Why Would Anyone Use Whole Life Insurance to Build Wealth
112 Views β’The Principles of the Infinite Banking Concept
135 Views β’The Big, Beautiful Bill Synopsis & Where to "Park" Your Funds
109 Views β’Which Comes First - Paying Off Your Debts or Building Wealth?
95 Views β’Understanding Universal Life Policies
123 Views β’Dividend Paying Whole Life Insurance Contract - The Cash Value
100 Views β’The Principles of the Infinite Banking Concept
132 Views β’The Four Phases of Wealth
106 Views β’Are You On Track for Retirement
113 Views β’Understanding Lost Opportunity Costs
112 Views β’Comparing Buy Term and Invest the Difference to Whole Life Insurance
106 Views β’Financial Literacy - Rules of Thumb You Should Know
106 Views β’Components of a Well Structured Policy
93 Views β’Introduction to "Think Like a Banker"
111 Views β’A Different Approach to Retirement
130 Views β’Overview of Creative Capital Strategies' (CCS) and Meet the Team
179 Views β’Topic: Analyze Real Estate Investment Efficiency & Explore Alternative Wealth Strategies
99 Views β’Comparing Qualified Retirement Plans vs. Life Insurance Retirement Plans
124 Views β’Explaining the Infinite Banking Concept by analyzing a bank's operations.
115 Views β’Fundamental Friday- Dec 19 2025
107 Views β’Overview of Creative Capital Strategies' (CCS) and Meet the Team
179 Views β’To explain how lines of credit work and their strategic use. Mar 6 2026
164 Views β’Explaining how whole life insurance policy loans can be used as a financial tool.
138 Views β’The Principles of the Infinite Banking Concept
135 Views β’The Principles of the Infinite Banking Concept
132 Views β’A Different Approach to Retirement
130 Views β’Nelson Nashβs 5 rules for Infinite Banking success.
130 Views β’Debt Management & Wealth Strategies- Jan 30th, 2026
129 Views β’Comparing Qualified Retirement Plans vs. Life Insurance Retirement Plans
124 Views β’Understanding Universal Life Policies
123 Views β’To explain and illustrate the benefits of specially-designed whole life insurance policies for cash value accumulation, tax-free
116 Views β’Explaining the Infinite Banking Concept by analyzing a bank's operations.
115 Views β’Are You On Track for Retirement
113 Views β’Why Would Anyone Use Whole Life Insurance to Build Wealth
112 Views β’Understanding Lost Opportunity Costs
112 Views β’Introduction to "Think Like a Banker"
111 Views β’The Big, Beautiful Bill Synopsis & Where to "Park" Your Funds
109 Views β’Fundamental Friday- Dec 19 2025
107 Views β’Financial Literacy - Rules of Thumb You Should Know
106 Views β’Comparing Buy Term and Invest the Difference to Whole Life Insurance
106 Views β’Topic: Analyze Real Estate Investment Efficiency & Explore Alternative Wealth Strategies
π Friday Zoom Session β October 31
Topic: Analyze Real Estate Investment Efficiency & Explore Alternative Wealth Strategies
Key Takeaways
Use a Schedule E for real estate analysis, not just rent vs. mortgage.
Many investors unknowingly subsidize tenants by ignoring non-deductible costs (e.g., principal payments) and over-relying on depreciation.
Sell inefficient properties to unlock trapped equity.
Example: A 2.6% return on $500k equity was converted into a tax-free income stream with a 9.6% tax-adjusted equivalent return.
The 1% Rule: Gross rent β₯ 1% of property value β indicates a strong deal.
Failing this rule often means poor cash flow and risky dependence on appreciation.
Use policy loans for down payments to make interest tax-deductible.
This converts personal (non-deductible) interest into a business write-off, improving cash flow.
The Problem: Inefficient Real Estate
The Schedule E Reveals True Performance
Principal payments are real expenses but not tax-deductible.
Depreciation is a tax credit, not a real expense.
Result: A property can show a tax loss on paper while the owner is still subsidizing tenants.
Two Rules of Thumb for Efficiency
1% Rule: Gross monthly rent β₯ 1% of property value
Example: $200k property β $2,000/month rent minimum.
4% Net Return Rule: Net annual cash flow β₯ 4% of equity
Rationale: If less, capital could earn more elsewhere (e.g., in a life insurance policy).
The Lending Impact
Banks use 75% of net income + depreciation to assess lendability.
A property showing a tax loss can hurt loan qualification.
The Solution: Convert Equity into a Policy
Case Study: Converting a βLazyβ Asset
Before:
Couple (age 67) owned two mortgage-free properties β $500k equity.
Net Income: $13,000/year (taxable).
Return on Equity: 2.6% (taxable).
Asset Profile: Illiquid, high-risk (tenants, market), inflexible.
After:
Sold properties β funded high-cash-value policy.
Income: $48,000/year for 15 years (tax-free).
Return on Equity: 9.6% (tax-adjusted equivalent).
Asset Profile: Liquid, guaranteed, flexible income.
Policy Benefits
Tax-Free Income: Distributions do not raise taxable income β may lower overall tax bracket.
Flexible Income: Owner controls amount, duration, and timing.
Guaranteed Growth: Contractual guarantees protect principal and provide predictable returns.
Case Study: A Successful Real Estate Deal
The Deal β Adam Edwards (Michigan Triplex):
Purchase Price: $90,000 (via HELOC)
Repairs: ~$30,000 over 6 months (DIY)
Total Cost: ~$120,000
The Strategy:
Cash-Out Refinance:
Appraised at $159,000 post-repair.
70% LTV refi = $111,300 β recouped nearly all invested capital.
Cash Flow: ~$1,700/month post-refi.
The Exit:
Sold after 2 years for $205,000.
Total Profit: ~$127,000 (cash flow + sale proceeds).
Key Insight:
A βhome runβ deal β it met the 1% Rule and was purchased at a deep discount, creating built-in equity.
Next Steps
For Property Owners
Analyze your rentals using Schedule E to determine true net return on equity.
If a property fails the 1% Rule or yields <4% net return, consider selling or redeploying equity into more efficient, tax-advantaged vehicles.
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