggregates slow

Business credit growth remained solid in the most recent Financial Aggregates data, up by almost 10 per cent over the year to May 2026, with investment in new data centres seeming likely to be a tailwind over the next year or two.

Housing credit growth slowed from 0.65 per cent to 0.54 per cent in the month of May, and this growth largely relating to mortgage approvals initiated well before the Federal Budget.

Over the year, housing credit growth was still solid at 7½ per cent, but these strong figures are already rolling over significantly on the monthly data.


Housing credit growth for investors was running at double-digit levels over the year - arguably underscoring why there was a need for a tax policy change - with the housing market having become flooded with borderless buyer's agents buying up investment properties all over the country. 



Yes, this was partly a response to a shortage of housing and rising rents, but it was also potentially becoming a systemic risk for the housing market and the economy. 

In real time, the housing credit impulse is undergoing a hard U-turn, and asking prices have already fallen significantly for houses in Sydney, Melbourne, and now Brisbane over the past three months.


Below is the asking prices chart for houses Sydney, from SQM Research, which shows asking prices for detached houses down by -4.3 per cent over the past 3 months (Melbourne and Brisbane are reflecting a very similar pattern):


Source: SQM Research

Business confidence collapses

In other news, small business confidence has been annihilated.

In fact, business confidence for SMEs has now fallen lower on the NAB survey measures than it cratered during the pandemic (which is pretty remarkable given everything that was happening at that time):

Source: NAB

What next?

What comes next looks set to be a painful adjustment for the housing market, and the Aussie economy.

Here are three related things which will likely happen, in my best guess. 

Firstly, it seems that very few investors are prepared to take the risk of buying a new build property at the moment, given crippled market confidence and increasingly scary media headlines.

As such new housing supply will eventually tighten. 

This will take a while to work its way through, however, given that there's a significant pipeline of new dwellings already under construction.




Secondly, as stamp duty take is already being eviscerated, it's almost certain that at the state level there will be creative incentives put in place to encourage more buyer activity, whether it's in the form of first homeowner grants, loans, deposit schemes, duty relief, or other concessions and initiatives. 


And thirdly, the interest rate cycle may also now be getting close to its peak, according to central bank rhetoric, market futures pricing, and bond yields. 

The Reserve Bank of Australia's Board Minutes, released today, appeared to bring to mind the significant slowing in consumption growth which was brought about by the Banking Royal Commission through 2018, and there's evidently some concern that the Aussie economy may be tipping into a slowdown or even a recession.


An August interest rate hike is now priced at lower than a 20 per cent chance, and Australia's 3-year bond yield is trading at around 4.37 per cent.

---

1. Download our property buying guide

Download our free property buying guide here

You can also check out a few of our recent property purchases here

Get in contact with us today if strategic property investment is your thing. 

    2. Subscribe to our Top 10 Podcasts for Investors

Listen in to our podcasts

The Australian Property Podcast is rapidly becoming one of Australia's biggest business podcasts, now with over 50,000 audio downloads per month, and growing fast.

And our popular Low Rates High Returns Show also remains available on Spotify.

    3. Subscribe for my free daily blog

Subscribe for my free daily blog here

You can also catch up with me daily on Twitter here, where I'm far too active daily and have over 18k followers. 

By the way, I'm an 8-times published author on finance, investing, and business, so you can check out some of my books here

My new book, co-authored with Cate Bakos is available to buy here or on Amazon here - check out our free Buy Right podcast series here

4. Work with me privately

For a limited time you can book in a free diagnosis call with me here, so book in a call today.

Sunday, 28 June 2026

Podcast: Is peak fear here for property? Negative gearing, SMSF risk and the 6-year rule

Property Podcast

We recorded this episode just before the government announced the ban on SMSF lending for property.

Here are the key points discussed:

In this episode of the Australian Property Podcast, Pete Wargent and Chris Bates ask whether Australia’s housing market has moved from nerves to peak fear.

They unpack weaker auction results in Sydney and Melbourne, falling prices, softer new-home sales and why investor sentiment keeps deteriorating even as hopes build for lower rates later in 2026. A key focus is policy risk: how proposed negative gearing and capital gains tax changes could hit established-property demand, why self-managed super fund lending may become the next political battleground, and whether investors end up being pushed towards new builds or Melbourne apartments instead.

They also test a few narratives gaining traction right now, including whether peak fear may open a window for first-home buyers, why headlines about Melbourne apartments and boutique developments need more scrutiny, and what a genuine market reset would look like across owner-occupier suburbs, investor pockets and regional areas rather than just in headlines.

Pete and Chris then move from headlines to practical strategy, explaining what buyers should watch around confidence, supply, serviceability and sensational market narratives.

In the listener Q&A, they tackle whether to keep a townhouse when upgrading to a forever home, how the six-year CGT rule works in practice, and whether AI could become deflationary for households carrying big debt.

