The Secret 770 Account:
What It Is?
Why You Should Have One!
Reposted
Originally posted by John Jamieson
of The DailyFinance
on July 21st 2014.
“Imagine an account that…For at least the last few years, the Internet has been abuzz about the "secret 770 account" that you simply must make a part of your investing strategy. Well, it's not a secret -- but it should be in your portfolio.
“Lets you retire 100% tax-free
“Is NOT reportable to the IRS
“Pays you an average of 5% per year
“Has paid out, on average, for 121 straight years “And which, unlike traditional retirement plans like IRAs and 401(k)s, lets you withdraw money anytime you like, for whatever reason you like, and with no penalties whatsoever.”
In this case, "770" refers to the section of the tax code covering funds inside a life insurance policy. Using the tax code to name a type of account is common: Think of the 401(k) and the 1031 exchange.
Whole life insurance has been used for generations by corporations and dynasties to grow money safely, securely and in a tax-favored environment.
I was taught by financial gurus 25 years ago that you never put any money into a whole life insurance policy, and that theory is still being taught by some big names today. So when a friend whom I respect showed me how to use a life policy to grow and protect wealth, I spent three weeks trying to poke holes in his presentation -- and I failed. Apparently, what I "knew" previously about whole life insurance was wrong.
If you are buying life insurance strictly for the protection, many advisers will recommend you buy term because it is much cheaper than whole life in the early years of the policy for the same death benefit. For example, if a 40-year-old man in good health wants $500,000 of coverage for his family, he can buy a straight term policy for 20 years for around $500 per year. The same coverage in a whole life policy might be $3,500 a year.
Financially Astute People Count on Many Benefits
If your main reason for setting up a whole life insurance policy is for the death benefit, that policy will differ from a policy whose main goal is to grow cash. Banks and Fortune 400 corporations have hundreds of billions of dollars in whole life. There are many benefits to purchasing a well-done life insurance contract. In fact, you will not find all these benefits in any other financial product.
- Your cash value balance is guaranteed by the insurance carrier to not go backward, assuming all premiums are paid.
- You will have guaranteed growth every year no matter how the stock market performs.
- All growth and dividends grow tax-deferred inside the policy.
- You have tax- and penalty-free access to your cash through policy loans at any age.
- There are no restrictions on when loans have to be paid back.
- Cash value may still increase even on borrowed funds, depending on the carrier.
- There are no restrictions -- personal, business or investment -- on using your cash value.
- There are very high limits on how much money can be put inside the policy (though avoid becoming a Modified Endowment Contract).
- It is possible to overcome the cost of insurance in the first few years and have the policy "self-complete" thereafter by paying remaining base premiums out of cash value -- with cash value still growing larger
- You can borrow funds out of the policy and pay those funds back with much of the interest getting credited to your cash value, more quickly driving up the cash value.
- You maintain total control of your funds and cash flow.
- Access to the cash value is tax-free for the rest of your life.
- Since all this is done inside a life insurance contract, when you pass from this world, you will leave a large tax-free benefit to your estate (some limits apply).
Traditional life policies are usually based on the income replacement needs of the insured. Properly designed life policies (or 770 accounts) are built more for the living benefits and less for the death benefit. The more financially astute understand the many other benefits and put as much cash in the policy as possible. The death benefit is the icing on an already fantastic cake.
John Jamieson is the best-selling author of "The Perpetual Wealth System."
“Manhattan’s Secret Vault: Why Wall St. has kept this powerful secret hidden from you
“There’s a very good reason you’ve never heard about the “770” account before:
“That’s because Wall Street doesn’t want you to know about it!
“And neither do the big banks too, for that matter. (More on this in a minute.)
“Now, even though this is the investment account The Wall Street Journal is on record as saying is better than 401(k)s and IRAs… the majority of Americans don’t know it exists.
“Why?
“Well here’s a clue…
“I just got off the phone with an insider who works in the 770 industry. This person has worked first-hand with one of America’s biggest financial gurus (a name you’d instantly recognize), as well as several employees from Goldman Sachs and other big investment banks.
“And this is what this person said to me: NO ONE in Wall Street has their money in stocks—many of them are invested instead in ’770' accounts!
“Now, consider what this means…
“Here are the same investment professionals who’ve been telling us for years to “buy stocks”… and meanwhile… they’re all putting their money somewhere else!
“Ridiculous.
“Can you imagine the outrage this would create if most people found out about this?
“That’s why you’ll never hear your broker mention this investment to you, no matter how much money he (or she) has parked into it.”
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