Each episode lasts between 5 and 15 minutes (as short and succinct as possible) and contains tips, strategies, research, methodology, case studies and ideas to help you build wealth safely and successfully. Stuart Wemyss is a qualified independent financial advisor, accountant, tax agent and licenses mortgage broker allowing him to provide holistic advice. He has authored three books with his latest being Investopoly. (Buy your copy here - http://investopoly.com.au/). Stuart writes a weekly blog which is reproduced on this podcast
I wrote a blog in February 2020 highlighting the first phase of government mandated changes to income protection insurance products. The second phase ...
I have noticed that more people are attracted to seeking out work that they have a personal connection with, particularly since the beginning of Covid...
Federal Treasurer, Josh Frydenberg has asked the Council of Financial Regulators to investigate the fact that credit growth is materially outpacing gr...
Personal insurance is becoming more difficult to obtain and increasingly costly to maintain. This blog outlines the approach we take when formulating ...
How to value stocks – an introduction to valuation conceptsTwo years ago I wrote a popular blog that explained some simple share market concepts and j...
Over the past 20 years, the US share market has risen 5-fold, the Australian share market 5.4-fold and Australian property 4.2-fold. That means if you...
Borrowing to invest in property is a popular and highly effective wealth accumulation strategy if it’s implemented correctly. However, loan structurin...
Investing in the share market is a relatively easy, simple and a low-cost investment strategy to implement, if you know the right way to do it, of cou...
Approximately half of Australia’s population is currently in a lockdown, and this may continue for another few months until vaccine target levels are ...
Land tax is levied on the value of an investor’s landholdings on 31 December each year. It is an insidious tax as any land tax is relatively small whe...