Australian Property Review

They said the rich would pay. So why does everyone else feel nervous?

8 min · 21 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio They said the rich would pay. So why does everyone else feel nervous?

Descripción

Welcome back to the Australian Property Review podcast. This episode gets into a question that sounds simple at first, but gets messy very quickly: when governments say they’re targeting wealth and trimming tax perks, who actually ends up feeling the pressure? Ryan and Mady talk through what happens when policy leaves the speech and hits the real world — renters, small landlords, investor borrowing, family trusts, younger Australians trying to build wealth, and a softer jobs backdrop that makes all of it feel heavier. In this episode: * why renters do not automatically win when investors get hit * why banks are already moving on investor lending * why family trusts and bucket companies are suddenly a much bigger issue * why younger Australians may not see this as the fairness fix they were promised * and why the wider economy matters when tax changes start landing Read more at Australian Property Review: https://www.apreview.com.au/ [https://www.apreview.com.au/] Subscribe to the newsletter: https://newsletter.apreview.com.au/ [https://newsletter.apreview.com.au/]

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9 episodios

episode The property shortcut that ends up costing more artwork

The property shortcut that ends up costing more

Welcome back to the Australian Property Review podcast. This episode is about the deals and decisions that look good upfront, but can turn expensive later. Ryan and Mady talk through four traps showing up right now: * why super suddenly looks more attractive after the budget * why a slowing economy does not automatically mean easier rates * how a cheap building quote can blow out later * and why a high commercial yield can hide a very average investment The bigger point: in this market, the danger is not always the obvious bad move. Sometimes it is the shortcut that looks smart on day one.   Read more at Australian Property Review: https://www.apreview.com.au/ [https://www.apreview.com.au/] Subscribe to the newsletter: https://newsletter.apreview.com.au/ [https://newsletter.apreview.com.au/] Follow the podcast and share this episode with someone who’d find it useful.

29 de may de 20265 min
episode They said the rich would pay. So why does everyone else feel nervous? artwork

They said the rich would pay. So why does everyone else feel nervous?

Welcome back to the Australian Property Review podcast. This episode gets into a question that sounds simple at first, but gets messy very quickly: when governments say they’re targeting wealth and trimming tax perks, who actually ends up feeling the pressure? Ryan and Mady talk through what happens when policy leaves the speech and hits the real world — renters, small landlords, investor borrowing, family trusts, younger Australians trying to build wealth, and a softer jobs backdrop that makes all of it feel heavier. In this episode: * why renters do not automatically win when investors get hit * why banks are already moving on investor lending * why family trusts and bucket companies are suddenly a much bigger issue * why younger Australians may not see this as the fairness fix they were promised * and why the wider economy matters when tax changes start landing Read more at Australian Property Review: https://www.apreview.com.au/ [https://www.apreview.com.au/] Subscribe to the newsletter: https://newsletter.apreview.com.au/ [https://newsletter.apreview.com.au/]

21 de may de 20268 min
episode They said the rich would pay. So why does everyone else look nervous? artwork

They said the rich would pay. So why does everyone else look nervous?

The politics sounds simple: hit wealth, trim tax perks, make housing fairer. The real-world version is a lot messier. In this episode, Ryan and Maedeh unpack who may actually feel exposed when housing tax settings change — renters, small landlords, young buyers, young investors, SMSF investors and families using trusts. They get into: * why renters do not automatically win when investors get hit * why small landlords may be the first to pull back * why younger Australians may not get the clean win they were promised * why the new-build push could create more buyer competition * and why trust tax changes matter more than they sound Read more at Australian Property Review: https://www.apreview.com.au/ [https://www.apreview.com.au/] Subscribe to the newsletter: https://newsletter.apreview.com.au/ [https://newsletter.apreview.com.au/] Follow the podcast and share this episode with someone who’d find it useful.

15 de may de 20267 min
episode The housing squeeze is hitting places people still aren’t watching artwork

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Everyone talks about housing pressure like it’s one clean story. It’s not. In this episode, Ryan and Maedeh unpack how the squeeze is spreading through first-home buyers, stressed suburbs, borrowers, renters, investors and even the kind of homes Australians keep trying to buy. They get into: * why the hard part for some first-home buyers starts after settlement * why borrowers are running out of easy moves * why suburb-level stress matters more than broad headlines * why hitting landlords doesn’t automatically help renters * and why regional markets are getting harder to ignore Read more at Australian Property Review: https://www.apreview.com.au/ [https://www.apreview.com.au/] Subscribe to the newsletter: https://newsletter.apreview.com.au/ [https://newsletter.apreview.com.au/] Follow the podcast and share this episode with someone who’d find it useful.

7 de may de 20267 min