CGT and negative gearing changes
Advisory Blog · 15 June 2026
The data is moving the way it was supposed to
Now comes the interesting part
There has been a lot to absorb over the past several months. Unemployment has moved up, household spending has pulled back, and growth figures have been modest but not worrying. The picture forming is one of an economy that is slowing, and the rate rises appear to be doing their job.
The economy is slowing in the way many expected
There has been a lot to absorb over the past several months. Numbers have been coming in one after another, with unemployment moving up, household spending pulling back, and growth figures that were modest but not worrying.
For anyone watching, the picture that has been forming is one of an economy that is slowing. Most economists and market commentators have been pointing in the same direction: the rate rises appear to be doing their job, along with everything else happening in the world.
The Reserve Bank is meeting this week, and by all accounts the weight of expectation among those watching closely is for a hold. Whether that marks the end of this cycle is not something anyone is calling with certainty, but the indication from most forecasters is that rates may not have far to go from here.
The RBA meeting matters this week
The Reserve Bank is meeting this week, and the commentary coming from the central bank and from most domestic forecasters suggests the recent rate rises are starting to work their way through the economy.
As Deputy Governor Andrew Hauser put it recently, the trend is moving the right way. Whether that marks the end of this cycle is not something anyone is calling with certainty. But somewhere in the next six to twelve months, the conversation could shift.
Global uncertainty is still part of the picture
There is also news this morning from the Middle East. Reports are coming through that the US and Iran have reached what is being described as a completed deal. G7 leaders are meeting in France today to discuss it, with the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz and the start of nuclear talks the central agenda.
It has to be said that this situation has produced a number of stop-start moments since the ceasefire was first announced in April. The noise has been hard to read. But if the latest reports hold, energy markets would be watching closely. When the April ceasefire was announced, oil prices fell sharply, and a sustained reopening would likely continue that movement.
End of financial year is now close
Closer to home, the end of the financial year is two weeks away. Some decisions simply cannot be made in July, and the window for them is right now.
The broader picture, taken together, is one of gradual improvement. Not everything is resolved, and there is no shortage of uncertainty still in the system. But the economic data is beginning to move in a direction that commentators and forecasters had been anticipating, and that is worth noting.
The plans built to navigate this kind of environment appear to be holding up.
As always, if anything here raises a question about your own situation, we are here.
Warm regards,
William, Paul and your HFI team
This update is general in nature and is not personal advice. For guidance that fits your situation, please speak with your HFI adviser. You may also need specialist legal or tax advice.
Markets and Money
Five things that matter this week
The RBA meets this week and a hold looks likely
The Reserve Bank of Australia’s Monetary Policy Board is meeting on 15 and 16 June, with the decision due at 2:30pm on Tuesday. The cash rate has been at 4.35 per cent since the third rise in May, which was the third increase of 0.25 per cent since August 2025.
The evidence that higher rates are slowing the economy has been building. Unemployment has risen, household spending has pulled back, and GDP growth has been modest. The weight of commentary from most analysts and domestic banks points to a hold at this meeting.
A US-Iran deal announced today, with the Strait of Hormuz set to reopen
This morning, US President Donald Trump told the Wall Street Journal the agreement with Iran is now complete. G7 leaders meeting in Evian, France are today discussing the long-term reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, which has been largely blocked since late February.
The deal includes Iran agreeing not to seek nuclear weapons and to open the strait without tolls. Shipping levels remain very low and the situation has had several stop-start moments, but the direction is cautiously positive.
30 June is two weeks away, and the window for key tax decisions is now
The end of the financial year closes on 30 June, and some decisions cannot be undone after that date. If you hold investments with unrealised capital gains or losses, the time to act on them is before 30 June.
Trust distributions must also be formally documented before year end. Deductions you plan to claim this financial year need to be paid before 30 June to count. This is separate from the super contribution deadline covered in an earlier edition.
Payday super starts 1 July, 15 days away for employers
From 1 July 2026, employers must pay superannuation guarantee contributions at the same time as wages, rather than quarterly. The change has been law for some time, but commencement is now 15 days away.
Payroll systems need to be configured to process SG contributions with every pay run. The ATO has indicated penalties will apply from commencement for non-compliance.
What your family actually receives from your super can surprise people
Australia does not have a formal inheritance tax. But super paid to a non-tax-dependant, typically an adult child over 18 who is not financially dependent on you, is taxed at up to 17 per cent before they receive it.
The structure of your binding death benefit nomination and who you have named can significantly affect what your family actually receives. Firstlinks raised this topic in their edition this week, noting that many people assume their super passes tax-free.
Health News
Research worth noting this week
Your brain can keep getting stronger at any age, including your 90s
A three-year study involving nearly 4,000 people aged 19 to 94 has found that brain health can improve at any stage of life. The research, published on 13 June 2026 in Scientific Reports, a Nature journal, by the Center for BrainHealth at the University of Texas at Dallas, found that participants who spent just a few minutes each day on structured brain-training activities showed measurable gains in thinking clarity, emotional wellbeing, and sense of purpose.
The study challenges the assumption that cognitive decline is inevitable and one-directional. The activities were not demanding. The key finding is that consistency matters more than intensity, and that the brain responds to effort regardless of age.
The strength training sweet spot is 90 to 120 minutes a week
A study tracking more than 147,000 people over 30 years has found that 90 to 120 minutes of strength training per week is associated with a 19 per cent lower risk of death from cardiovascular disease and a 27 per cent lower risk of death from neurological disease.
The research, published in the British Journal of Sports Medicine on 12 June 2026, found no additional health benefit from training more than 120 minutes per week. That works out to roughly two to three sessions of 30 to 45 minutes each. The gains were even stronger for people who combined strength training with regular aerobic exercise.
The financial year winds up in two weeks, and this edition has more actionable content than most. If there is something you have been meaning to do before 30 June, such as a super review, a tax timing decision, or a nomination update, the window is closing. We are here to help you work through it before the deadline.
Warm regards,
William, Paul and your HFI team
Ready to review your plan?
Book an Annual Review or a Power Call with your HFI adviser. We are here to help you stay on track, whatever the environment.
Book an Annual Review Email HFISources
- RBA, Monetary Policy Decisions 2026
- RBA, Fireside Chat, Andrew Hauser, 5 June 2026
- ABS, Consumer Price Index, Australia, April 2026
- ABS, Labour Force, Australia, April 2026
- RFERL, Trump Says Iran Deal ‘Now Complete,’ Hormuz to Open, 15 June 2026
- ATO, Super guarantee for employers
- Firstlinks Edition 662, Australia has no death duties. Technically.
- Scientific Reports, Nature, Brain Health Study, University of Texas at Dallas, 13 June 2026
- British Journal of Sports Medicine, Strength Training Longevity Study, BMJ Group, 12 June 2026
Important information
Opinions in this article are attributable to its author only and do not constitute financial advice. Any advice in this document is general in nature and does not take into account the objectives, financial situation or needs of any particular person. You should obtain financial or legal advice relevant to your circumstances before making investment decisions. Health & Finance Integrated takes no responsibility for, nor gives any endorsement or warranties in relation to any third-party information referred to herein.
Health & Finance Integrated is a Corporate Authorised Representative of Able Financial Services, ABN 27 646 319 164, AFSL 530596, Shop 6, 23 Hassall St, Parramatta 2150 NSW.