E72 - Why IULs Almost Always Fail: The Kyle Busch $8.5M Lawsuit

07/11/2025 44 min Temporada 1 Episodio 69

Listen "E72 - Why IULs Almost Always Fail: The Kyle Busch $8.5M Lawsuit"

Episode Synopsis

Two-time NASCAR champion Kyle Busch just lost $8.5 million in an Indexed Universal Life policy after paying $10.5 million in premiums. This isn't just celebrity drama—it's a case study in why 90%+ of IULs collapse and why we'll never sell one. IULs try to be insurance, savings, and investment all in one product. The result? A policy full of moving parts, changing cap rates, rising mortality charges, and a "path of least resistance" that leads most people to stop funding properly. By your 70s, the annual insurance cost skyrockets while your cash value evaporates. The company transfers risk back to you—the opposite of what insurance should do. Whole life insurance has guaranteed increases, true downside protection, unlimited upside potential, and a 200+ year track record. Don't mix protection, savings, and growth into one product. Keep them separate. Think in years, measure in weeks. And whatever you do, don't "IUL" your financial future.Chapters: 00:00 - Opening segment 01:44 - Kyle Busch $8.5M IUL lawsuit introduced 03:51 - How did this happen? Bobby Samuelson article breakdown 05:43 - Agent structured policy to maximize his compensation 07:21 - Why celebrity cases expose industry-wide problems 09:19 - How IULs work: cap rates, floors, participation rates 13:07 - The mortality charge death spiral explained 14:32 - Real client story18:32 - Why policies collapse in your 70s and 80s 20:18 - Net amount at risk breakdown 22:11 - IULs transfer risk back to you (opposite of insurance) 22:54 - Protect, Save, Grow: Don't mix them 26:13 - Why IULs exist and why they fail 28:17 - Whole life dividends vs IUL flexibility traps 32:52 - Proper protection across all life areas 35:12 - Long-term thinking vs optimization traps 38:17 - Conservative approach to new growth strategies 40:12 - Don't "IUL" your trading or life insurance 42:30 - Closing segmentKey Takeaways:Kyle Busch lost $8.5M of $10.5M in premiums in an IUL—brings national attention to product failure ratesIULs have cap rates (max return), floors (usually 0%), and participation rates—but companies can change caps anytime90%+ of IULs collapse because of human behavior traps and rising mortality charges in later yearsIULs charge monthly mortality based on net amount at risk—when policy underperforms, charges increaseInsurance should transfer risk to the company—IULs transfer risk back to youWhole life has guaranteed increases every year, true downside protection, unlimited upside potential, and 200+ year track recordDon't mix protection, savings, and growth—keep them separate and intentionalThink in years, measure in weeks—stay conservative even when you find better strategiesOnly time to "buy term and invest the difference": when your only other option is an IULGot Questions? Reach out to us at [email protected] or book a call at https://remnantfinance.com/calendar !Visit https://remnantfinance.com for more informationFOLLOW REMNANT FINANCEYoutube: @RemnantFinance (https://www.youtube.com/@RemnantFinance )Facebook: @remnantfinance (https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61560694316588 )Twitter: @remnantfinance (https://x.com/remnantfinance )TikTok: @RemnantFinanceDon't forget to hit LIKE and SUBSCRIBE

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