May 5, 2025

Rental rules every landlord and tenant in NSW needs to know

Whether you’re moving into a new rental or welcoming tenants into your investment, starting a lease is an exciting step. However, before signing anything, it is essential to understand the.

It’s been an eventful few weeks with the share market seeing dramatic falls that have matched the early Covid fear and the GFC. The drop has wiped almost $180 billion from Aussie super funds and trillions of dollars off the US share market. Trump’s tariffs have created uncertainty and the fear of a full-blown trade war is set to ensure there is volatility in equity markets for some time to come.

The large falls generated plenty of conjecture among financial commentators and economists. Treasurer Jim Chalmers also weighed in with the prediction that the RBA could cut rates by 50 basis points at the next meeting in May – a sentiment echoed around the major banks. However, many pundits predict that the RBA will have to cut rates more aggressively. Only time will tell and with such big shifts unfolding, it’s impossible to get a clear read on what may come next.

If we look to the past we can find evidence of how money markets have responded to similar circumstances, what has unfolded with interest rates and the impact on property. In Australia, property is the key asset and wealth-creating vehicle, followed by shares, while in the US, stocks are the primary vehicle. As a result, US property prices can sit idle for long periods of time and housing affordability across the broader country is a lot better than here in Australia. Interestingly, the top 10 per cent of Americans own a whopping 93 per cent of the share market. With that in mind, the falling US share market is really only impacting the uber wealthy. By contrast in Australia, if we see dramatic property price declines, this will shrink net worths and erode confidence very quickly. Our property markets are currently sitting at a record high of $11 trillion.

Let’s look at the current stock market correction, right on the edge of a bear market that’s pulling the ASX back to 2022 levels, and determine its current and future impact on the property market. We are already hearing from many downsizers that their super has fallen 20-30 per cent over the past month and this is most concerning as they plan for retirement. Higher priced properties are also feeling the impact as many buyers for such homes are exposed to the financial markets or even work in the sector. Banking and finance-related money has been a key driver behind prestige sales in Sydney over the past decade and these recent falls will put some plans on hold or even see some buyers exit the market. These are real conversations occurring in the market today and we expect them to remain until there is a clearer path revealed around the impact of tariffs and how other countries will react.

Buyers should be wary of rate cuts because when the market shifts, it moves fast. Right now, buyers have the upper hand in Sydney. This will only be magnified through this share market chaos but one more rate cut backed up by another and all of a sudden property will move into positive territory quickly. One could also reasonably argue that ongoing share market uncertainty will flow money back towards the relative safety of property, so slowly pieces of the puzzle are starting to fall into place towards a property market bounce. But as they say, watch this space!