

Investopoly
Stuart Wemyss & Campbell Wallace
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.auWe 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.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Mar 30, 2026 • 38min
Q&A - Can you retire early without taking big risks?
In this episode, Stuart explores a powerful theme across multiple listener scenarios: is it possible to achieve early retirement without aggressive risk-taking, and what trade-offs does that require?A couple in their late 40s shares a disciplined, “late starter” journey and a clear downsizing strategy to fund retirement within five years. Stuart unpacks whether their plan to bridge the gap to super using shares and cash flow is realistic, and the key risks that could derail it.The conversation then broadens to include several compelling case studies: how to allocate proceeds from a property sale when nearing retirement, whether to prioritise super versus accessible investments, and how to structure a portfolio to fund the critical pre-super gap.Stuart also tackles the psychology of risk: Should wealthier investors take on more growth exposure, or reduce risk as they approach retirement? And for those pursuing early retirement primarily through shares, what are the key considerations when navigating volatility, sequencing risk, and income needs?This episode is a deep dive into retirement strategy, highlighting that while simple plans can be effective, success ultimately comes down to managing timing risk, maintaining flexibility, and aligning your portfolio with your real-world lifestyle goals.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-servicesIf 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.

Mar 24, 2026 • 31min
EP 401: Beyond the median: What actually drives property outperformance in Melbourne
Read Full Blog HereIn this episode, Stuart challenges the idea that Melbourne property has been a poor performer by digging beneath the median data and uncovering what actually drives outperformance.While headline figures suggest modest growth since 2010, a deeper look reveals many individual properties have significantly exceeded the average. Stuart walks through 10 real case studies across investment-grade Melbourne suburbs, highlighting the common characteristics that contributed to stronger long-term results even during relatively flat market conditions.The discussion focuses on key drivers of outperformance, including structural scarcity, walkable lifestyle appeal, strong local demographics, and positioning within tightly held pockets. He also explains why factors like land size and heritage overlays may matter less than investors assume, and how well-executed renovations can enhance both value and buyer demand.Importantly, Stuart emphasises that property investing is both art and science data can guide decisions, but nuance and local expertise often make the difference.The episode reinforces a critical message: you don’t need a booming market to achieve strong results. By focusing on high-quality assets with enduring fundamentals, investors can outperform the median and harness the real power of long-term compounding.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-servicesIf 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.

11 snips
Mar 23, 2026 • 32min
Q&A - When your dream home conflicts with your wealth plan
A homeowner weighs an $800k–$1M knockdown rebuild against a plan to retire at 60 with strong passive income. The conversation covers timing the project, borrowing limits, and when selling investments may be unavoidable. It also touches on reducing concentration risk, using concessional super contributions, and whether debt recycling or large lump-sum offers make sense.

Mar 17, 2026 • 35min
Ep 400: CGT discount changes: what property investors should do now
A deep dive into proposed capital gains tax changes and how they could reshape property investing. Discussion of alternative tax systems, CPI indexation history, and modeling of after-tax returns over 30 years. Comparison of property versus share investing if tax advantages shift. Lessons from UK landlord tax reforms and potential impacts on rental supply and affordability.

Mar 16, 2026 • 36min
Q&A - Preparing for retirement: prioritising debt reduction, super contributions, and liquidity
Three real-life retirement dilemmas are dissected: whether to prioritise mortgage offset savings or SMSF contributions, and when splitting surplus cash makes sense. A plan-versus-speculation debate over buying property ahead of the Brisbane Olympics versus boosting super. Strategies for FIRE retirees to bridge pre-super gaps, manage sequence-of-returns risk, and balance taxable versus preserved assets.

Mar 10, 2026 • 37min
Ep 399: The Forever Test: Probably the most important concept investors must understand
Read Full Blog HereRegister HereIn this episode, Stuart explores what he believes is the single most important principle in long-term investing: choosing assets that are most likely to deliver the highest average return over the next 20–30+ years, and ideally much longer.He explains why successful investors focus on lifetime compounding rather than short-term market noise, and how the real power of compounding only becomes obvious after decades of patience. Stuart walks through why investment decisions should always be framed around the question: Would I be comfortable owning this asset forever?The discussion also covers the practical levers investors can control to maximise long-term outcomes. That includes minimising fees and tax drag so more returns can compound, selecting assets where growth is driven largely by unrealised capital appreciation, and structuring ownership correctly from the beginning.Stuart also highlights the often-overlooked behavioural side of investing. The best investments are not just those with strong fundamentals; they are the ones that require minimal time, emotional energy, and decision-making so investors can stick with them through market cycles.Finally, he explains how this principle applies across asset classes from ETFs built around durable indexes to investment-grade property in supply-constrained locations, and why resisting short-term “shiny object” strategies is essential for building meaningful wealth over time.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-servicesIf 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.

