- 07 Apr 2025
- By API Magazine

When share prices are tanking and Trump-supporting hedge fund billionaires are predicting a ‘nuclear winter’, it is time to assess if Australian property is a safe haven or susceptible to a crash.
By resorting to 19th century economic models, the Donald Trump-engineered global stock market crash has seen multi-trillions of dollars wiped from major international indices.
Trump himself actually cited this era as justification of the tariff formula seemingly composed on a beer mat and applied without nuance to all countries.
“In the 1880s, they established a commission to decide what they were going to do with the vast sums of money they were collecting. We were collecting so much money so fast, we didn’t know what to do with it. Isn’t that a nice problem to have?”
Times have changed since the 1880s. People no longer travel by horse-drawn omnibus or communicate over long distance by Morse code and telegraph.
Tariffs anywhere near the scale unleashed by the Trump administration are reminiscent of the financial panic of 1873, in which European nations and North America imposed huge protectionist trade barriers in attempt to shore up domestic economies. It failed spectacularly.
The 1930s’ Great Depression came about through the sort of astonishing wealth disparities seen today but just as in 1873, governments responded by imposing large tariffs. History repeated itself and the problem only got worse.
Fast forward almost a century and the US economic policy foisted upon the world last week more resembles the fever dream of an 1800s robber baron than that of the president of the world’s largest economy in a time of globalisation and free trade agreements.
“We are heading for a self-induced, economic nuclear winter, and we should start hunkering down.”
– Bill Ackman, Founder and CEO, Pershing Square Capital Management
On Monday (7 April), the Australian share market lost $160 billion within a minute of opening. The US is forecast to slide into recession.
Stock market turmoil on this scale reverberates through every aspect of the financial world and Australia’s property market is no exception.
So, what does history – for those who do choose to pay heed to it, perhaps unlike some Presidents – teach us about where real estate markets might head if the market was to crash even further or the downturn be sustained for a lengthy period?
The 2025 financial landscape
Throughout 2024, share markets around the world had been on a tearaway run to record levels around the world in the years since the pandemic.
From New York to London and Tokyo, 14 of the world’s 20 biggest stock markets had hit record highs. Then came a burst of volatility in early August, when Japan’s Nikkei Index lost 12.4 per cent of its value in a day before adding another 10 per cent the next day, and the US and Europe markets contracted very sharply.
Whether this latest market panic is a ‘healthy correction’ or the harbinger of more turmoil to come is unclear at the moment.
There is still, of course, the risk of an expanded Middle East conflict, or even the same eventuality beyond Ukraine and deeper into Europe. There’s still China’s slowing economy, aggressive tariff response and its unpredictable regional sabre rattling. And in any market correction, there is always the potential for a global herd reaction that could throw a major spanner into the whole international economic system.
And there is there is the instability of US policymaking. Policies are enacted, withdrawn, stalled and overturned by legal challenges.
A nervous administration is already laying the groundwork for a possible reversal of what has so far been an absolutely disastrous tariff introduction.
US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said on the weekend that the different countries’ tariffs, which are set to come into force on 9 April, could be in place for “days and weeks”.
Article Q&A
Will tariffs impact the Australian property market?
The unpredictable global financial ramifications of the Trump government’s tariff regime mean no assets are beyond impact, as seen by the global share market correction, but Australian property has proven resilient in the past.
Could a share market crash cause property prices to fall?
If there is a massive stock market crash on the scale of the GFC, property is likely to respond slowly to such volatile scenarios. With the current low rate of loan delinquencies few sellers would be forced to offload property and therefore add supply to the market that might lower prices.