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Investopoly

Investopoly

By: Stuart Wemyss & Campbell Wallace
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About this listen

Investopoly is a twice-weekly podcast designed to help you make better financial decisions and build wealth with clarity and confidence. Hosted by Stuart (tax adviser, financial adviser, and mortgage broker) and Campbell (senior financial adviser), each episode delivers concise, practical insights grounded in real-world strategy, research, methodologies, and case studies.

You will get two episodes each week: a main episode that deep-dives into a single wealth-building topic, and a Q&A episode that answers listener questions and real scenarios. Send your questions to questions@investopoly.com.au

We also writes a weekly blog, and many podcast topics build on those ideas and frameworks. Stuart's forthcoming book, Wealth by Design, will be available in July 2026.

© 2026 Investopoly
Economics Leadership Management & Leadership Personal Finance
Episodes
  • Ep 403: Lump sum share market investing: risky or rational
    Apr 7 2026

    Read Full Blog Here

    Investing a large lump sum into the share market can feel risky, but is spreading it out actually safer, or just more comfortable?

    In this episode, Stuart revisits his own evolving view on lump sum investing versus dollar cost averaging. Drawing on decades of market research, he explains why lump sum investing has historically outperformed staged investing around two-thirds of the time, and why the real cost of caution is often missed opportunity, not reduced risk.

    But this is not just about timing. Stuart explores how the decision should also depend on what you’re investing in, from expensive markets like the Nasdaq to more attractively valued regions globally. He also unpacks the role of cash sitting in offset accounts, and how that changes the equation when comparing guaranteed returns versus market exposure.

    The episode dives into the psychology behind staged investing, including loss aversion and the fear of regret, and introduces a practical middle ground: enhanced dollar cost averaging.

    Stuart also breaks down common misconceptions around debt recycling, explaining why it does not automatically accelerate home loan repayment—and when it can still make sense.

    A clear, evidence-based discussion on balancing logic, emotion, and strategy when investing significant capital.

    My new book out in mid-2026: To join the pre-order waitlist and get a bonus. More info go to: https://prosolution.com.au/book-preorder-bonus

    Do you have a question for the podcast? Email us at questions@investopoly.com.au.

    If you're interested in working with our team and me, discover how we can work together here: https://prosolution.com.au/family-office-services

    If this episode resonated with you, please leave a rating on your favourite podcast platform.

    Subscribe to my weekly blog: https://prosolution.com.au/stay-connected

    IMPORTANT: This podcast provides general information about finance, taxes, and credit. This means that the content does not consider your specific objectives, financial situation, or needs. It is crucial for you to assess whether the information is suitable for your circumstances before taking any actions based on it. If you find yourself uncertain about the relevance or your specific needs, it is advisable to seek advice from a licensed and trustworthy professional.

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    25 mins
  • Q&A - When good options compete: property, super & the art of the trade-off
    Apr 6 2026

    In this week's Q&A episode, Stuart works through real-life scenarios where the challenge isn't finding a good option; it's choosing between several.

    A Canberra couple planning a move to Queensland face a layered dilemma: how to fund a $3M home while managing a defined benefit pension, a potential inheritance, and a preference to hold quality assets. Stuart weighs selling, renting, and carrying debt into retirement, and why flexibility may matter more than certainty at this stage.

    The episode also covers structuring investments for children (informal versus discretionary trusts), cash flow and loan strategies for business owners and high-income earners, and how to decide whether an underperforming property is worth holding or cutting loose.

    Across every case study, the same tension surfaces: flexibility, tax efficiency, and long-term growth rarely all point in the same direction.

    A practical, honest episode for anyone navigating big financial decisions where no single path is obviously right.

    My new book out in mid-2026: To join the pre-order waitlist and get a bonus. More info go to: https://prosolution.com.au/book-preorder-bonus

    Do you have a question for the podcast? Email us at questions@investopoly.com.au.

    If you're interested in working with our team and me, discover how we can work together here: https://prosolution.com.au/family-office-services

    If this episode resonated with you, please leave a rating on your favourite podcast platform.

    Subscribe to my weekly blog: https://prosolution.com.au/stay-connected

    IMPORTANT: This podcast provides general information about finance, taxes, and credit. This means that the content does not consider your specific objectives, financial situation, or needs. It is crucial for you to assess whether the information is suitable for your circumstances before taking any actions based on it. If you find yourself uncertain about the relevance or your specific needs, it is advisable to seek advice from a licensed and trustworthy professional.

    Show More Show Less
    33 mins
  • Ep 402: The real risk in retirement: working too long and spending too little
    Mar 31 2026

    Read Full Blog Here

    In this episode, Stuart explores a lesser-discussed but increasingly important risk in financial planning: not running out of money, but failing to use it when it matters most.

    While much of the conversation around retirement focuses on avoiding financial shortfall, this episode flips the script. For those in a strong financial position, the greater danger may be underspending during the early, high-health years of retirement when time, energy, and freedom are at their peak.

    Stuart introduces a practical framework for thinking about retirement in two phases: the active “high-health” years and the later, lower-spending phase. He explains why a successful plan often involves intentional drawdown of capital, not just preserving it, and how shifting from accumulation to decumulation is as much psychological as it is financial.

    The episode also outlines how to build confidence in spending through simple guardrails dividing wealth into core, contingency, and discretionary capital—and why liquidity and asset structure play a critical role in enabling flexibility.

    This is a thoughtful discussion about aligning money with life, permitting yourself to spend, and ensuring that financial success actually translates into a richer, more fulfilling retirement.

    My new book out in mid-2026: To join the pre-order waitlist and get a bonus. More info go to: https://prosolution.com.au/book-preorder-bonus

    Do you have a question for the podcast? Email us at questions@investopoly.com.au.

    If you're interested in working with our team and me, discover how we can work together here: https://prosolution.com.au/family-office-services

    If this episode resonated with you, please leave a rating on your favourite podcast platform.

    Subscribe to my weekly blog: https://prosolution.com.au/stay-connected

    IMPORTANT: This podcast provides general information about finance, taxes, and credit. This means that the content does not consider your specific objectives, financial situation, or needs. It is crucial for you to assess whether the information is suitable for your circumstances before taking any actions based on it. If you find yourself uncertain about the relevance or your specific needs, it is advisable to seek advice from a licensed and trustworthy professional.

    Show More Show Less
    27 mins
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