REA Group stock drops as investors watch FY27 listings under tax reform

REA Group stock drops as investors watch FY27 listings under tax reform

June 11, 2026

Sydney, June 11, 2026, 08:03 (AEST)

  • REA Group slipped 2.06% to finish at A$149.43 on Wednesday. The S&P/ASX 200 rose 0.57%.
  • BofA downgraded REA to neutral from buy and set a new target of A$175. UBS is now at hold with a target of A$165.
  • REA is nearing its buyback cap, having spent about A$191.4 million so far, according to its latest update.

REA Group shares slumped 2.06% to close at A$149.43 on Wednesday, dropping A$3.15, as investors set aside its strong property portal lead and started to question if Australia’s tax moves could slow housing turnover and cut into paid listings. The broader market managed a gain.

REA lagged even as real estate stocks did well. The S&P/ASX 200 jumped 49.1 points to 8,653.3, with the real estate sector up about 1.8% as lower yields boosted the group. But REA fell, with the stock hit by broker downgrades on future residential listing volumes.

BofA Securities dropped its rating on REA to neutral from buy, lowering its 12-month price goal to A$175 from A$210. The firm said tax reform plans could slow property turnover and reduce listings through FY27. BofA now expects new listings to fall 3% in FY27. The market is looking for a flat result.

UBS cut REA to hold and slashed its target to A$165 from A$213, analyst data from Investing.com showed. Two big brokers have pulled back quickly. The market shift now looks less tied to any single forecast and more about doubts over REA’s ability to keep its premium pricing if volumes stay weak.

Tax changes could hit REA’s main business if property owners hang onto homes for longer. Realestate.com.au and its other sites make money from agents and vendors who pay to list or advertise properties. Fewer homes for sale means fewer ad campaigns getting sold.

Budget limits negative gearing to new homes from July 1, 2027; current rules stay for properties held before budget night. The 50% capital gains tax discount goes. Instead, investors get inflation indexation, plus a minimum 30% tax on capital gains starting the same date.

BofA is mainly focused on Sydney and Melbourne. The bank said the two cities make up about 40% of listing volumes and drive strong ad yields. “Yield” here means the revenue REA gets per listing, as prices and upgrades boost income. If those two cities see a weaker mix, overall national listing figures might look fine but REA could still take a hit. Investing

REA’s buyback isn’t moving the needle like it used to. In its June 10 update, the company said it bought 47,375 shares in the last session for about A$7.21 million, bringing total purchases reported in that filing to around A$191.4 million. REA’s on-market buyback is capped at A$200 million, depending on market conditions, the share price, and what the company decides.

REA got a lift from new commercial news. On June 10, the company said it struck a new deal with Harcourts for a strategic partnership. Harcourts agencies will get access to REA’s Pro subscriptions at a national discounted rate, and the arrangement also covers sponsorship of major Harcourts events until FY27. That should help REA’s push into agent products, but it wasn’t enough to ease market worries about future listing supply.

REA’s post-budget take is mixed. The company says planned capital gains tax changes could prompt some investors to sell before July 2027. But with negative-gearing benefits grandfathered, existing owners may hold off selling after that. That’s the tension in the stock: a possible bump in listings now, then maybe lower turnover ahead.

BofA isn’t only worried about volumes. Analysts also pointed to weaker auction clearance rates, higher upfront marketing costs for sellers, and some valuation risks, along with concerns tied to artificial intelligence. On the other side, bulls say REA still owns strong pricing levers, premium products like Luxe and Pro, and holds a market position they argue could protect revenue even if listings drop.

Next up is seeing if Sydney and Melbourne listings, auction clearance rates and agent demand for premium tools back up the downgrade call before the July 2027 tax change. With the buyback close to its stated cap, REA may need operating numbers, not capital moves, to change the story on the stock.

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