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Do You Pay Taxes On Life Insurance Proceeds? - YouTube
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Life insurance proceeds are income tax-free.
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In this episode, I'm going to address the
question, "Do you pay taxes on life insurance
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proceeds?"
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Well, the simple answer is no.
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But it's way more than that.
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Get ready to be blown away.
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My name is Doug Andrew.
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I've been a financial strategist, a retirement
planning specialist for more than 4 and a
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half decades.
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Clear back in 1974 when I started, I actually
got my series one securities license.
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They don't even offer that anymore.
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I could sell in stock-bond, mutual fund in
America.
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Okay?
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But I also got my insurance lisence.
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So, I've helped many, many people obtain life
insurance not only in the event that they
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die with an untimely death which is being
responsible and accountable.
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But also maximum funding insurance for living
benefits.
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For most people a long time.
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And the beauty of an insurance policy is not
only that when you ultimately pass away, life
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insurance death benefit proceeds are totally
income tax-free.
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But money that builds up inside the insurance
policy is tax-free.
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But unfortunately, a lot of people think,
"Well, insurance is for death.
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It's not for accumulating money."
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I'm going, "What?
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Hello?
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It's tax-free."
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EF Hutton back in 1980 realized this and my
said, "My heavens!
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It's tax-free!"
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Instead of taking the amount of insurance
you want and trying to shop for the cheapest
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premium that you can find, they said, "why
don't we take the least amount of insurance
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we can get away with and put in the most premium
the IRS allows.
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And it will accumulate tax-free into this
cash cow.
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And this is where I have earned rates of return
of 7 to 10 percent for the last 40 years tax-free.
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That's better than any IRA or 401(k) that
is only tax-deferred.
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See an IRA or 401(k) has to earn 15% to net
10.
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My insurance contracts for 25 years have earned
10.
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They net 10 tax-free.
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And it's much more stable than an IRA or 401(k)
in the market to try to earn 15 and then net
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10 after paying tax at the end of the day.
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But let me share with you 3 sections of the
internal revenue code that make a life insurance
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contract a sacred tax-free cash cow.
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So, before I share with you 3 sections of
the internal revenue code that protect life
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insurance contracts from being taxed, let
me share with you how you can learn even more
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about this topic and others.
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Hit subscribe, share this video with people
who also were wondering the same thing.
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Because I'm passionate about educating people
like you.
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Back in 2005, I let all my professional licenses
go to become a consumer advocate.
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So, I'm into educating you.
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And at the end of this episode, I'm going
to show you how you can claim a free copy
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of my most recent best selling 300-page book,
The Laser Fund which is a maximum-funded,
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tax-advantaged life insurance contract that
most people use for living benefits, for retirement,
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for college funding, for their kids, for working
capital, for business and on and on and on.
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But when they ultimately pass away, anything
in the insurance policy blossoms, increases
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in value, and transfers income tax-free.
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If I were to die tomorrow, I'm 68, if I died
in an accident, right now, every million in
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my portfolio of insurance policies would blossom
to about 2 and a half million totally tax-free.
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Why?
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That has been a sacred cow in the internal
revenue code for as long as the code is been
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around, 1913.
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Okay?
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Why?
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Why does the government do that?
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Because they realize that if they taxed life
insurance, why would people buy life insurance.
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Usually, so that if they passed away, it provides
the means, an immediate state that will take
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care of people --provide college educations
for your kids, your grandkids or pay off the
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house or whatever had you stayed around.
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Why would the government penalize people for
trying to be self-reliant?
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Because they've done studies and found out
that if they taxed it, they would be shooting
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themselves in the foot.
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In other words, if they tax those, then those
people, a few years later, widow and orphans
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would be coming around for government help
for welfare.
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And so, why do that?
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So, so fat, it's been a sacred cow.
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Leave it alone.
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Well, as far as the money that grows inside
of an insurance policy, those are called cash
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values.
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Now, a lot of times, people think, "Well,
why should I pay more than I need to to be
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insured the rest of my life?"
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Because it's tax-free.
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EF Hutton who was not an insurance company,
they were a brokerage firm.
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They realize a lot of people have their money
in the market in stocks and was like a person
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with a yo-yo hopefully walking up some stairs.
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But I don't know if you have ever played red
light, green light.
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See, as a kind playing red light, green light,
there are sometimes I might advance 20 steps
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and then take back 10 steps.
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People with money in the market, some periods
you might make 20%.
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And then in the next period, you lose 10.
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You're going back and forth, back and forth.
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EF Hutton said, "Why are we doing this?"
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Especially, if we averaged even 12% which
most people don't do.
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On a million dollars, if you were going to
average 12% rates of return, that would be
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120,000 a year.
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And they realized, you pull out 120,000 out
of a million-dollar nest egg, you're going
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to pay tax of about 40,000 between federal
state tax.
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You're only netting 80.
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And then you have another 1% in fees.
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You're only netting 70.
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You have to earn 12, 120 grand to net 70 to
buy gas and groceries.
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They said, "Why are we doing that?"
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Back at that time, it was 1980.
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"Why don't we take 11 steps forward and only
1 step back and net 10% tax-free?"
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In other words, most insurance companies on
their general account portfolios were earning
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between 11 and 3 quarters and 15 and a half
percent.
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I never earned less than 11 and 3 quarters
from 1980 to 1990.
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So, with that metaphor, I was taking 11 steps
forward, 1 step back.
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What's the 1 step back?
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It's not tax.
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It's the cost of the insurance that the IRS
has to be there or it's not going to be tax-free
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in the code.
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The internal revenue code says, "Money inside
of an insurance policy grows tax-free."
