WCC 1013: The 18-Year Property Cycle: Navigating the CGT Cliff and Market Noise

It’s Monday, April 20, 2026, and the property market is buzzing with speculation. With the May 12 budget looming, rumors are swirling about a significant reduction in the Capital Gains Tax (CGT) concession—potentially dropping from 50% to 25%. In today’s Wealth Coffee Chat, Emily breaks down why this “noise” is nothing new when viewed through the lens of the 18-year property cycle. We take a look back at the “Blackboard of Challenges” from 2008 to today and explain why the fundamentals of a good asset always outweigh the headlines of the day.

  • The CGT Concession Shift: A deep dive into the prospective budget changes. If you hold an asset for more than 12 months, your 50% tax concession may soon be slashed in half.

  • The 18-Year Property Cycle: Understanding the macro-cycle that began with the GFC in 2008 and is slated to find its current “end” around 2026–2027.

  • The Blackboard Retrospective: A look at the gauntlet investors have run over the last two decades:

    • 2008: The Global Financial Crisis (GFC).

    • 2016: Previous CGT reform threats.

    • 2017: The Royal Commission into Banking.

    • 2019: The “Credit Squeeze.”

    • 2020: The COVID-19 pandemic.

    • 2022–2024: 13 consecutive interest rate rises.

  • Time in the Market vs. Timing the Market: Why exiting the market during “uncertainty” (like 2019 or 2022) has historically cost investors hundreds of thousands in missed capital growth.

  • Brisbane Case Study (2022): Emily shares a personal story of purchasing a Brisbane property at the “top of the market” right before rate rises began—and why that property has already doubled in value despite the negative headlines.

  • The 4X Growth Plan: Reaffirming the importance of buying into areas with low supply and high demand, regardless of current policy shifts.

The property market rarely moves in a straight line. By understanding the typical stages of a long-term cycle, investors can avoid making “blinkered” decisions based on short-term fear.

  1. Don’t Let the Tax Tail Wag the Investment Dog: While CGT changes are important for your “exit strategy,” they don’t change the quality of an asset. If a property is fundamentally sound, a tax tweak shouldn’t stop you from building wealth.

  2. Short-Term Memory is an Investor’s Enemy: We have survived rate rises, pandemics, and global crashes before. Each time the media says “it’s the end,” the market eventually finds its feet and continues its upward trajectory.

  3. Hindsight vs. Foresight: It is easy to look back at 2020 and say, “I should have bought.” It is much harder to look at 2026 and say, “I will buy.” Focus on the long-term fundamentals (location, schools, infrastructure) rather than the “bleeding” headlines.

About the Author
From a small town boy growing up in the remote outback of rural Queensland, to becoming the founder of Australasia’s most powerful property wealth creation engine – Positive Real Estate Group CEO Jason Whitton is on a mission to change the way we look at wealth.