Episodes

  • Why Investing Gets Complicated for Corporation Owners | Ep.57
    Jun 26 2026

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    Investing gets more complicated once you move beyond RRSPs, TFSAs and simple registered accounts. For Canadian corporation owners, incorporated professionals, and investors with taxable accounts, the type of income your investments generate can matter almost as much as the return itself.

    In this episode of the Plain English Finance Podcast, Tré and Sierra discuss three core investment concepts that help explain how financial planning, tax planning and portfolio construction fit together for corporation owners. The episode focuses on investment income types, how to think about risk, and why a consistent investment philosophy matters when taxes and corporate accounts are involved.

    In this episode, we discuss:

    • Why investing becomes more complicated in non-registered and corporate accounts
    • The three main types of investment income: interest, capital gains and dividends
    • Why GICs, bonds and fixed income create interest income
    • Why capital gains are treated differently from interest income
    • Why Canadian dividends can have a different tax profile
    • Why RRSPs change the tax treatment of investment income
    • Why asset location matters across RRSPs, personal taxable accounts and corporations
    • Why “risk” should not only mean volatility
    • Why fixed income may become riskier over long timeframes
    • Why market ups and downs are a feature, not a flaw
    • Why low-cost, globally diversified investments can simplify planning
    • Why turnover matters in taxable accounts
    • How active management can create unexpected taxable capital gains
    • Why corporate investment decisions should be made with tax drag in mind

    Learn more about working with Tré Bynoe, CFP®, CIM®:
    https://trebynoe.ca

    This podcast is provided as a general source of information and should not be considered personal investment, tax or legal advice. Consult your financial, legal and tax professionals before making changes to your financial plan.

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    24 mins
  • Send This to Someone Who Needs to Start Investing | Ep. 56
    Jun 19 2026

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    Do you know someone who keeps saying they’ll start investing “later”?

    This episode is for the person who knows investing is important but feels overwhelmed by where to begin. Tré and Sierra talk through the simplest possible starting point for a young Canadian or beginner investor: understand compound interest, stop waiting to learn everything, open a TFSA, start investing, and learn more as you go.

    The point is not to build the perfect investment strategy on day one. The point is to stop losing time.

    In this episode, we discuss:

    • Why compound interest matters so much
    • Why the first $100,000 invested is such an important milestone
    • How starting earlier can matter more than saving more later
    • Why “I’ll catch up later” usually does not work
    • Why young investors should focus on getting started instead of optimizing
    • Why a TFSA is often the simplest place to begin
    • Why a low-cost global equity portfolio can be a reasonable default
    • Why early market drops can actually help you build investing experience
    • The difference between risk tolerance and risk capacity
    • Why keeping everything in cash or GICs can create its own long-term risk
    • How parents, friends and family can encourage someone to start investing

    If you are young, new to investing, or trying to help someone you care about get started, the message is simple:

    Start now. Keep it simple. Learn as you go.

    Waiting until you understand every detail may feel safer, but time is one of the most valuable ingredients in building wealth. Once it is gone, you cannot get it back.

    Chapters

    00:00 Helping someone start investing
    00:44 Why “just start” matters most
    01:24 Compound interest explained simply
    02:13 Why starting young changes everything
    02:45 The first $100,000 invested
    03:30 Why compound interest feels unimpressive at first
    05:04 When investment growth starts to feel real
    06:32 Why lost time cannot be recovered
    07:45 What an 18-year-old should do first
    08:24 Step 1: understand compound interest
    09:25 Step 2: do not wait to learn everything
    10:18 Step 3: start with a TFSA
    11:04 When young people can start investing
    12:00 Investing for kids before they can open their own account
    12:46 Step 4: choose a 100% equity portfolio
    13:12 Investing is like learning to drive
    14:18 Why owning assets builds wealth
    14:42 Global equity index funds
    15:20 Why early market drops can be useful lessons
    16:00 Risk capacity versus risk tolerance
    17:30 Use the default, then learn why
    18:14 Why early losses feel bigger than they are
    19:10 Where to open an investment account
    20:05 Why starting early made such a difference
    21:00 First-generation financial literacy
    22:28 Recap: compound interest matters
    22:58 Recap: there is no catching up later
    23:10 Recap: start with a TFSA
    23:28 Recap: choose a low-cost global equity fund
    24:00 Why a market crash should not stop you
    24:40 Building a lifetime investing habit
    25:08 Send this episode to someone who needs to start
    25:52 Final thoughts and disclaimer

    Learn more about working with Tré Bynoe, CFP®, CIM®:
    https://trebynoe.ca

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    27 mins
  • RRSPs Aren’t a Scam, But This Mistake Is Costly | Ep. 55
    Jun 12 2026

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    RRSPs are not a scam, but using one without a withdrawal plan can create an avoidable tax problem.
    In this episode, we explain when RRSP contributions help, when they don't, and why retirement withdrawals need to be planned years in advance.

    What I cover:

    • Why an RRSP is best understood as a tool for moving income between years
    • The mistake people make when they spend their RRSP tax refund
    • How one client’s decision may have cost approximately $12,000
    • Why taking no RRSP income in early retirement can backfire
    • How RRIF withdrawals, pensions, CPP, and OAS can stack together
    • Why automatically maximizing your RRSP is not always the best strategy

    Chapters:

    00:00 Are RRSPs a scam?
    01:12 What an RRSP actually does
    02:18 The problem with spending the tax refund
    04:40 The RRSP decision that may have cost $12,000
    06:35 Why the withdrawal strategy matters
    08:28 How a large RRSP can become a retirement tax trap
    13:12 Using lower-income years for withdrawals
    25:02 When maximizing your RRSP may be the wrong move

    RRSP planning is not a way to get a tax refund. Deciding when you want to recognize the income and pay the tax is what they're designed for.

