『Episode 100: "What If the Insurance Company Fails?" Objection Answered』のカバーアート

Episode 100: "What If the Insurance Company Fails?" Objection Answered

Episode 100: "What If the Insurance Company Fails?" Objection Answered

無料で聴く

ポッドキャストの詳細を見る

今ならプレミアムプランが3カ月 月額99円

2026年5月12日まで。4か月目以降は月額1,500円で自動更新します。

概要

In this milestone 100th episode of Infinite Banking Daily, M.C. Laubscher addresses final critical objection: "What if the insurance company fails?" Legitimate concern putting significant capital into policy, need to know it's safe. Most don't understand: life insurance companies are most heavily regulated financial institutions in United States—more regulated than banks, more regulated than investment firms. Every state has insurance commissioner monitoring financial stability of companies. Required to maintain massive reserves, pass rigorous stress tests, prove they can pay claims even in catastrophic scenarios. Key point: if insurance company gets into financial trouble, state guaranty associations step in. Every state has guaranty fund protecting policyholders—cash value and death benefit protected up to very high limits, typically five hundred thousand dollars cash value and higher for death benefits depending on state. Historical perspective: how many major life insurance companies failed last hundred years? Very few. When they did, policyholders were protected, policies transferred to stronger companies, benefits paid. Compare to banks: hundreds failed in 2008 alone. FDIC insurance protected depositors to certain limits, but chaos, uncertainty, frozen accounts were real. Life insurance companies didn't fail during 2008, didn't fail during Great Depression. Designed for stability not speculation, invest conservatively, operate with long time horizons, prioritize policyholder protection above everything. Mutual insurance company recommendation for Infinite Banking provides additional security layer—owned by policyholders not shareholders, no pressure maximize short-term profits at expense of stability, entire structure designed to protect you. Yes always theoretical risk, but risk of well-established mutual life insurance company failing is extraordinarily low—far lower than bank failing, brokerage firm collapsing, business failing, real estate investment going south. Infinite Banking isn't about eliminating all risk, it's building on most stable financial foundation available: properly structured whole life policy with strong mutual insurance company.Key Concepts:Legitimate concern putting significant capital into policyMost don't understand: life insurance companies most heavily regulated financial institutions in USEvery state has insurance commissioner monitoring financial stabilityCompanies required to maintain massive reservesMust prove can pay claims in catastrophic scenariosEvery state has guaranty fund protecting policyholdersCash value and death benefit protected to very high limitsHistorical perspective: very few major life insurance company failures last hundred yearsWhen failures occurred, policyholders protectedPolicies transferred to stronger companies, benefits paidBank comparison: hundreds of banks failed in 2008 aloneFDIC protected to limits but chaos, uncertainty, frozen accounts were realLife insurance companies didn't fail during 2008Didn't fail during Great DepressionDesigned for stability not speculationInvest conservatively with long time horizonsMutual insurance company additional security layerOwned by policyholders not shareholdersNo pressure maximize short-term profits at expense of stabilityEntire structure designed to protect policyholdersCore Principle:"What if insurance company fails?" is legitimate concern. Most don't understand: life insurance companies most heavily regulated financial institutions in US—more than banks or investment firms. Every state has insurance commissioner monitoring stability. Companies required maintain massive reserves, pass rigorous stress tests, prove can pay claims in catastrophic scenarios. If company has trouble, state guaranty associations step in—every state has guaranty fund protecting policyholders. Cash value and death benefit protected to very high limits, typically $500K cash value, higher for death benefits by state. Historical perspective: very few major life insurance failures last hundred years. When occurred, policyholders protected, policies transferred to stronger companies, benefits paid. Compare banks: hundreds failed 2008 alone, FDIC protected to limits but chaos and frozen accounts real. Life insurance companies didn't fail during 2008 or Great Depression. Designed for stability not speculation, invest conservatively with long time horizons, prioritize policyholder protection above everything. Mutual insurance company provides additional security—owned by policyholders not shareholders, no pressure maximize short-term profits at stability expense, entire structure protects you. Yes theoretical risk exists, but well-established mutual company failing risk extraordinarily low—far lower than bank failing, brokerage collapsing, business failing, real estate problems. Infinite Banking not about eliminating all risk, it's building on most stable financial foundation available: properly structured whole ...
まだレビューはありません