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What is the Difference Between Fixed and Variable Universal Life? - YouTube
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Seeking high returns means more risk.
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In this episode, we are going to address the
question: "What's the difference between fixed
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and variable universal life?"
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This is episode 6 of series of 21 titled Secrets
To a Tax-Free Retirement.
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If you invest 4 hours in viewing all of these
episodes, you will be empowered to accumulate
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at least an extra million bucks in my opinion
that will generate $100,000 a year of tax-free
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income for as long as you live.
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So, I'm Doug Andrew.
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I've been a financial strategist, retirement
planning specialist for more than 45 years.
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And my favorite vehicle for people preparing
for retirement bar none is a max-funded, indexed
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universal life insurance contract.
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But before we talk about that in the next
episode, I want to make sure you understand
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the difference between fixed and variable
universal life which came out before indexed
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universal life did in 1997.
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So, let me explain how an insurance policy
works inside of an insurance company.
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People like to use these for liquidity, ability
to access their money when they need it.
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For safety because the safety of the institution
because the multi-trillion dollars insurance
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industry is rated some of the safest places
to put money.
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This is where banks and credit unions put
30 to 40 percent of their tear 1 assets for
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liquidity and safety.
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It's also where a lot of pensions are invested.
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When you look at history during the great
depression, some real estate dropped 80% in
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value.
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Banks closed their doors.
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40% never opened doors again.
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Guess how many legal reserve insurance companies
went under in the great depression?
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ZERO.
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They came through with flying colors paying
2.5, 3, 3.5 percent interest.
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How about 2008?
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There were 400 banks that went under in 2008.
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900 more on the watch list.
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Guess how many insurance companies went under
in 2008?
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ZERO.
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Now folks, it's because the legal reserved
insurance industry cross insures each other.
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Instead of FDIC, federal deposit insurance
corporation that charges a premium to banks.
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But if a lot of banks failed, the government
has to come in a bail them out.
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When you have the legal reserve insurance
industry, if an insurance company became insolvent
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for some reason, there has never been a legitimate
claim ever not paid or honored by the insurance
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industry.
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Especially if they have the legal reserves
required on hand which is what most insurance
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companies do.
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Those reserved requirements are far more stringent
than what banks and credit unions have to
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have on hand.
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And this is why in 2008, the federal government
ask the 5 major banks to disclose where they
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have their tear 1 assets for liquidity and
safety.
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Guess where they have 30 to 40 percent?
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In BOLI, bank owned life insurance contracts.
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The major corporations have it in COLI, corporate
owned life insurance contracts.
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Because they know where they can borrow our
money and pay us 1% interest at the bank.
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And the can put that money and increase the
safety by 5 or 6 notches higher safety ratings
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and also have 5 times the rate of return.
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They can earn 5 percent when they're only
paying us one percent.
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On a million bucks, they pay 10,000 in interest,
they earn 50,000 by putting it into an insurance
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company.
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So, these are very highly rated as far as
safety is concerned.
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I sort of put my money into last place that
I think would go if things got really, really
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bad.
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In other words, I would have a lot of warning.
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Banks and credit unions would be failing.
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And I could go access my money because of
the liquidity out of an insurance company.
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But let me ask you this: If things were really
that bad and you got your money, where would
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you put it?
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The american dollar would be worthless.
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You better be able to grow carrots in your
backyard.
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A gold and silver isn't going to cut it.
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You can't eat gold and silver at the end of
the day.
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So when people say, "Well, what if the insurance
industry goes belly up?
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If that happens, the american dollar is worthless.
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And so, I like to put my serious cash in the
last place that would go with things got that
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bad.
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Now, I want to share with you what the insurance
company does with their money which is your
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money because when you put your money into
a bank, credit union or an insurance company,
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it's a lended position.
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Are they just a benevolent institution paying
you interest?
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No.
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They're taking your money and earning more
interest.
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So, where do they put that money?
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So, a legal reserve insurance company will
have their assets, that money that they have
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on deposit in what is called their general
account portfolio.
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Now, most insurance companies will diversify
that into very conservative investments that
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are liquid and safe.
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They may put a large portion in triple A and
double A bonds.
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They may have 15 or 20 percent of their general
account portfolio invested in mortgages.
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In shopping malls, sky scrappers.
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But they only loan about 40/50/60 percent
value.
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They don't loan 80 or 90 percent loan to value
like the mortgage companies and the banks
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do.
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If they have to foreclose on a sky scrapper,
which I've seen some insurance companies do,
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they come out smelling like rose.