    Subscribe for more practical conversations about Canadian retirement, tax, and financial planning.

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    32 mins
  • Are You Paying Too Much to Invest? | Ep. 53
    May 29 2026

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    Paying more for investing does not automatically mean you are getting better advice, better products, or better returns. In this episode, Tre breaks down what Canadians should understand about investment fees, advice fees, product costs, commissions, and the difference between active and passive investing. He explains why new fee disclosures matter, how fees can quietly drag down returns, and why investors need to know exactly what they are paying for. This episode is especially useful for professionals, business owners, and DIY investors who want to make informed decisions instead of assuming higher cost means higher quality. The goal is simple: know your fees, understand the value, and stop overpaying for complexity that may not help you.

    You’ll learn:

    • Why higher investment fees do not always mean better performance
    • How active and passive investing costs compare
    • What management expense ratios mean in plain English
    • Why commission-based products can create conflicts
    • How advice fees, product fees, and robo-advisor fees differ
    • Why good financial planning should be clear about cost and value

    Follow, review, and share the Plain English Finance Podcast with someone who needs to check what they are really paying for financial advice.

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    1 hr and 4 mins
  • Conversations on Money, Values, and Parenthood | Ep. 52
    May 22 2026

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    What changes when a financial planner becomes a parent? More than you think—and less than you might expect. In this episode, Tre shares the practical money moves he made after having a child, from updating the family will to reviewing life insurance, adjusting cash flow, and setting money aside early for future needs. He also talks about the bigger parenting challenge: teaching kids how money works without spoiling them, scaring them, or making money the centre of everything. This episode is for Canadian parents, soon-to-be parents, and professionals who want to raise financially capable kids while protecting their family first.

    You’ll learn:

    • Why parents need a will, guardianship plan, and proper life insurance
    • How to budget for a child before and after they arrive
    • Why cash flow is the foundation of family finances
    • How to teach kids delayed gratification and responsible spending
    • Why children should learn to earn, save, invest, and give
    • How to raise kids with healthy money values in a privileged environment

    Follow, review, and share the Plain English Finance Podcast with someone who wants to make better financial decisions for their family.

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    25 mins
  • Too Good to Be True? Investment Red Flags Explained | Ep. 51
    May 15 2026

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    Have you ever looked at an investment and wondered if it was too good to be true?
    In this episode, we walk through the red flags that can show up in private investments, real estate deals, mortgage funds, and other “exclusive” opportunities.

    What I cover:

    • Why high returns with low risk should immediately raise questions
    • The problem with returns that look too smooth or consistent
    • How urgency can push people into poor investment decisions
    • Why you need to understand how an investment makes money
    • Why you also need to understand how you could lose money
    • The hidden risk in private or illiquid investments

    This episode is for education only and should not be considered personal investment advice. Always speak with your financial, legal, and tax advisors before making investment decisions.

    Subscribe for more plain-English conversations about investing, financial planning, and avoiding costly money mistakes.

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    28 mins
  • Why Smart People Make Bad Money Decisions | Ep. 50
    May 8 2026

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    Your calm self is not always a good judge of what your stressed self will do.
    In this episode, we talk about why smart people still make poor financial decisions under pressure.

    What I cover:

    • Why good intentions do not guarantee good financial decisions
    • How hot-cold empathy gaps affect investing, retirement, and estate planning
    • Why people misjudge how they will feel during market crashes
    • The difference between risk capacity and emotional willingness
    • How too many options can create analysis paralysis
    • Why pre-deciding rules and automating good behaviour can help protect your future self

    Planning is easier before life gets emotional. Subscribe for more plain-English conversations about investing, retirement, tax planning, and better financial decision-making.


    References: https://www.cmu.edu/dietrich/sds/docs/loewenstein/hotColdEmpathyGaps.pdf

    https://dtg.sites.fas.harvard.edu/Gilber%20t&%20Ebert%20%28DECISIONS%20&%20REVISIONS%29.pdf

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    57 mins
  • Popular Money Advice vs What the Research Says | Ep. 49
    May 1 2026

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    Most money advice is popular because it’s easy to follow — not because it’s right.
    In this episode, I break down what academic research says about personal finance versus what popular financial books and gurus recommend.

    What I cover

    • Why “save 10–15%” is simple, but not always optimal
    • The difference between smooth consumption and rule-of-thumb saving
    • Why dividend investing is often overrated
    • How to think about portfolio risk based on time horizon, not just age
    • Where passive investing beats active management
    • What the data says about debt repayment and mortgage choices

    Chapters
    00:00 Why finance advice conflicts
    01:00 The paper comparing gurus vs professors
    03:30 Saving 10–15% vs controlling consumption
    09:00 The real key: separate income from expenses
    18:00 Portfolio mix: age vs time horizon
    24:30 Dividend investing vs tax efficiency
    31:20 Small value, international diversification, and indexing
    35:00 Debt repayment and fixed vs variable mortgages

    Good financial decisions usually come from better frameworks, not better slogans.
    Subscribe for more plain-English financial education, and watch the next episode if you want more evidence-based investing and planning conversations.

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    39 mins