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Updated over 3 years ago on . Most recent reply
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Todays episode, "Become the Bank" with Whole Life Insurance?
Chris kind of glossed over this since it was his intermediary between flips and flops, but does anyone have any thoughts here?
I love Bigger Pockets so much but I hate how I always want ten plus hour episodes and they cut short this fire content just when the speakers are really getting on a role!
In any case, I did several hours of research on this topic afterword and would love to open a discussion on it! There are many different Whole Life Insurance companies, and within the companies there are many different policies. Let's get a discussion going! What do you think about this strategy?
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Originally posted by @Chris Szepessy:
Maybe I'm being arrogant, but isn't borrowing against a whole life policy, just borrowing money that you could've just put in a savings/money market account and used from there? I don't see the point in paying a ton of money for a whole life policy just to be able to borrow from it. I understand there is a "death benefit" with the policy, but whole life is crazy expensive compared to term insurance. Just looking for some clarification on why this is a good way to go, since it wasn't explained in detail in the podcast.
You could use the same concept with a savings account if:
- the savings account was giving you a return in the 4~8%,
- a bank would accept to give you a loan at 3~5%, based on the collateral of your savings, while your whole savings account is not touched.
And that is what is difficult to understand in this concept, when you are taking a loan out of your policy, you are not borrowing from yourself. You are taking a loan from a third party (the insurance company or a bank), that is secured by the cash value in your life insurance. So the full cash value is continuing to grow unimpeded.
So let's take the following example:
You have $100,000 in cash value in an Index Universal Life Insurance.
During that year your return on the index has been 7%, but after the cost of the insurance your net gain was 6%*. So your cash value at the end of the year would be $106,000.
You take a loan, secured by your cash value, of $90,000 at 3.5% from a bank that you reinvest in a syndication that is giving you a 10% cash on cash return.
You would pay the bank $3,150 in interest that year
Your syndication investment will give you a return of $9,000
If you are in the 35% tax bracket, you will have to pay tax on ($9,000-$3,150). The gain on the life insurance is tax free.
So your net gain, after tax, on your syndication will be $3,802 and your gain on your life insurance will be $6,000. A total of $9,802.
Would you have invested directly the $100,000 in the same syndication, without the life insurance, your net after tax gain would only have been $6,500.
So with the life insurance, you get more money, and on top of it you also have a life insurance that will give your heirs tax free money when you die.
*The cost of life insurance is heavily front loaded, and the first few years the yearly total cost of the insurance may be as high as 15%, in later years, it may be as low as 0.25% a year. Averaged over the life of the policy, the cost is usually between 0.5 to 0.75%.