Fundamental Friday Basic Zoom Calls
Completed
Why Would Anyone Use Whole Life Insurance to Build Wealth
15 Views •The Principles of the Infinite Banking Concept
7 Views •The Big, Beautiful Bill Synopsis & Where to "Park" Your Funds
6 Views •Which Comes First - Paying Off Your Debts or Building Wealth?
11 Views •Understanding Universal Life Policies
11 Views •Dividend Paying Whole Life Insurance Contract - The Cash Value
12 Views •The Principles of the Infinite Banking Concept
11 Views •The Four Phases of Wealth
7 Views •Are You On Track for Retirement
8 Views •Understanding Lost Opportunity Costs
7 Views •Comparing Buy Term and Invest the Difference to Whole Life Insurance
6 Views •Financial Literacy - Rules of Thumb You Should Know
7 Views •Components of a Well Structured Policy
9 Views •Introduction to "Think Like a Banker"
15 Views •A Different Approach to Retirement
21 Views •Overview of Creative Capital Strategies' (CCS) and Meet the Team
30 Views •Topic: Analyze Real Estate Investment Efficiency & Explore Alternative Wealth Strategies
15 Views •Comparing Qualified Retirement Plans vs. Life Insurance Retirement Plans
21 Views •Explaining the Infinite Banking Concept by analyzing a bank's operations.
12 Views •Fundamental Friday- Dec 19 2025
5 Views •Overview of Creative Capital Strategies' (CCS) and Meet the Team
30 Views •A Different Approach to Retirement
21 Views •Comparing Qualified Retirement Plans vs. Life Insurance Retirement Plans
21 Views •Why Would Anyone Use Whole Life Insurance to Build Wealth
15 Views •Topic: Analyze Real Estate Investment Efficiency & Explore Alternative Wealth Strategies
15 Views •Introduction to "Think Like a Banker"
15 Views •Dividend Paying Whole Life Insurance Contract - The Cash Value
12 Views •Explaining the Infinite Banking Concept by analyzing a bank's operations.
12 Views •Which Comes First - Paying Off Your Debts or Building Wealth?
11 Views •Understanding Universal Life Policies
11 Views •The Principles of the Infinite Banking Concept
11 Views •Components of a Well Structured Policy
9 Views •The Principles of the Infinite Banking Concept
7 Views •Are You On Track for Retirement
8 Views •Financial Literacy - Rules of Thumb You Should Know
7 Views •Understanding Lost Opportunity Costs
7 Views •The Four Phases of Wealth
7 Views •Comparing Buy Term and Invest the Difference to Whole Life Insurance
6 Views •The Big, Beautiful Bill Synopsis & Where to "Park" Your Funds
6 Views •Fundamental Friday- Dec 19 2025
5 Views •The Principles of the Infinite Banking Concept
Key Takeaways
IBC allows flexible, tax-advantaged funding of whole life insurance policies up to 25% of gross income
Policy loans provide access to cash value without disrupting growth, enabling efficient use and recapture of money
Starting policies early maximizes long-term efficiency and growth potential
Real-world example showed how policy was used to:
Pay unexpected tax bill
Consolidate high-interest debt
Topics
Introduction to Infinite Banking Concept (IBC)
IBC uses participating whole life insurance as a personal banking system
Allows use of money without losing growth via policy loans against cash value
Enables recapturing of spent money by repaying loans back into policy
Cash value grows tax-deferred and can be accessed tax-free via loans
Real-World IBC Policy Example (DJ's Policy)
Firefighter started policy 4 years ago at age 40
Initially funded $36k/year for first 2 years, then reduced contributions
Current cash value: $125k, death benefit: $1.49 million
Used $30k policy loan to pay unexpected crypto tax bill
Consolidated credit card debt with policy loan at 5.3% interest
Now repaying loans $1-2k/month from paycheck
Policy Flexibility and Features
Automatic Premium Loan (APL) prevents policy lapse if premium is unpaid
Catch-up provision allows making up missed PUA contributions
Dividends can:
Purchase paid-up additions
Reduce premiums
Repay loans
Can reduce premium payments and rely on dividends/cash value growth
IBC Strategy Insights
Start policies as young as possible for maximum long-term growth
Aim to save 25% of income (max allowed) vs. 7% national average
Use policy loans strategically vs. other debt/financing options
Recapture spent money by repaying policy loans when possible
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