The Australian government’s landmark 2026–27 Federal Budget tax reforms are triggering a massive structural rotation out of growth-oriented small caps and property into high-dividend blue chips and fixed income.
The Key Numbers & Policy Shifts:
- CGT Discount Scrapped: Effective 1 July 2027, the 50% capital gains tax (CGT) discount for assets held over a year is abolished. Capital gains will instead be indexed to inflation and hit with a 30% minimum tax.
- Negative Gearing Squeezed: Tax deductions for property losses are now restricted exclusively to newly built homes to stimulate supply, curbing landlords’ borrowing demand for established properties.
- Market Reaction: The ASX Small Caps Index (.AXSO) fell 2.6%, underperforming the broader S&P/ASX 200 (.AXJO) which dropped 1.9%. Australia’s “Big Four” banks saw shares tumble 1.3% to 6% on cooled mortgage growth fears.
The Winners and Losers:
- Winners (Income & Yield): High-dividend financial and wealth managers like ASX, AMP, and Challenger will capture massive fund inflows because Australia’s generous dividend franking credit system remains untouched. Active fixed income and bond markets will also see an influx from ageing demographics seeking steady cash flow over highly taxed capital growth.
- Losers (Growth & Property): Non-dividend-paying small caps, diversified property developers (Stockland, Mirvac), and property-linked retailers (Harvey Norman) face immediate headwinds.
The Bottom Line: By heavily taxing capital appreciation while leaving dividend credits intact, the new framework shifts capital away from growth-oriented economic development toward low-risk, income-harvesting investments.
