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In this clarifying episode of Infinite Banking Daily, M.C. Laubscher addresses one of the most frequently asked questions about the private family banking system: who sets the interest rate on policy loans, and why does it matter? The answer is straightforward but often misunderstood: the insurance company sets the rate based on their internal cost of capital and investment portfolio performance. Unlike bank loans that fluctuate with market conditions, Federal Reserve decisions, and economic volatility, policy loan rates remain relatively stable and predictable—typically ranging between 4-6% for most mutual life insurance companies.
Key Concepts Covered
Core Principle
The insurance company sets policy loan rates based on stable internal economics, not volatile market conditions. The rate itself is secondary to what matters most: guaranteed access, uninterrupted compounding, and the ability to deploy capital without permission. Control and certainty beat low rates every time.
Resources:
Keywords:
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Hashtags:
#InfiniteBanking #PolicyLoanRates #InterestRates #WholeLifeInsurance #MutualCompany #FinancialControl #StableRates #GuaranteedAccess #PrivateFamilyBanking #PolicyLoans #CertaintyVsRates #FinancialStrategy #BusinessFinancing #RealEstateInvesting #CapitalControl #WealthBuilding #LoanArbitrage #FinancialIndependence
By M.C. LaubscherIn this clarifying episode of Infinite Banking Daily, M.C. Laubscher addresses one of the most frequently asked questions about the private family banking system: who sets the interest rate on policy loans, and why does it matter? The answer is straightforward but often misunderstood: the insurance company sets the rate based on their internal cost of capital and investment portfolio performance. Unlike bank loans that fluctuate with market conditions, Federal Reserve decisions, and economic volatility, policy loan rates remain relatively stable and predictable—typically ranging between 4-6% for most mutual life insurance companies.
Key Concepts Covered
Core Principle
The insurance company sets policy loan rates based on stable internal economics, not volatile market conditions. The rate itself is secondary to what matters most: guaranteed access, uninterrupted compounding, and the ability to deploy capital without permission. Control and certainty beat low rates every time.
Resources:
Keywords:
Infinite Banking, policy loan interest rates, whole life insurance loan rates, who sets policy loan rates, life insurance loan interest, mutual company policy loans, guaranteed loan rates, stable interest rates, policy loan cost, Infinite Banking interest rates, private family banking rates, cash value loan rates, insurance company loan rates, predictable interest rates, policy loan vs bank loan rates, cost of certainty, control vs low rates, mutual company ownership, dividend recirculation, stable financing rates, non-volatile interest rates, guaranteed access to capital, flexible loan terms, no credit check loans, policy loan arbitrage
Hashtags:
#InfiniteBanking #PolicyLoanRates #InterestRates #WholeLifeInsurance #MutualCompany #FinancialControl #StableRates #GuaranteedAccess #PrivateFamilyBanking #PolicyLoans #CertaintyVsRates #FinancialStrategy #BusinessFinancing #RealEstateInvesting #CapitalControl #WealthBuilding #LoanArbitrage #FinancialIndependence