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Invisible Threat

Podcast by Dr. Matthew Eby & Carter Wilcoxson

English

Business

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About Invisible Threat

There are forces that quietly and invisibly shape fiduciary judgment when rules alone are no longer sufficient to determine responsibility. The Invisible Threat podcast is hosted by Carter Wilcoxson, Founder and CEO of ePIC Services Company, and Dr. Matthew Eby, Founder of Nth Degree Financial Solutions, a doctorally trained fiduciary researcher and co-author, with his wife Joanne, of The Invisible Threat: A Professional Fiduciary’s Guide to Unseen Challenges in Wealth Management. The podcast explores what happens when professionals trained to rely on traditional rules are required to interpret duty, discretion, and responsibility in complex situations—often without realizing that what is required in those situations has changed. Through fiduciary scenarios drawn from real-world situations, the podcast examines how judgment is formed—before anyone is aware of it—inside moments of uncertainty where interpretation carries real consequences. To make judgment visible, the podcast draws on the AFIRE™ Compass, a research-backed framework that examines how Anchors, Fairness, Identity, Risk, and Emotion influence fiduciary judgment in today’s fiduciary industry. Designed for trust officers, administrators, advisors, and other fiduciary professionals, the podcast treats disagreement and uncertainty not as failure, but as diagnostic—revealing how unseen assumptions shape responsibility long before outcomes are documented.

All episodes

16 episodes

episode When the Safe Answer Isn't Right: Lindsey Day on Real Fiduciary Duty artwork

When the Safe Answer Isn't Right: Lindsey Day on Real Fiduciary Duty

There's a question that lives in every fiduciary's chest when the document goes silent: Can we do this? But then comes the harder one—should we? It's the tension that hums beneath every discretionary decision, knowing that a yes or a no doesn't just move money. It shapes a life. It shapes a legacy. Lindsey Day, a trust and fiduciary advisor with fifteen years navigating institutional judgment and committee dynamics, brings listeners inside the invisible pressures that form decision-making at every level. Day traces how the same fact pattern—the same request, the same circumstances—gets answered completely differently depending on which room holds your decision, which institution frames your fiduciary duty, which regulators audit your reasoning. The conversation reveals how a fiduciary's personal philosophy—whether they give people the benefit of the doubt or assume constraint—lives quietly beneath every choice they make, shaping outcomes in ways that ripple far beyond the numbers. Carter Wilcoxson hosts Invisible Threat with a precision earned from years studying how judgment actually works under pressure. This episode unfolds as a conversation rooted in real relationship—Day and Wilcoxson discussing fiduciary responsibility not as theory, but as the lived weight of a capital F Fiduciary in a world where the stakes are always human.

21 May 2026 - 57 min
episode The In-Law Factor: Why Spouses Destroy Family Trusts artwork

The In-Law Factor: Why Spouses Destroy Family Trusts

The magic isn't in the park itself. It's in the moment when a three-year-old stops mid-conversation with a character and the room holds its breath. Then someone dies, and the real test begins. Behind closed doors, in living rooms across America, siblings stop speaking to each other not because of what their parents left behind, but because their spouses—people who never knew the family's original values—are making the decisions now. Most families believe their estate plan will hold. They think their oldest will step up. They think the trust document signed twenty years ago will protect what matters. But Invisible Threat examines what actually happens when discretionary decision-making falls to someone outside the family's original circle of values. You'll discover why fiduciary duty alone cannot prevent the invisible fractures that tear families apart, and how intentional planning—while there's still time—can preserve both wealth and relationships across generations. Carter Wilcoxson came to estate planning the hard way: by witnessing it tear families apart. He watched it happen to his wife's family when her grandfather passed and her father became executor. That single moment of seeing how a trust can fracture a bloodline became his obsession. In this episode, recorded live from Orlando, Carter explores the hidden vulnerabilities inside every family trust and shares what advisors and families need to understand before the critical moment arrives.

