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.
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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.
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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.
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The Blackboard Retrospective: A look at the gauntlet investors have run over the last two decades:
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2008: The Global Financial Crisis (GFC).
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2016: Previous CGT reform threats.
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2017: The Royal Commission into Banking.
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2019: The “Credit Squeeze.”
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2020: The COVID-19 pandemic.
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2022–2024: 13 consecutive interest rate rises.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.