The property industry is talking after NGU Real Estate founder Emil Juresic listed his Brisbane mansion, “Hacienda”, for sale with an asking price reportedly exceeding $25 million. According to reports, Juresic believes artificial intelligence could impact jobs, borrowing power and property prices, prompting him to reduce parts of his property portfolio. NGU’s own campaign for the Indooroopilly residence describes it as a three-level luxury home on 1,400sqm with extensive high-end finishes.
It’s a bold move, but it is still only one person’s view of the market.
Julian and Renee at Flash Conveyancing understand why this story has attracted attention. Property buyers and sellers are already dealing with interest rates, borrowing limits, construction costs, insurance pressures and affordability concerns. Once AI enters the discussion, fear can quickly take over.
AI may significantly reshape the Australian workforce over time. Some industries will feel the impact sooner than others. However, the stronger argument is that AI often changes tasks before it replaces entire professions. That was the point made by Jensen Huang in 2026 when discussing radiology. AI has become an important tool in the industry, but Huang argued that demand for radiologists has continued to grow because the role still depends on judgement, diagnosis and patient care — not simply reading scans.
The same principle applies to property transactions. Technology can speed up searches, automate documents and improve communication. What it cannot do is apply human judgement to risk. It cannot properly explain how a special condition shifts liability to a buyer, identify when a clause appears harmless but creates long-term exposure, or guide a nervous purchaser through the consequences of exchanging contracts.
The Australian property market also cannot be reduced to one AI prediction. Housing affordability, borrowing power and buyer confidence are all being shaped by multiple pressures at once, including:
- interest rates and lending policy
- employment and wage growth
- housing supply and construction costs
- migration and population growth
- infrastructure and planning delays
- investor confidence and local demand
- fuel, insurance and supply-chain pressures
AI is one influence among many. It is not the entire market.
For NSW buyers and sellers, the key lesson is not to panic or ignore technology altogether. The real lesson is to make property decisions using proper legal and financial advice. NSW Government guidance states that conveyancing involves the legal work associated with contracts, mortgages and related property documents, and warns that people handling conveyancing themselves may be personally liable if issues arise.
That’s where Flash Conveyancing focuses its attention. Julian and Renee treat conveyancing as more than paperwork. Their role is to identify and manage risk before settlement by carefully reviewing:
- contracts before signing
- title searches and restrictions
- easements, covenants and zoning concerns
- special conditions and settlement deadlines
- finance-related risks
- strata or community title issues
- adjustment calculations
- communication with banks, agents and the other side

Flash Conveyancing Tips
Don’t let AI headlines make decisions for you. Markets move, technology evolves and opinions change — but a signed contract creates real legal obligations. Before you buy, sell or refinance, make sure the contract has been properly reviewed, the title is understood and the decision supports your long-term goals. In a fast-changing market, careful legal advice remains one of the few things that can genuinely reduce uncertainty.
Flash Conveyancing, led by Julian & Renee, understands that headlines about AI, interest rates and market uncertainty can make buyers and sellers feel pressured into quick decisions. That’s why the team focuses on practical guidance, careful contract reviews and clear communication throughout the property process. With extensive experience across councils including Blacktown, Hawkesbury, Blue Mountains, The Hills, Hornsby and Parramatta, they assist clients throughout areas such as Kellyville Ridge, Riverstone, Schofields, Baulkham Hills, Castle Hill, Norwest, Rouse Hill and beyond — helping buyers and sellers navigate an evolving market with confidence, not fear.