Mar 9, 2026 • 32min
Q&A - Bitcoin, debt recycling & the 6-year rule: smart structuring for financial independence
Register HereIn this wide-ranging Q&A episode, Stuart tackles advanced strategy questions across crypto, capital gains tax, debt recycling, super structuring, and long-term portfolio design.First, he unpacks the tax realities of holding Bitcoin via an ETF versus direct ownership, including whether using Bitcoin as a future currency actually avoids CGT (spoiler: the tax system doesn’t work that way). He also explores custody risk and what “safest” really means when holding digital assets directly.The episode then shifts to a couple crystallising a large capital gain and weighing up debt recycling, super contributions, and leveraging through NAB Equity Builder. Stuart breaks down the maths of deductible versus non-deductible debt, Div 293 considerations, and how to balance tax efficiency with flexibility and early financial independence.He also revisits the six-year rule for CGT on former principal residences, clarifying eligibility, deductibility during exemption periods, valuation strategies, and whether banks need to be notified when occupancy changes.Finally, for a defined benefit member building wealth outside super, Stuart explores portfolio diversification beyond property and how defined benefit interests interact with the $2 million transfer balance cap.A technical but practical episode focused on sequencing, structure, and preserving optionality on the path to financial freedom.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-servicesIf 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.

Mar 3, 2026 • 35min
Ep 398: Why non-bank lenders can significantly extend your investment capacity
Read Full Blog HereRegister HereThe lending landscape has changed dramatically over the past two decades, and the gap between traditional banks and non-bank lenders has never been wider. In this episode, Stuart breaks down the key differences between authorised deposit-taking institutions (ADIs) regulated by the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority (APRA) and non-bank lenders regulated primarily by the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) under the NCCP framework.You’ll learn how banks fund loans using customer deposits protected by the Financial Claims Scheme, while non-banks typically rely on securitisation and bond markets. Stuart explains why non-banks aren’t subject to APRA’s macroprudential limits, including serviceability buffers and debt-to-income caps, and how this can translate into materially higher borrowing capacity.He also unpacks the important nuances around offset account structures with non-banks, potential risks in a lender failure scenario, and why funding costs can shift independently of the RBA cash rate.Most importantly, Stuart explores how using a non-bank lender strategically can accelerate wealth creation, particularly in property investing, where access to finance often matters more than marginal differences in interest rates.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-servicesIf 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.

Mar 2, 2026 • 35min
Q&A - Buy the dream home or optimise the structure? Leveraging smartly in your late 30s and 40s
A deep dive on whether to upgrade to a dream family home or preserve income‑producing assets. Practical talk about leverage, sequencing and avoiding overconcentration in the family house. Clear thresholds for when to use a family trust or consider an SMSF. Guidance on tax, repayment plans and when professional advice is worth the cost.

Feb 24, 2026 • 27min
Ep 397: Australian vs International Shares: Why the 45:55 split does not add up
Read Full Blog HereWhy do most diversified Australian portfolios still allocate nearly half of their equity exposure to Australian shares, when Australia represents only around 2% of the global share market?In this episode, we challenge the traditional 45/55 split between Australian and international equities and examine whether it truly makes sense in today’s global economy.Campbell breaks down the most common arguments for maintaining a heavy domestic allocation, franking credits, reduced currency risk, higher dividend yields, lower volatility, and familiarity, and tests whether they justify such a significant home bias. While franking credits provide a real and measurable benefit, he explores why that benefit may be meaningful but not transformational. He also unpacks the realities of currency hedging, sector concentration, tax efficiency, and long-term compounding.Australia’s share market is highly concentrated in banks and miners, with limited exposure to fast-growing sectors like technology. Over the past decade, global markets have outperformed, largely due to stronger earnings growth and broader diversification. Yet over 30 years, returns have been surprisingly similar, which raises a more important question: what does the future likely reward?Campbell also discusses how the investor stage matters. Retirees seeking income may prefer higher domestic exposure. Accumulators focused on long-term after-tax compounding may benefit from greater global diversification and capital growth orientation.This episode isn’t about abandoning Australian shares. It’s about thinking more critically about where new investment dollars should go and whether the default allocation most Australians inherit is grounded in evidence, or simply habit.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-servicesIf 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.


