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Section 7702 Changes | How Do They Affect Life Insurance? - YouTube
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This was passed in the final hours of the
year 2020. In this episode, I'm going to address
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section 7702 the changes that took place with
the stimulus package that is thousands of
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pages long and how do they affect life insurance.
So, my name is Doug Andrew. I've been a financial
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strategist and a retirement planning specialist
for more than for 4 陆 decades. And one of
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my favorite instruments to allow people to
accumulate their serious cash --money earmarked
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for serious goals like retirement totally
tax-free and be able to access that money
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tax-free during their golden years, and when
they ultimately die, it blossoms and transfers
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tax-free is a max-funded indexed universal
life insurance policy. Why? Because it passes
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the liquidity, safety and rate of return test
with flying colors. And it's been a tax-free
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sacred cow in the internal revenue code for
over 107 years. Now, the merits of an insurance
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policy are that the money accumulates tax-free
under Section 72E of the internal revenue
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code. All the money you are earning, the interest
dividends and so forth is tax-free. Why? Because
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the government doesn't want to hurt you for
accumulating money taking ownership to take
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the pressure off of them having to take care
of you with welfare or whatever in your golden
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years. So, this is why people accumulate money
tax-free for their retirement. And if you
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happen to die, Section 101A of the code says
it will blossom and transfer-tax-free as life
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insurance death benefit. That's tax-free.
Why? Because they want to make sure that widows
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and orphans aren't draining on government
welfare programs. So, why would they want
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to tax something, take money away from people
who were trying to leave behind something
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that would've sustained them and their family
have they live longer. So, that's why it's
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been sort of a sacred cow. It's tax-free.
Now, section 7702 actually allows people to
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access money out of an insurance policy totally
income-tax-free while they're alive. And this
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is what I have used for years to be able to
create tax-free income. So, that every million
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of cash value in my universal life policy
can generate 70, 80, 100 thousand dollars
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a year of tax-free income because I'm earning
maybe 9 netting 8. Maybe some years, I'm earning
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11, netting 10. Some years, maybe I'm only
earning 6, netting 5. But I have average payouts
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of 8 to 10 percent. That's tax-free income.
But in order to have tax-free income, you
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have to jump through what are called Tefra,
Defra, and Tamra hoops. It means this: Back
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in the 1980s, --1982, 1984; You had to have
a commensurate amount of insurance coming
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along for the ride so you don't exceed the
definition of life insurance under those sections
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of the code. So, If I want to reposition at
age 60, let's say, $500,000 into an insurance
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policy, I have to have at least 1,250,000
of life insurance. Now, the objective is,
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is to have my half a million grow tax-free.
Maybe double to a million in as little as
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7 to 10 years. Well, I can do that. And that
money as it grows qualifies as part of the
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death benefit so that the cost of the insurance
goes down as you get older because the amount
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of insurance at risk is getting less and less.
This is what makes it such a tax-free cash
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cow for retirees. Now, Section 7702 also said
under Tamra that was passed June 21st, 1988,
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that the fastest you could fund it is over
5 years if it's universal life. 7 years if
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it's whole life. It's called the 7 pay test.
That's a misnomer with regarding to universal
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life. So, that means if I want to put in 500,000,
the most I can put in is 100,000 a year every
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year for 5 years. Now, I could put in 100,000
the first day and the first year. And by the
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fourth year and first day of the 5th year,
I can put it my last 100,000. Now, I'm qualified
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to have tax-free income forever after out
of that contract. That's the Tamra test. That's
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section 7702. Well, that's been that way since
1988. Now, in March in the year 2020, the
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insurance industry started to introduce legislation
to be able to allow people to put in money
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faster. And all of those rules pass back in
the 1980s were based upon 4% interest guarantees.
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See, whole life insurance for years has been
based upon they will guarantee you 4% or at
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least the actuaries are based on that. And
so, they tout, "Well, this is guaranteed to
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be no less than 4%." Well, when US treasuries
ended up being less than 1%, interest rates
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are low, that means insurance companies are
hard-pressed to be able to guarantee 4%. So,
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they introduce legislation but it was tabled.