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They make money.
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And so, if they buy stocks, it's usually very
conservative stocks in a very low percent.
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So, this is called the general account portfolio.
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Many insurance companies manage billions of
dollars.
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Some trillion of dollars.
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One insurance company where I have some of
my money manages 3 trillion dollars.
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That's as much as the IRS collect an income
taxes in an entire year in America.
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One insurance company, okay/ So, these are
huge.
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So, the general account portfolio during high-interest
time like back in 1980 to 1990, interest were
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high.
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Mortgages were high.
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CDs at banks were paying 10%.
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So, I was able to earn on my universal life
insurance policies the fixed universal life
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insurance returns of 11 and three quarters
to 15.5 percent.
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Then after the turn of the century, interest
rates came down.
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And we've been in an all-time low interest
environment now where banks have only been
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paying 1%, sometimes less.
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And so, the insurance company's general account
portfolio is usually yielding around 5 or
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6 percent with mortgages and everything like
that.
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So, when interest rates are high for borrowing,
they're high for earning.
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When they're low for borrowing, they're low
for earning.
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That's called the general account portfolio
yield.
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So, if I have a fixed universal life insurance
policy, that means I am just settling for
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the general account portfolio rate.
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For the last decade or so, it's been between
4 and 6 percent depending upon the company
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where I have my money.
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Let's just say 5.
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That means the insurance company will pay
me 5%.
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In actuality, they're usually earning more
like 6% but they need one of those percentage
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points for them.
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They're in business to make a profit and pay
their overhead.
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And the net would be 5 percent.
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So, if I had a million dollars of cash value
accumulated inside of my universal life insurance
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policy and it's a fixed contract, and this
year, the general portfolio rate is 5%, I
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would be credited with $50,000 of interest
on my million.
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5%.
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If it's 4 percent, it would be 40,000.
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That's a fixed universal life.
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And that can fluctuate very, very slowly through
the years based upon the general account portfolio
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yield of all their assets.
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And those are published every year by every
insurance company.
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So, how does a variable universal life work?
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So, variable universal life came out in the
1990's primarily is when it became popular.
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And this is where people want to participate
in the market.
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Now, I've never owned a variable universal
life or a variable insurance policy, I never
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will.
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Because it's too risky in my opinion.
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This is where you keep just enough on hand
in the insurance policy to pay for the mortality
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cost, the cost of the insurance.
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And you're telling the insurance company to
take all the excess in the cash value and
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put it out into the market.
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This is why you need a securities license
as a license producer if you're going to sell
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this to somebody because now you're selling
a security.
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Your money is out in the volatile market in
a portfolio of mutual funds or whatever you
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choose.
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Now, the advantages when the market goes up,
you could be credited with 10%, 15, 20 or
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25 percent.
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But what's the trade-off?
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When the market crashes like in 2008, 40%.
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If you had a million dollars in your variable
universal life insurance policy, that million
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might go down to $600,000.
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There are some policies where insurance companies
have had to call to insured, the owner and
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say, "You need to pay some premiums.
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Hurry, pay some premiums because you lost
all your cash value or a big chunk of it."
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And now there's not enough to cover the mortality
cost when people were not maximum funding.
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So, variable universal life is where your
money then assigned out to the market and
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it's subject to the market volatility where
you can lose.
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And you can make.
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But I don't like my money at risk in variable
universal life.
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This is why I choose indexed universal life
which I'll talk about in the next episode.
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So, when you structure a maximum-funded insurance
contract, I would recommend you wanted it
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to pass what I call the Laser test.
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Liquidity, safety, predictable rates of return
and tax free.
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When you have fixed universal life, you do
not get the rate of return that you could
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get if you were able to participate when the
market is doing well.
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But you don't want to lose when the market
goes down.
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Otherwise your rate of return and the safety
goes down.
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So, that's why I wrote the book called the
Laser Fund because I want to have liquidity,
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safety, predictable rates of return.
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And I want it to be tax-free.
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These are the 4 pillars.
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I want to send a copy of this out to you absolutely
free.
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I'll buy the book.
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You just pay $5.95 shipping and handling.
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Go to LaserFund.com and pay $5.95 shipping
and handling.
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And I'll send you out a free copy of this
300-paged book.
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You can study it.
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And I implore you to watch this episode next
so that you can empower yourself to accumulate
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an extra million dollars more that can generate
$100,000 a year of tax-free income for the
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rest of your life.
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