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That's section 72 (E).
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When you go to access money, if I have a million
dollars in there, I can pull out 900,000.
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I could pull out 100,000 a year for retirement.
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It's tax-free.
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That's section 7702.
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And when I ultimately die, anything left in
there blossoms, increases in value and transfers
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totally income tax-free, section 101 (A).
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It's totally tax-free.
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A maximum-funded insurance contract, what
I call the Laser Fund.
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Laser is an acronym that stands for liquid
assets safely earning returns.
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It's the only financial instrument that allows
you to accumulate your money tax-free, sections
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72 (E).
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Access you money tax-free, section 7702.
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And when you die it blossoms, increases in
value and transfers income tax-free, section
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101 (A).
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Show me anything else that does that.
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A Roth does not do that.
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And so, this is my favorite vehicle for all
kinds of goals because you do not pay tax
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on an insurance proceeds which is what this
episode is about.
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But hello, you don't pay any tax as it growing
either.
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So, this would be like and IRA or 401(k) on
steroids.
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But when you die, nobody pays tax, it blossoms.
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it'd be like and IRA or 401(k) that has a
million and when you die, it automatically
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turns in 2 and a half million and transfers
income tax-free.
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Your spouse, your kids don't have to pay tax.
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There's none an IRA or 401(k) around that
will do that.
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But the laser fund will.
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Why not employ a laser fund?
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It is way better than an IRA or 401(k) especially
with the same amount of money.
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It will give you sometimes double to triple
the net spendable income during retirement.
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But when you finally pass away, it blossoms
and transfers tax-free.
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I'm going to share one last little aha, epiphany
here.
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And then I going to show you how you can claim
a free copy of my most recent best-selling
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book.
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Don't look at what it is.
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Look at what it does.
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If I put money into an insurance policy and
I maximum fund it under IRS guidelines, it
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turns into this tax-free cash cow.
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Well, I use that for retirement because it
way out performs IRAs or 401(k)s or even Roths.
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Roths have 2 benefits.
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You take after-tax money and put it in there,
it accumulates tax-free.
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When you take it out, it's tax-free.
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The Laser Fund does that.
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It's been grandfathered for over 100 years.
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But I can put in huge deposits --2 hundred,
3 hundred thousand.
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You can do that ino a Roth.
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I don't have to.
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I can put in 30,000 but if I could've put
in 300, I can put in the other 270,000 anytime
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I want in the future.
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You can't do that in a Roth.
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See, people who make too much money can't
own a Roth.
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So, sometimes, savvy CPAs and tax attorneys
call the Laser Fund the Rich Man's Roth.
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And I snicker because you don't have to be
rich to own one.
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You can set one up for 500 bucks a month if
you want.
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But see, I can put in a large lump sums, I
can make up for years.
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But if I put in 300,000 one year because I
have a banner year and I need 250,000 back
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in 30 days, I can do that.
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There's no penalties.
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With a Roth, you have to wait 5 years until
your 59 and a half.
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Who wants all of those strings attached?
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I can link my returns so that when the market
goes up, I make money.
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But when the market goes down, I don't lose
because money inside of an indexed universal
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life contract is not actually at risk at the
market.
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You participate when the market goes up but
you do not lose when it goes down.
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And you need to learn about that strategy.
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Because it's a game changer.
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But at the end of the day, when I finally
pass away, it blossoms and transfers tax-free.
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So, let me give you a few teasers and you
may want to search on this channel for some
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related videos about this.
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I not only use it for my retirement but I
have owned life insurance on my father.
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I couldn't on my mother.
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She had already had some heart attacks early
in life.
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She was uninsurable.
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My Father in law, my mother in law.
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And when they all passed away, I got a huge
lump sum of tax-free capital.
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The rate of return was far better than if
I had been putting those premium dollars into
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the best investment account you could even
show me.
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Likewise, my children, own insurance on me.
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If they put money in an IRA or 401(k), I would
go crazy.
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"What are you thinking?"
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If they put $1,000 a month into a million-dollar
policy on me and if I live along time, they're
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going to have an incredible tax-free rate
of return that is better than any IRA or 401(k)
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would produce.
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But when I die, they have an automatic million
bucks tax-free that they know they put into
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an a new insurance contract on them and it
will generate 100,000 a year of tax-free income,
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they would have to have an IRA or 401(k) that
produces 150,000.
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You pay tax and net the same 100.
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Hello?
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Are you getting some epiphanies?
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every person in our family, when they pass
away, we take 20% of that insurance benefit
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tax-free and we fund the next oldest healthiest
family member.
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And our family bank is funded into perpetuity.
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We will never run out of money.
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And we keep it tax-free.
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I've written 11 books.
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I want to show you how you can claim your
free copy to learn more about what I call
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The Laser Fund.
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So, my 11th book, we're on our 6th printing.
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It's been flying off the warehouse shelves.
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It's called The Laser Fund.
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It's actually 2 books in one at this side.
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It's 200 pages, 14 chapters, all kinds of
charts and graphs.
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This side is the right brain side about 100
pages, 12 chapters with 62 chicken soup for
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the financial soul stories.
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You can read both books if you'd like.
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It retails for 20 bucks but I want to gift
you a free copy.
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Go to laserfund, (LASER) laserfund.com.
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Contribute a nominal amount towards the shipping
and handling and I'll cover the rest of those
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cause and I'll pay for the book and fire it
out to you.
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There's other options in there to learn, listen
and learn, watch, and learn.
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And be sure and search this channel and subcribe.
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And you'll be notified every time I post a
new educational video which is almost daily
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to empower you so you can become financially
independent.
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