In the We hours, the final hours of 2020,
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they slipped that back into the economic stimulus
package and it got passed. So, Section 7702
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has been now altered. I don't know what the
total ramifications are but I can give you
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a few glimpses. And then subscribe to this
channel, 3-Dimensional Wealth. And as I get
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more information, you will get answers to
those because I'm going to post several videos
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in the next few months that will help you
understand what this means for you. But in
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a nutshell, this is what it means: For whole
life insurance, it appears that it means that
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whole life won't be able to tout the 4% guarantee
anymore that new policies will only based
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on 2% guarantees. So, whole life insurance
is going to have to perform based upon dividends.
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It can't be touted as "Oh, look at our guarantees.
They're 4%." Because it's going to be downt
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to 2%. Now, universal life, we don't worry
about the guarantees because you're linking
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to an index. In other words, the guarantee
with indexing is zero. What? Zero? It means
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that if the market goes down, you will not
lose. Zero is your hero. We're not worried
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about guarantees because in indexed universal
life, the objective is to have your cash value
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grow to be close to the death benefit as soon
as possible. Maybe 10 or 15 years so the cost
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of insurance gets cheaper as you get older.
You're self-insuring. Now, what does this
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mean? Based on that example, it appears as
though, instead of as being restricted to
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$100,000 for 5 years, I may be able to put
in maybe 130,000; 150,000. With the new section
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7702, I may be able to get in the 500,000
faster. Maybe as soon as 2 years and 1 day
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instead of 4 years and one day. What does
that mean? Well, it will likely mean that
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if you can get the money, the half a million
in there faster, it will grow faster because
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universal life has often outperformed whole
life because the fastest you could fund a
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whole life with 7 years. Universal life was
5 years. Actually 4 years and 1 day. Now,
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if I can get the money in that I want to put
in there, in 2 years and 1 day, let's say,
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it's going to grow faster if I want to achieve
an internal rate of return within 1% of the
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gross rate of return instead of maybe waiting
10 years or 15 years. That may happen in 8
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years. Maybe 7 years. So, you'll be able to
get a great internal rate of return quicker
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because it looks like you'll be able to put
in the money faster. Or you maybe able to
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reduce the death benefit in order to put in
the amount of money you want so it performs
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better as a capital accumulation account.
So, whatever happens with section 7702, stay
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tuned to this channel because I think in the
long run, this is going to be better for you.
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You're going to get better internal rates
of return. You'll be able to get away with
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les insurance. In other words, have less cost
or for the same amount of insurance, you can
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fund it faster, put in more money or put in
the money faster which accelerates the performance.
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So, at the end of the day, when the insurance
companies adapt to this, I think it's going
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to be a positive. They have not done anything
to alter 7702 since June 21st, 1988. And they
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just sneaked in in the final hours of the
year 2020. So, stay tuned, I am here for you.
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I want to empower you and I will post future
episodes that will show you what this means
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for you. Especially as you consider taking
out new indexed universal life policies and
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how they can perform even better than they
have in the past because they've been superior.
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Now, I think they're even going to get better.
If you want to learn more, if you want to
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understand what I'm talking about, Tefra,
Defra, and Tamra, Section 72E, 7702, and 101A,
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I want to gift you a copy of my most recent
bestselling book The Laser Fund. Claim your
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free copy. I'll pay for the book. You go to
LASERFUND.COM (L-A-S-E-R, fund, ".com"). And
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you contribute a nominal amount to cover the
shipping and handling. If it's short, I will
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cover the rest of that expense. I will pay
for the book and fire it out to you. And in
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this book, you will learn about all of these
nuances of max-funded index universal life.
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Why I call it the Laser Fund, liquid assets
safely earning returns. And as you learn these
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basics, then when I share new videos about
how section 7702 changes and enhances this,
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you're going to be well-equipped to understand
it instead of going "What's Tefra, Defra,
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and Tamra?" You'll know when you study this
book.
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