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Home»Finance»Finance guru Mark Bouris blasts Anthony Albanese’s solution to the housing crisis: ‘It’s window dressing’
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Finance guru Mark Bouris blasts Anthony Albanese’s solution to the housing crisis: ‘It’s window dressing’

March 19, 20254 Mins Read


Finance guru and businessman Mark Bouris has blasted a ‘bull***t’ government legislation that aims to solve Australia’s crippling housing crisis. 

Under a new policy passed by Labor, a two-year temporary ban stopping non-citizens from buying real estate in Australia will start on April 1. 

‘The way it was served up, it was ‘foreign buyers won’t be able to buy’ but it’s really just limited to established homes,’ the Wizard Home Loans founder said on his Property Insights podcast this week. 

‘I don’t think it’s going to make a huge difference.

‘So it’s all bulls***t. It’s just window dressing.’

Until March 31, 2027, the ATO says a foreign buyer – including temporary residents and foreign-owned companies – can only buy an established building if an exception applies. 

This includes permanent residents, New Zealand citizens and spouses of Australian citizens, permanent residents or New Zealand citizens when the property is purchased as joint tenants.

An exception also applies to investments that significantly increase or support the availability of housing supply, and for the Pacific Australia Labour Mobility (PALM) scheme. 

Finance guru and podcaster Mark Bouris (pictured) slammed new legislation passed by Labor that aims to solve Australia's crippling housing crisis

Finance guru and podcaster Mark Bouris (pictured) slammed new legislation passed by Labor that aims to solve Australia’s crippling housing crisis

Principal of solicitors firm NL Legal Nicole Leggat (pictured) agreed with Bouris that the new policy would do little to keep house prices down

Principal of solicitors firm NL Legal Nicole Leggat (pictured) agreed with Bouris that the new policy would do little to keep house prices down

Mr Bouris was joined by Nicole Leggat, the principal of solicitors firm NL Legal, to discuss the upcoming ban. 

‘I can sort of see the reason behind the policy, allegedly it will keep prices down – I don’t think it will,’ he said.

‘We’re not talking about millions of transactions from foreigners, they’re not exactly flooding the market and buying everything are they?’

Ms Leggat agreed there was no ‘flood’ of foreign buyers in the housing market.

‘Not in my experience,’ she said.

‘But there are some [buyers], definitely within Sydney’s east.’

Mr Bouris went so far as to suggest that, without competition, houses that could usually sell for up to $12million will now only sell for $10million.

‘It’s not like they are keeping a nice, young family out of a $12million home, they are further down the chain,’ he said.

Finance guru Mark Bouris (pictured) slammed the government's temporary ban on foreign buyers in the housing market as 'window dressing'

Finance guru Mark Bouris (pictured) slammed the government’s temporary ban on foreign buyers in the housing market as ‘window dressing’

Ms Leggat also explained how the temporary ban could backfire on government finances.

‘There’s also the loss of the revenue to the government when you think about the foreign investment review board fees that they were getting from them as well which is huge,’ she said. 

‘I don’t think it is going to make a huge difference but I definitely think it will do something.’

After the two-year ban, the government is due to review the findings and decide whether to expand it. 

The legislation is designed to boost the supply of new housing, after a record 518,000 migrants moved to Australia during the last financial year.

Australia’s rental vacancy rate plunged to a record-low of one per cent in November, as an influx of international students competed with locals for somewhere to live, sending asking prices soaring.

That rising demand also saw house purchase prices in Sydney, Brisbane and Perth last year surge by double-digits despite the Reserve Bank raising interest rates for the 13th time in 18 months to a 12-year high of 4.35 per cent.

The ATO said it will enforce the ban by screening foreign investment proposals relating to residential properties.

The Labor government is also planning to crack down on land banking by foreign investors (pictured, a house for sale in Sydney)

The Labor government is also planning to crack down on land banking by foreign investors (pictured, a house for sale in Sydney)

When the policy was announced in February, Housing Minister Clare O’Neil released a statement with Treasurer Jim Chalmers

‘The ban will mean Australians will be able to buy homes that would have otherwise been bought by foreign investors,’ she said.

‘We’re cracking down on land banking by foreign investors to free up land to build more homes more quickly.’

Land banking is the practice of buying an area as an investment and holding for future use.

Ms O’Neill said the government will ‘take a tougher stance on compliance of foreign investment approvals’ for vacant residential land development. 

The Liberals have been vocal about the need to curb foreign buyers in the Australian housing market. 

Opposition Leader Peter Dutton made a promise in his budget reply in 2024 that the Liberals would ensure a two-year ban on foreign investors and temporary residents buying existing homes.



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