Tune in here (or click on the image below):


You can also watch the YouTube version here:


---

1. Download our property buying guide

Download our free property buying guide here

You can also check out a few of our recent property purchases here

Get in contact with us today if strategic property investment is your thing. 

    2. Subscribe to our Top 10 Podcasts for Investors

Listen in to our podcasts

The Australian Property Podcast is rapidly becoming one of Australia's biggest business podcasts, now with over 50,000 audio downloads per month, and growing fast.

And our popular Low Rates High Returns Show also remains available on Spotify.

    3. Subscribe for my free daily blog

Subscribe for my free daily blog here

You can also catch up with me daily on Twitter here, where I'm far too active daily and have over 18k followers. 

By the way, I'm an 8-times published author on finance, investing, and business, so you can check out some of my books here

My new book, co-authored with Cate Bakos is available to buy here or on Amazon here - check out our free Buy Right podcast series here

4. Work with me privately

For a limited time you can book in a free diagnosis call with me here, so book in a call today.

Thursday, 25 June 2026

Job vacancies march lower

Job vacancies ease

Job vacancies fell by -2.1 per cent over the 3 months to May 2026, to a seasonally adjusted total of 329,500, according to the ABS. 

This was in large driven by a sharp drop in public sector vacancies, following an earlier boom in Canberra-driven hiring. 


At the state level, most states and territories are continuing to see total job vacancies trend lower from their post-pandemic highs.


The number of unemployed persons per job vacancy rose to just above 2, to be at the highest level since February 2021 (albeit still at a historically low level). 


With the solid expansion in the labour force, it looks as though the unemployment rate will continue working its way higher from here, especially after a Federal Budget that will 'challenge' confidence.


The ABS commented:

"The Financial and insurance services industry had the largest quarterly percentage drop, with a fall of 21.4 per cent. This was followed by Accommodation and food services, which was down by 16.1 per cent. "

Overall, it looks like the labour market was gradually softening in the lead-up to the Federal Budget.

---

1. Download our property buying guide

Download our free property buying guide here

You can also check out a few of our recent property purchases here

Get in contact with us today if strategic property investment is your thing. 

    2. Subscribe to our Top 10 Podcasts for Investors

Listen in to our podcasts

The Australian Property Podcast is rapidly becoming one of Australia's biggest business podcasts, now with over 50,000 audio downloads per month, and growing fast.

And our popular Low Rates High Returns Show also remains available on Spotify.

    3. Subscribe for my free daily blog

Subscribe for my free daily blog here

You can also catch up with me daily on Twitter here, where I'm far too active daily and have over 18k followers. 

By the way, I'm an 8-times published author on finance, investing, and business, so you can check out some of my books here

My new book, co-authored with Cate Bakos is available to buy here or on Amazon here - check out our free Buy Right podcast series here

4. Work with me privately

For a limited time you can book in a free diagnosis call with me here, so book in a call today.

Employment flat over 3 months

Employment flattens through Easter volatility

At first blush it looked like a solid set of numbers for May employment change, with a +40,300 increase in employed persons, albeit mostly part-time roles.

But then when we got into the detail of the release, April's figures were revised down to -40,700, meaning that employment was broadly flat over the past couple of months.

Essentially, there was some seasonal volatility as fewer people took leave than normal over the Easter period. 


The 3-month average employment gain was only +6,300.


The participation rate is also well down from the 2024 highs.

The seasonally adjusted unemployment rate fell back to 4.4 per cent, though it looks as though the trend is still probably higher from here. 


There was little change in underemployment measures, though policymakers will be keeping a close eye on the youth unemployment, rate which is above 10 per cent (and particularly in Victoria where the youth unemployment rate is a concerning 13.2 per cent). 


Finally, population growth among the aged 15+ civilian population was revised lower following recent data updates, but remains elevated at 1.76 per cent over the year.


Overall, markets weren't much changed, and indeed the 3-year bond yield was lower over the day at 4.37 per cent, as oil prices completed a round trip all the way back down to where they were when the Iranian conflict began.

A rate hike for August is now priced as less than a 1 in 4 chance. 

James Foster ran through the figures in more detail here

---

1. Download our property buying guide

Download our free property buying guide here

You can also check out a few of our recent property purchases here

Get in contact with us today if strategic property investment is your thing. 

    2. Subscribe to our Top 10 Podcasts for Investors

Listen in to our podcasts

The Australian Property Podcast is rapidly becoming one of Australia's biggest business podcasts, now with over 50,000 audio downloads per month, and growing fast.

And our popular Low Rates High Returns Show also remains available on Spotify.

    3. Subscribe for my free daily blog

Subscribe for my free daily blog here

You can also catch up with me daily on Twitter here, where I'm far too active daily and have over 18k followers. 

By the way, I'm an 8-times published author on finance, investing, and business, so you can check out some of my books here

My new book, co-authored with Cate Bakos is available to buy here or on Amazon here - check out our free Buy Right podcast series here

4. Work with me privately

For a limited time you can book in a free diagnosis call with me here, so book in a call today.