- In case you die
- In case a spouse dies
- In case a child dies
- In case you’re immortal, like a vampire or something
- If you own a business
- If you have a business partner
- If you might get cancer
- If you don’t think you need life insurance
- If you know what a buy-sell agreement is
- If you are inheriting a business
- If you are ever planning on retiring
- If you’re tired of losing money in the stock market
- If you need to ever stay in a long term care facility
- If you have debt
- If you love your kids
- If you believe in smurfs( ‘cause Gargamel is real!)
- If you’re a terrorist (our guys are coming for ya!)
- If you’re not dead yet (preferably not very close yet either)
- If you eat lots of bacon
- If you read this whole list
Here it is folks… the definitive top 20 reasons for life insurance. (some of them aren’t serious, but maybe a little funny) Eat your heart out Letterman!
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So I mentioned Indexed Universal Life (IUL from here on out) as a great way to “be your own personal bank” in the last article I wrote. I wanted to take a minute and discuss that now. We all know debt is a very touchy, and should be avoided as much as is reasonable. Banks make an awful lot of money collecting your interest. Maybe, instead, you should pay cash, right? But what about the interest you lost by not investing that money instead? So what should you do? I’m saying don’t borrow from the bank, don’t pay cash… How about we start treating our personal finances like we were a business. Let’s set up a capital fund and use the interest earned by that fund to pay for your new car. You have to realize that this setup, like anything good, takes some time and discipline. No get rich quick schemes here. You probably want to allow for a good 7 years or so to build up the capital. Let’s have you put in $35,000 over the first 7 years. I told you it wasn’t quick. From then on, you’re going to continue to save for retirement in this same account, but now you’re only putting in $3,030 a year. Now, in year 8, you purchase your first vehicle through this program. Let’s assume you stayed pretty mild on the price and purchased a car for $10,500. You could do this now, every 4th year until retirement. At retirement, depending or your rate of return in this program, you could have a retirement of tax -free income of $50,000 per year. Find me a bank auto loan program that will do that for you! So when you look at the numbers, taking the time to capitalize your auto fund allows you to then consider your car payments each month as a retirement contribution. Did you catch that? We just turned your car payment into retirement income! So, the next question, and the last one I’ll cover in this article, is: What is the best type of account to do this? I feel that IUL’s are the best-suited account type out there to achieve this strategy. Compared to the stock market they function better because of lower volatility. You could lose your capital fund in the market and have to re-fund the base of your plan. Compared to CD’s, which will give you that retirement amount for 5 years or so, an IUL will give you that money indefinitely, if constructed properly and perfectly funded. A special thanks to Nelson Nash and his expertise in providing the groundwork for this program, and to Patrick Kelly and his efforts to use his writing abilities to share this wonderful cure for Americans’ financial woes. It is incredibly powerful. It has the ability to change your financial life and fix your retirement dreams. It truly is something that can work for nearly everyone and doesn’t involve Wall Street and it’s fees and volatility. There are lots of assumptions I made in the example numbers, so call an expert to discuss this program for your individual set of circumstances. I am one of those experts you can call. It just might be the most important financial phone call you ever make. Last week we covered the basics of temporary or term life insurance. Boring, I know, but not as annoying as that AFLAC duck. I’m going to shoot that duck!!! This week we want to take a moment and cover the basics of permanent life insurance. It is a bit more complicated, but also has many great uses. I doubt you’ve even heard of some of these uses, but they are so neat you may actually like life insurance by the time we’re done. Maybe… There are two basic types of permanent insurance: Whole Life and Universal Life. Whole Life Insurance is set pretty well in stone at the time it is applied for. In other words, the death benefit, premium payment schedule are set. Universal Life Insurance, on the other hand, has neither a set premium nor death benefit. Your premium is tied to your death benefit and there’s a lot of flexibility in a Universal Life policy. The strengths of a Whole Life policy are found in their consistency and guarantees. The strengths of a Universal Live policy lies in it’s flexibility. Both will cover you and provide a death benefit for your lifetime as long as you pay the premiums. If you remember, term life insurance only insures you for a certain set period of time. One thing to note is that permanent life insurance is typically more costly than term insurance. This is because of two reasons. First, there is a permanent guarantee that the policy will pay your death benefit. That guarantee means it’ll cost you more than just keeping the insurance company on the hook for 10 years on a term policy. Chances are you may not die in the next ten years. The second, and for me the neatest thing, is that permanent life policies can accumulate cash value. Sometimes they accumulate cash value at an amazing rate. This cash value in a whole life policy is based on an interest rate and sometimes there is an additional dividend paid on the policy that accelerates cash accumulation. With universal life insurance cash can accumulate based on an interest rate, and interest rate that follows a market index like the S & P 500, or the cash value can actually be invested directly into the market. You should note that the way your universal life policy accumulates cash value depends on the type of life insurance you purchased, so make sure your advisor knows what your needs and desires are with this policy so you get the right policy the first time. I won’t elaborate in this article, but I am going to be bold enough to say that nobody should ever purchase a variable life insurance policy, the kind that invests you directly into the market. If you want to know why, email me @ [email protected] . Finally, let’s briefly look at the different ways you can use permanent insurance, so you can decide if it’s something that should be in your financial plan. A quick list includes: estate planning, retirement savings plans, business planning, buy/sell agreements, deferred compensation plans, college funding, and more! I am a big fan of permanent insurance, especially for it’s cash building potential. Like any financial tool, you need to talk to an advisor to see if it’s the right fit. You wouldn’t use a hammer to paint your house and you shouldn’t use permanent life insurance unless it fits your circumstances. But chances are… it does. Talk about a boring and morbid topic… or so I thought. I was heavily recruited to sale insurance from the beginning of my career. I thought “No way!”. Nobody grows up dreaming of selling insurance. Here I am now, though, and I love what I do. To clear up what I didn’t know before I changed careers, and what most people don’t know, here’s the basics of life insurance. Take two minutes and get educated! There are two basic types of life insurance: Permanent and Temporary. Permanent life insurance has more variations so lets talk about temporary life insurance first. I’ll talk about permanent life insurance next week. Temporary life insurance is most commonly called Term Life Insurance. It only covers you for a certain time period. Typical terms include 10, 15, 20, 25 and 30 years. There is no cash value in the policies, so their benefit is limited to two things: Peace of mind while you’re alive, knowing that your beneficiary, the person that gets your money if you die, is protected, and, of course, the death benefit if you die. Term life insurance is the least expensive type of insurance, since there is no cash value accumulation. Because of this, virtually everyone should have at least some term life insurance. It is very difficult to justify not having life insurance when the cost of term life is so low. If you don’t have term life insurance and are wondering if you should, check out this list and see if any of them apply to you. If one of them does, then you need life insurance! Here you go:
The short and simple truth is you need life insurance, and term life can be a great way to protect your loved ones.
Tune in next week for permanent insurance and prepare to be amazed!!! Really! |
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Marc & Ed
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