14 May 2026 - 42 min
episode Precedent Over Reasoning: When Structure Stops Judgment artwork

Precedent Over Reasoning: When Structure Stops Judgment

"Permission seems clear," she says. And in that instant, something invisible happens—the outcome has already begun to take shape, long before the person with the power to choose even realizes they are choosing at all. A request arrives. A decision point emerges. But by then, the architecture that will determine the answer is already in place, operating silently beneath the surface of judgment itself. In this episode of Invisible Threat, you'll map the precise mechanisms by which regulatory environments shape fiduciary judgment before discretion is ever exercised. Different charters—national bank, state-chartered trust company, registered investment adviser, broker-dealer—create different kinds of fiduciaries who literally see different things when facing identical situations. This conversation reveals how authority becomes permission becomes expectation becomes capability, often without anyone noticing the substitution. You'll understand the four-layer system that influences what remains visible, what is feared, and what is ultimately decided in moments that feel like free choice but are structured long before the choice arrives. Carter Wilcoxson hosts this conversation with Joanne Eby, coauthor of The Invisible Threat, whose decades of legal and regulatory expertise illuminate the forces operating before judgment itself begins to form. This episode completes a trilogy—revealing the individual fiduciary, then the institution, and finally the regulatory system that shaped both of them before the moment ever began. It's essential listening for anyone working within fiduciary frameworks, trust committees, or institutional risk management. About the Guest: Joanne Eby is coauthor of The Invisible Threat and brings extensive expertise in regulatory architecture, fiduciary duty, and the institutional forces that shape financial decision-making.

7 May 2026 - 38 min
episode The Institution Decides: How Environment Overrides Judgment artwork

The Institution Decides: How Environment Overrides Judgment

Same person. Same facts. Same case on the desk. Drop that person into four different institutional environments and you'll get four different decisions—not because one is right and one is wrong, but because the room itself is quietly rewriting what "right" even means. Somewhere in the conversation, a quiet line lands: when something goes wrong, we look at the person. When we should be looking at the system. In this episode of Invisible Threat, Dr. Matthew Eby and Joanne Eby walk through four institutional worlds a fiduciary can sit inside—OCC-chartered national banks, state-chartered independent trust companies, trust companies tied to RIAs and wealth management, and the broker dealer world—and show how each one reshapes judgment itself. You'll hear how defensibility quietly becomes the standard at large banks, how responsibility concentrates onto a single person in smaller trust companies, how advisory capability starts blurring fiduciary duty, and why the question "who is the client?" is harder to answer than most people realize. The system itself becomes the invisible threat. Host Carter Wilcoxson keeps pulling the thread further—from the individual, to the institution, to the system shaping the institution—because for him, as CEO of ePIC Services Company working with advisors and broker dealers every day, this isn't theory. It's the ground his clients are standing on, and understanding how institutional architecture shapes fiduciary decision-making is essential to navigating it with clarity and integrity. About the Guest: Dr. Matthew Eby and Joanne Eby bring decades of combined experience in fiduciary governance, institutional trust management, and risk assessment across multiple regulatory environments. Their work focuses on how organizational structure influences fiduciary judgment and institutional accountability.

30 Apr 2026 - 19 min
episode The Four Pressure Moves: When Judgment Becomes Self-Protection artwork

The Four Pressure Moves: When Judgment Becomes Self-Protection

He backs away from the ball. Indecisive. And in that instant, everything changes—the shot goes wrong, the momentum collapses, the moment that was supposed to be clear becomes murky and uncertain. It happens to professional golfers at the Masters. It happens to people managing other people's money and futures. It happens when the pressure arrives and someone realizes there is no clean answer anymore. Carter Wilcoxson and Dr. Matthew Eby examine what actually happens inside the mind of a fiduciary when judgment becomes difficult—not the rules they're supposed to follow, but the invisible forces that pull decision-makers in different directions when ambiguity arrives. You'll discover why the safest answer often becomes the wrong answer, how empathy can become its own trap, and what it really means to exercise discretion under the HEMS standard when no policy manual has an answer. This is how fiduciary duty gets tested in the real world. For Carter Wilcoxson, this conversation on Invisible Threat connects to a question that's haunted him through his own decisions as a business leader and parent: What am I actually trying to protect when I think I'm being objective? It's a question that reveals how easily good intentions can obscure the complexity of what we're really choosing.

23 Apr 2026 - 20 min
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