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CGT DISCOUNT

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CGT DISCOUNT

The CGT discount is a hot topic with the upcoming Federal budget, but I haven't yet heard anyone discussing equities versus property. All the talk seems to be about investment properties only. (As far as equities are concerned, a recent investor survey showed a definite preference for a longer time period before the discount can apply, rather than reducing the percentage.) Do you have any information as to how - or even whether - the Govt is going to make a distinction? The govt seems to be considering reducing or even removing the CGT discount in an effort to improve housing affordability, or so they tell us. Surely then, if they extend the policy to other assets like equities, that will demonstrate that it wasn't about the housing market at all, but more about revenue raising? What are your thoughts?

Answer

Hi David,

As of now, there is no confirmed plan to distinguish between shares and property, but property is clearly the political focus due to affordability issues.

Predicting what politicians will do is hard at best, without appearing too cynical, looking through the eyes of “voter popularity” is never a bad start.

  • The government wants housing affordability to improve putting property in the crosshairs of CGT changes.
  • Conversely the government wouldn’t want to hurt the stock market with most Australians holding shares either directly or indirectly through their Super.

To us logic would say it should only apply to property, with the specific aim of improving affordability, with far fewer people impacted, estimates are around 20% of households, BUT we are talking politicians and government here.

Also, historically, governments tend to avoid asset-class discrimination because it complicates the tax system and creates lobbying pressure, which is why the current discount is uniform. So your intuition is logical: If equities are included, it strongly suggests the objective extends beyond housing and into fiscal repair and structural tax reform.

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