Browsing Category Market Volatility

Placing Extra Cash in Your Life Insurance Policy

May 10th, 2010 // 4:00 am @ Andrew Rosenbaum

swissarmyknife 300x216 Placing Extra Cash in Your Life Insurance PolicyIn the current economic environment, it is difficult to produce a significant return from conventional financial products that offer safety, such as savings accounts and certificates of deposit.

But if you own a whole life insurance policy, you may be able to deposit money using your life insurance contract and gain two important things:

  1. A return from dividends*, as well as guaranteed cash values that grow tax-deferred each year.
  2. An ability to leverage your death benefit, because in most situations, every additional dollar added may produce an additional $3 in your death benefit. That gives you an opportunity to create more of a legacy and pass along more income tax-free money to your heirs.

Basically, you’re getting your money to do more than one job.

It will both generate a higher return than what’s available from most financial products today, and significantly enhance your death benefit.

It’s a sensible and secure long-term growth vehicle for extra cash that can be set aside for several years.

So if you’ve worked hard and saved money that you can afford to sit for a while, discuss this option with your financial representative.

*Dividends are not guaranteed and are declared annually by the company’s Board of Directors.

Category : Accumulation v. Utilization &Family &Market Volatility &Recession &Taxes

Spending Year-End Bonuses Wisely

April 19th, 2010 // 7:02 am @ Andrew Rosenbaum

It’s Wall Street bonus time, and the big surprise is what is on so many bankers’ shopping lists: whole life insurance.

safetyfirstsign 300x205 Spending Year End Bonuses WiselyAfter last year’s economic freefall, it’s not just Main Street investors seeking safer financial products; Wall Street players are adding whole life products to their portfolios.

And many of them are using guaranteed financial products to balance portfolio risk.

They’ve seen how other investors protected their wealth with products such as whole life insurance when the economy sank.

Sophisticated investors have begun to question the common belief, “Buy term and invest the rest.”

They see it is a misconception, because (1) most people don’t invest the rest, they spend it, or (2) they invest it in something that they think will produce a high return, but that is more like gambling than investing.

Bonus time is a great time to invest in your economic security.

Consider taking part of your bonus and putting it toward guaranteed financial products that will weather the storm, whether markets go up or down.

Category : Financial Risk &Investing &Life Insurance &Market Volatility &Permanent Insurance &Recession

Average Returns v. Actual Yields, & Why Whole Life is a Great Bet

December 30th, 2009 // 4:00 am @ Andrew Rosenbaum

Honest businessmanHere’s a message for all investors who like playing with high-risk investments: Math is not money, and money is not math.

Imagine you are investing $1,000 in a mutual fund. You have a fantastic first year, earning a 100 percent rate of return, bringing your balance to $2,000.

In year two, things go poorly and the investment loses 50 percent. Your balance is now back to $1,000.

In year three, the market goes up and you earn 100 percent again, bumping your balance back up to $2,000. The fourth year markets tank again and you lose 50 percent. Your balance has now fallen back to $1,000.

Notice that your beginning and ending balances are exactly the same. Your actual yield is a big fat 0 percent.

Here’s the interesting thing. What is your average rate of return? 25 percent.

I know any investor would love to get a 25 percent return. A mutual fund with this exact performance could advertise, “Our fund has averaged 25 percent over the last four years.”

It’s a true statement. It is not illegal or blatantly dishonest. It simply fails to illustrate the fact that investors actually ending up with no return.

One of my clients is a major league hedge fund manager. He knows something about high-risk investments. But what does he have in his portfolio? A guaranteed contract –- a whole life insurance policy.

In the past year he doubled the size of his policy. In this economic environment, he told me, he needed to lower the overall risk of his investments. And a guaranteed contract is a smart alternative to treasury bills, which are currently paying a very low yield.

Here’s how he explains it in his own words:

Whole life is an investment with its own risks and rewards. But the risk is relatively low. The return is virtually guaranteed, you can borrow against it over time, and you can use it for estate planning purposes. I know that when I die my family will have enough money to manage their own lives. I could invest in ExxonMobil, but who knows what the stock would be like in ten years?”

He told me he thought that whole life has a bad rap, which encourages people to think they can outperform the policy. To quote him again,

Many savvy investors believe they can stimulate the characteristics of life insurance benefit on an after-tax basis – it has to be after tax because money accumulates within a policy tax-free. They think they can take $10,000 a year and invest it, but what happens is they never do it, and their portfolio is skewed.”

My hedge fund client really understands risk, and he certainly understands rewards.

Category : Financial Certainty &Financial Planning &Investing &Market Volatility &Permanent Insurance &Stocks & Mutual Funds

Can You Spot Your Investment Flaw?

December 9th, 2009 // 4:00 am @ Andrew Rosenbaum

gamblingchips 201x300 Can You Spot Your Investment Flaw?The federal government says the country is coming out of the recession. My biggest fear is that, with the market recovery, people with a lot of ground to recover in their portfolios will chase risky high returns again.

But with high-risk investments you will inevitably lose your money. That’s not financial planning; it’s legalized gambling.

A wealth swing coach helps you spot your investment flaws. Investors try to outsmart market volatility. They mistakenly believe they can cash in at the top, then balance their portfolios to preserve their wealth.

They rarely do. Sooner or later, the market will turn down again and they’ll have lost the opportunity.

Trying to outplay market volatility is like trying to control the weather. It’s impossible.

Remember the old expression, “save for a rainy day”? Don’t assume it will always be sunny.

As a golf fan, I like golf analogies. Tiger Woods never tries to outplay the weather. He doesn’t take wild risks. He meticulously measures, plans, and calculates every move he makes.

He starts out playing conservatively and defensively. Only if the weather’s right and only if he thinks he’s playing well does he go on the offensive.

So balance your investments by including assets that will endure no matter whether markets are sunny or stormy, and you’ll be better prepared if other investments decline.

Category : Financial Certainty &Financial Planning &Investing &Market Volatility &Wealth Swing Coach

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Disclosures

Registered Representative and Financial Advisor of Park Avenue Securities, LLC (PAS) 212-701-7900. Securities products/services and advisory services offered through PAS, a registered broker/dealer and investment advisor, Financial Representative, The Guardian Life Insurance Company of America (Guardian), New York, NY. PAS is an indirect, wholly-owned subsidiary of Guardian. Strategies for Wealth is not an affiliate or subsidiary of PAS or Guardian. PAS is a member of FINRA, SIPC. www.finra.org

Insurance Licenses

Andrew Rosenbaum is insurance licensed in the following states: Arizona, California (License #0B24019), Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, D.C., Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, West Virginia