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www.cabpropertywealth.com.au
In early 2026, the most pressing finance topic in Australia’s property sector is the "Supply-Demand Paradox." This is a situation where property prices continue to rise—or remain stubbornly high—despite record-low affordability and the sudden, unexpected threat of further interest rate hikes by the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA).
1. The Interest Rate "Pivot" FearThe market began 2026 with a jarring shift in sentiment. While 2025 saw some relief from rate cuts, underlying inflation has remained "sticky" (around 3.2–3.4%).1 This has led the RBA to signal a "higher for longer" stance, with major banks now split on whether a rate hike will occur in February 2026.
For many homeowners, this is a "financial cliff" moment. Those who bought recently or refinanced during the 2025 dip are now facing the reality that mortgage relief is likely months or even years away.
2. The Chronic Supply ShortageThe core driver of price resilience is a massive shortfall in housing.4 The Federal Government’s National Housing Accord (targeting 1.2 million homes by 2029) is currently tracking roughly 50,000 homes behind schedule for the year.
There is significant debate over the expanded 5% Deposit Scheme.8 While intended to help first-home buyers, economists argue it is backfiring:
A major social and financial concern today is that home ownership is increasingly becoming a transfer of wealth rather than an earned milestone.
With the "pivot" fear keeping homeowners on edge, the focus has shifted from "waiting for cuts" to active risk management.
To meet the 1.2 million home target, the industry is moving away from traditional "bricks and mortar" toward faster, high-tech alternatives.
To stop "help" from simply pushing prices higher, the focus is shifting from "giving buyers money" to "sharing the burden."
Problem Solution (2026 Approach)How it Works Price Inflation Shared Equity Schemes Under the "Help to Buy" scheme, the government buys a 30–40% stake in the home. This reduces the loan size without flooding the market with raw cash. Low Mobility Stamp Duty to Land Tax States (like the ACT and parts of NSW/VIC) are transitioning to annual land taxes. This removes the $50k+ "moving tax," allowing empty-nesters to downsize easily. Developer Risk Deferred Infrastructure Charges Local governments are deferring the massive "upfront" levies developers usually pay, allowing projects to start even while construction costs are high.4. Bridging the Intergenerational Divide
To help those without a "Bank of Mum and Dad," policies are targeting wealth mobility and housing variety.
Would you like me to create a checklist for "stress-testing" your own mortgage against these 2026 rate predictions?
By MarK Perkichwww.cabpropertywealth.com.au
In early 2026, the most pressing finance topic in Australia’s property sector is the "Supply-Demand Paradox." This is a situation where property prices continue to rise—or remain stubbornly high—despite record-low affordability and the sudden, unexpected threat of further interest rate hikes by the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA).
1. The Interest Rate "Pivot" FearThe market began 2026 with a jarring shift in sentiment. While 2025 saw some relief from rate cuts, underlying inflation has remained "sticky" (around 3.2–3.4%).1 This has led the RBA to signal a "higher for longer" stance, with major banks now split on whether a rate hike will occur in February 2026.
For many homeowners, this is a "financial cliff" moment. Those who bought recently or refinanced during the 2025 dip are now facing the reality that mortgage relief is likely months or even years away.
2. The Chronic Supply ShortageThe core driver of price resilience is a massive shortfall in housing.4 The Federal Government’s National Housing Accord (targeting 1.2 million homes by 2029) is currently tracking roughly 50,000 homes behind schedule for the year.
There is significant debate over the expanded 5% Deposit Scheme.8 While intended to help first-home buyers, economists argue it is backfiring:
A major social and financial concern today is that home ownership is increasingly becoming a transfer of wealth rather than an earned milestone.
With the "pivot" fear keeping homeowners on edge, the focus has shifted from "waiting for cuts" to active risk management.
To meet the 1.2 million home target, the industry is moving away from traditional "bricks and mortar" toward faster, high-tech alternatives.
To stop "help" from simply pushing prices higher, the focus is shifting from "giving buyers money" to "sharing the burden."
Problem Solution (2026 Approach)How it Works Price Inflation Shared Equity Schemes Under the "Help to Buy" scheme, the government buys a 30–40% stake in the home. This reduces the loan size without flooding the market with raw cash. Low Mobility Stamp Duty to Land Tax States (like the ACT and parts of NSW/VIC) are transitioning to annual land taxes. This removes the $50k+ "moving tax," allowing empty-nesters to downsize easily. Developer Risk Deferred Infrastructure Charges Local governments are deferring the massive "upfront" levies developers usually pay, allowing projects to start even while construction costs are high.4. Bridging the Intergenerational Divide
To help those without a "Bank of Mum and Dad," policies are targeting wealth mobility and housing variety.
Would you like me to create a checklist for "stress-testing" your own mortgage against these 2026 rate predictions?