The latest Federal Budget doesn’t introduce immediate, headline-grabbing change. Instead, it signals a shift toward a more complex environment for how businesses approach transactions, growth and exits over the next 12–24 months. For most businesses, the impact will be less about what changes and more about when and how decisions are made.
Here are the key practical implications:
Transactions will need to be planned earlier
With the return of the loss carry-back regime, timing is becoming more commercially significant. The same transaction, executed at different points in a business cycle, may now produce different cash outcomes. Boards and management teams may want to bring forward strategic reviews, particularly where restructures, divestments or acquisitions are being considered to ensure timing is aligned with broader financial outcomes. Early input on structure and sequencing will become more valuable.
Exit and incentive structures are becoming more complex
Proposed changes to CGT settings are likely to reshape how founders, management teams and investors approach exits and equity participation. Therefore, Sale processes, management equity and employee incentive plans may need to be revisited earlier in the lifecycle. Businesses considering a sale or capital event should be pressure-testing whether existing structures still deliver the intended commercial outcomes.
Growth is still supported, but with more upfront structuring
Ongoing settings around asset write-offs and R&D incentives continue to support investment and innovation. However, that support is increasingly linked to how ventures are structured. Growth initiatives, particularly in early-stage or scaling businesses may benefit from more deliberate planning around funding arrangements, IP ownership and commercial agreements at the outset, rather than being addressed retrospectively.
The common theme: earlier, more deliberate planning
Across transactions, growth and exits, the consistent shift is toward earlier engagement on structure and strategy.
For boards and leadership teams
The focus is less on reacting to changes, and more on proactively positioning the business to preserve value in a more technical landscape.
Where we can assist?
We work closely with clients on the structuring and execution of these decisions, including transactions, governance, incentive frameworks and commercial arrangements.
Bringing that lens in early can help ensure businesses are well positioned as these changes take effect.
This is a Budget that rewards being proactive The complexity is increasing, but so is the opportunity for businesses that plan ahead.