
Australia’s property market has shifted.
After years of relentless price growth, the combination of three RBA rate hikes, the federal budget’s negative gearing changes, and stretched affordability is doing what many thought impossible: pushing house prices lower in Australia’s two largest cities.
Commonwealth Bank of Australia’s (ASX: CBA) own economists estimate the budget changes to negative gearing and capital gains tax will make established investment properties less attractive. As a result, house prices are expected to be about 3% lower than they otherwise would have been.
Dwelling price growth is now expected to be just 3% to December 2026, down from an earlier forecast of 5%.
Investors are naturally asking themselves what this means for these three widely held ASX shares.
What falling house prices mean for CBA shares
CBA sits at the centre of the Australian housing market.
It is Australia’s largest mortgage lender, and falling house prices create two distinct risks for shareholders.
First, lower property values reduce the collateral backing existing mortgages, increasing loan-to-value ratios.
Second, three cash rate hikes have subtracted 1.5 percentage points from the banks’ 2026 price growth forecasts. The restriction of negative gearing will also weigh on prices, with CBA estimating this policy change will subtract 0.6 percentage points from annual price growth by the end of this year.
That slowdown will reduce the appetite for new borrowing, which directly impacts CBA’s mortgage volume growth.
In the first half of FY2026, CBA posted statutory net profit of $5.41 billion, confirming the underlying business remains strong.
But at a premium valuation, there is little room for a meaningful deterioration in credit quality.
What falling house prices mean for REA Group Ltd (ASX: REA)
REA Group is Australia’s dominant online property platform, operating realestate.com.au.
Its revenue model depends on property listing volumes and the fees charged to agents and developers.
Falling house prices create a complex picture for REA. A slowing market with more days on market can actually increase listing volumes as vendors spend longer trying to sell.
However, a sustained price decline can dampen vendor confidence, reducing the number of people willing to list at all.
REA Group’s first-half FY2026 result delivered revenue growth of 21% to $912 million, driven by strong listings and yield improvements. That momentum reflects a market that was still functioning actively in the first half.
The second half will test whether REA’s yield-per-listing growth can compensate if vendor confidence softens.
Bell Potter recently downgraded REA Group to sell with a $137 price target, noting the valuation looks stretched relative to a property market losing momentum.
What falling house prices mean for Mirvac Group (ASX: MGR)
For Mirvac, falling house prices present a more nuanced picture.
Mirvac develops new residential properties, not existing ones.
The federal budget’s negative gearing changes actually benefit Mirvac by exempting new builds from restrictions applying to established properties. This has created a direct policy incentive for investors to buy new rather than existing properties.
In Q3 FY2026, Mirvac delivered a 28% year-on-year lift in residential sales, reaffirming its full-year guidance and confirming the new-build demand tailwind is real.
Mirvac shares have still fallen approximately 26% over the past twelve months as the rate hiking cycle weighed on REIT valuations.
Macquarie carries an outperform rating on Mirvac with a price target of $2.70, arguing the residential recovery and build-to-rent growth story may drive earnings higher even in a higher-for-longer rate environment.
Foolish takeaway
Falling house prices are not a disaster for all ASX shares with property exposure.
CBA faces credit quality headwinds if the slowdown deepens.
REA Group must navigate lower vendor confidence against strong yield-per-listing growth.
Mirvac, counterintuitively, may be one of the few property-exposed ASX shares that actually benefits from the policy environment driving the slowdown.
Understanding which side of the falling house prices story each company sits on is the most important question for investors right now.
The post What falling house prices could mean for these widely held ASX shares appeared first on The Motley Fool Australia.
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Motley Fool contributor Mark Verhoeven has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia’s parent company Motley Fool Holdings Inc. has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Scott Phillips.