I've never bought any kind of life insurance, term or otherwise. My kids and wife would just have to make due with my millions of fucking dollars, boo hoo.Agreed. It’s not the first, second, or even third asset to acquire. In that age range, get term to protect the family and replace income . It’s more cost effective. Permanent plans happen later for different reasons.
A lot of it is tax dodging for people over the estate tax threshold. Theoretically lower returns make sense to pass it tax free rather than pay Uncle Sam.Later in life when you want to invest your money at a worse rate than a high yield savings account for some reason.
It’s clear you have zero idea what you’re talking about. Best to quit now.Later in life when you want to invest your money at a worse rate than a high yield savings account for some reason.
I have some unfortunate news for you.It’s clear you have zero idea what you’re talking about. Best to quit now.
It’s clear you have zero idea what you’re talking about. Best to quit now.
If he only sells to people with over $28M in the bank then perhaps he's not a bullshit peddler. Is that the case?A lot of it is tax dodging for people over the estate tax threshold. Theoretically lower returns make sense to pass it tax free rather than pay Uncle Sam.
Do you have any idea how much financial and legal risk there is in lying to people with money, who have lawyers?If he only sells to people with over $28M in the bank then perhaps he's not a bullshit peddler. Is that the case?
This is the way I've always felt about it.I've never bought any kind of life insurance, term or otherwise. My kids and wife would just have to make due with my millions of fucking dollars, boo hoo.
If you accumulate assets instead of spending it, you don't need life insurance.
Selling shitty products isn't illegal.Do you have any idea how much financial and legal risk there is in lying to people with money, who have lawyers?
Tons of things are bullshit but make sense for an individual person, and some things are judge hedges against market events or losses when you are rich enough.If he only sells to people with over $28M in the bank then perhaps he's not a bullshit peddler. Is that the case?
An umbrella is insurance against personal liability which is completely not the same thing as any kind of life insurance at all. Anybody with assets should have a $1-2M umbrella, they are cheap as shit and you never know what might happen.This is the way I've always felt about it.
Insurance makes sense for someone if they need to provide for their kids during their earning year, and before the kids leave the house.
Once you have assets, they can live off those if you die.
The only kind of insurance like that that I've ever considered would be umbrella, just in case some asshat sued me.
Tons of things are bullshit but make sense for an individual person, and some things are judge hedges against market events or losses when you are rich enough.
Look at it this way - if you have $50M, your goal isn't necessarily to make $100M, it's to ensure you keep your $50M and stay in front of your spending. You REALLY don't want to end up poor again, so you buy some structured financial products with $10M of it (that also bypass probate and go straight to your kids on death, so no estate tax) that also are very unlikely to tank in the event the market (or your business that got you the $50M in the first place) tanks.
That is a super simplified reason, but thats a justification that some people use. Me, I'd just move some into safer investments, but different strokes for different folks. I don't think Burren or others like him are "scammers" in the sense, UNLESS they are marketing or trying to push their products on people they KNOW it isn't suitable for. Which is what I have absolutely seen happen with Northwestern Mutual with my own eyes. If Burren does shit like them then yea, thats shady and borderline unethical in my opinion.
If he's selling rich people tax avoidance and hedge strategies then it's just rich people doing rich people things.
Just my $0.02.
Estate planning, business planning for c-suite and boards, and tax-free income when it makes sense. We also do managed money and variable assets. This shit isn’t rocket science. The solutions are hundreds of years old.Tons of things are bullshit but make sense for an individual person, and some things are judge hedges against market events or losses when you are rich enough.
Look at it this way - if you have $50M, your goal isn't necessarily to make $100M, it's to ensure you keep your $50M and stay in front of your spending. You REALLY don't want to end up poor again, so you buy some structured financial products with $10M of it (that also bypass probate and go straight to your kids on death, so no estate tax) that also are very unlikely to tank in the event the market (or your business that got you the $50M in the first place) tanks.
That is a super simplified reason, but thats a justification that some people use. Me, I'd just move some into safer investments, but different strokes for different folks. I don't think Burren or others like him are "scammers" in the sense, UNLESS they are marketing or trying to push their products on people they KNOW it isn't suitable for. Which is what I have absolutely seen happen with Northwestern Mutual with my own eyes. If Burren does shit like them then yea, thats shady and borderline unethical in my opinion.
If he's selling rich people tax avoidance and hedge strategies then it's just rich people doing rich people things.
Just my $0.02.
It's tough though because the life insurance people absolutely do position non-wealthy people as "protecting their family" if they buy these structured whole life insurance products... when they'd be better off doing just about anything else. You may not do it, and thats fine, but it's like me denying some lawyers are predatory shitbags... there absolutely are plenty of predatory shitbags and people need to look out.Estate planning, business planning for c-suite and boards, and tax-free income when it makes sense. We also do managed money and variable assets. This shit isn’t rocket science. The solutions are hundreds of years old.
FFS, I do planning for some of the nation’s largest banks, law firms, and RIAs. You think these people are getting scammed? No, they have brilliant minds that understand leverage and diversification. Most of America doesn’t hear of this stuff or understand it because it’s not appropriate or applicable to them.
I’m not calling you out Cad, I know you get it. Just piggie-backing off your post.
Very true. A lot are shit. Same with doctors. Same with teachers. Same with _________.It's tough though because the life insurance people absolutely do position non-wealthy people as "protecting their family" if they buy these structured whole life insurance products... when they'd be better off doing just about anything else. You may not do it, and thats fine, but it's like me denying some lawyers are predatory shitbags... there absolutely are plenty of predatory shitbags and people need to look out.
The default reaction of hearing annuity/life insurance broker is, for most normal people, immediately thinking "scam" and they're not wrong.
I'm poor, but I enjoy knowing things. At what point, or in what situations, should people start doing things that might not be commonly known?I'm more than happy to give advice to this board. Its provided me with plenty of the last 2 decades. But, clearly this isn't the thread for people who want to get ahead or learn something.
That's fine. For the vast majority of people it's a terrible way to invest your money and whether or not Burren is doing it, other people are aggressively marketing it to people who barely have anything to invest and they are getting sold on "infinite banking" horseshit that is being advertised as a smart and sound investment when it will mean orders of magnitude less money when you retire if you fall for it and keep doing it for a long time. My grandfather bought a couple of them and I have received these sales pitches myself and you would think they are giving you the keys to a happy life when all they're doing is ruining your retirement for their own gain. I'll take your word for it that there are rich people fucking around with it to avoid taxes etc, but 95% of people should run away from that shit and any national radio program would be irresponsible to say anything else.If he's selling rich people tax avoidance and hedge strategies then it's just rich people doing rich people things.