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Plain English Finance

Plain English Finance

By: Tré Bynoe CFP® CIM®
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The Plain English Finance podcast is hosted by Tré Bynoe CFP® CIM®, a financial planner with TCU Wealth Management and Aviso Wealth.


While Tré specializes in working with families with more complicated finances, typically involving corporations and trusts, this podcast is for anyone wanting to learn how to make high-quality decisions based on evidence, to give themselves the highest likelihood of financial success.


You should always consult with your financial, legal, and tax advisors before making changes.

This podcast is provided as a general source of information and should not be considered personal investment advice or solicitation to buy or sell any securities.

The views expressed are those of the individual and are not necessarily those of Aviso Financial Inc.

Mutual funds and other securities are offered through Aviso Wealth, a division of Aviso Financial Inc.


© 2026 Plain English Finance
Economics Personal Finance
Episodes
  • 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
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