In light of all the doomsdays predictions around in mainstream media, it thought it would be nice to have a balanced commentary to read from experienced property economists. I have added a conversation by 3 economists below about the outlook for the market.
For my take, in essence, yes, we are in a price pullback phase where buyers are still about but seem apprehensive to submit offers and are worrying about buying in a falling
market . A lot of buyers are concerned by what they are reading and consuming on television and I get that, but this is the period that savvy buyers come to the fore.
The other point I will make is our Hunter market is a lot different than Sydney pricing of course and the fall, if any, will be minimal in my opinion. We have different price
points and more accessible prices and that should keep our investment properties pricing in decent shape during this re adjustment period.
Article:
A leading economist has argued property prices should still rise by 50 per cent over the next decade, declaring history showed housing “will never fall” meaningfully over
the longer term.
Despite current predictions of 10 per cent falls due to interest rate hikes, wider economic pressures and proposed investment tax reforms, Stephen Koukoulas said 150
years of data suggested it would not be a sustained trend.
“And in fact, house prices in three years, five years, 10 years from now will be materially higher than they are today,” he said last week.
“So yes, there’s a cycle occurring. Unemployment’s going up, supply is going up. Demand is going down. So, house prices will be weaker over the course of the next 12 to
18 months.
“However, let’s take a step back and think about what drives house prices in a fundamental way.”
Data from the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) released on Tuesday revealed residential dwelling prices rose 2.5 per cent or $315.9 billion to $12.8 trillion in the March
quarter.
Dr Mish Tan, ABS head of finance statistics, said growth had “moderated” after a strong end to 2025 but stock was now 11.9 per cent higher than a year ago.
Victoria was the only state or territory to see a fall in the mean price of residential dwellings this quarter (-0.3 per cent or -$2400). Western Australia (7.2 per cent, or
$73,700) and Queensland (4.6 per cent or $49,800) recorded the biggest rises.
Mr Koukoulas, a former senior adviser to prime minister Julia Gillard, explained on Thursday that rising labour and material costs would inevitably keep driving property
prices up long-term.
In a scenario where inflation sat between two to five per cent over the next decade, he said the price of items like windows, bricks and cement could rise up to 40 per cent.
If it could be assumed wages for tradies went up four per cent over each year, “the labour costs of assembling a house will go up by around about 60 per cent or there or
thereabouts”.
“So materials plus labour over a 10-year period house prices should rise by 40 to 50 per cent as a replacement cost,” Mr Koukoulas said.
The senior economist said property developers would not build if the price of a dwelling was lower than the cost of construction, which could see housing shortages and
thus price rises.
“So it’s a roundabout way of saying that in the long run, house prices will never go down,” Mr Koukoulas said.
“They will always go up as they have for the last 150 years there’ll be little cyclical blips and blops and things that happen what which we’re seeing right now as I said linked
to the unemployment rate rising among a couple of other things.”
Prices in Australia’s two biggest cities, Sydney and Melbourne, have already been sliding in 2026 as first interest rate hikes and then major tax reforms became investment
hurdles.
Federal Treasury papers forecast changes to capital gains tax and negative gearing concessions to reduce property price growth by a modest two per cent nationally, while
some economists have predicted the market had reached the end of its decades-long supercycle.
Market in ‘transition period’ – but for how long?
The trend has seen federal government ministers grilled over whether or not they want house prices to grow or fall, as they defend the tax changes as key to levelling the
playing field for first-home buyers.
“What we want to see is sustainable growth,” Housing Minister Clare O’Neil said in a tense exchange on Sunrise last week.
Asked about Mr Koukoulas’ prediction, top property market analyst Louis Christopher said a “few things would need to go his way” for it to be proven true.
The managing director of SQM Research agreed the “current housing downturn will not be with us forever” and said Australia was now in “an adjustment period”.
He forecast investors would not come back into the market until properties started to become cashflow positive – or positively geared – as rents grow and prices fall.
“I think that transition period is going to last two years,” Mr Christopher said.
“So I don’t regard this downturn as a short-term thing.”
Mr Christopher pointed to the example of Japan, where the property market had collapsed while the Asian superpower grapples with a declining population.
He said Australia’s migration and population growth was “one of the key reasons why we’ve got a situation where housing prices have been rising above income
growth for many, many years now”.
If that was reduced, in line with political sentiments, there would be downward pressure on property prices.
A 10% fall ‘pretty minimal’
Ray White chief economist Nerida Conisbee agreed with the notion that property costs would rise over time, adding “there’s a natural floor as to how far they can go”.
“They can fall … but hopefully (people) are aware of the fact that housing price or house price growth is more complicated than just interest rates,” she said.
“And at the moment, we have high construction costs, we’re not building enough, and all of those things will keep them more elevated than if we had a really well-supplied
market.”
Ms Conisbee predicted prices would stabilise or fall slightly over the next year, but it would come after “an incredible run” of exploding growth.
“And if we do see a drop of, I think the most bullish drop is 10 per cent … it only takes us back to about July last year. So it’s pretty minimal in terms of overall impact,” she said.
“If you go to markets like Perth, which have sort of been increasing at sort of 20 to 25 per cent, it doesn’t even take you back until barely the start of year.
“So you do need to put that into perspective that we have had this incredible growth.”
AUSTRALIAN REAL HOME PRICES CHART INDEX.
You can notice that each of the pullbacks in pricing are short lived.
In terms of politics, each opposition party has stated they will repeal the CGT and Negative Gearing changes if there is a change in government at the next election.
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