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  <title>Are Life Insurance Companies Safe? Mutual vs Stock Companies &amp;amp; PE Firm Truth: Between The Lies Episode 017</title>
  <description>We keep getting asked in the YouTube comments: How are you any type of alternative when life insurance companies still make money off investments? This week's Between The Lies tackles that question head-on with some uncomfortable truths Bloomberg doesn't want you to understand. Luke and Rob break down a recent Bloomberg article warning about private equity firms creating &amp;quot;credit hazards&amp;quot; in retirement funds. The article highlights companies like Apollo Group and Athene taking risky leveraged positions with your money. But here's what Bloomberg conveniently omits: They're talking about stock-owned insurance companies playing PE games, not the mutually-owned companies we actually work with. &amp;amp;nbsp; Rob explains the fundamental difference most people miss: Mutual life insurance companies are owned by policyholders, not stockholders chasing quarterly profits. These companies survived the Great Depression with only 5% failure rates while 16% of banks collapsed. During 2008's financial crisis, even AIG's life insurance subsidiaries required zero bailout money - completely solvent while their mortgage-backed securities division imploded. &amp;amp;nbsp; Luke tackles the private equity angle directly. Yes, PE firms use 80% leveraged deals to extract value and leave companies holding the debt. But that happens with stock companies optimized for shareholder returns, not mutually-owned insurers where policyholders vote on major decisions. There's a massive difference between Apollo Group manipulating Athene's portfolio and Northwestern Mutual's 130+ year track record of contractual profitability. &amp;amp;nbsp; The real story Bloomberg won't tell: Life insurance companies are the single largest store of genuine wealth in America. They're required by all 50 states to maintain massive reserves, undergo annual stress testing, and prove liquidity to pay claims. While 65-75% of their portfolios sit in investment-grade AAA corporate bonds, Bloomberg focuses on the 0.25% in higher-risk investments and screams about systemic failure. &amp;amp;nbsp; This is classic fear-mongering designed to keep you dependent on Wall Street's 401k casino while ignoring the only financial institution that's actually required to be solvent. When you control your own capital through properly structured mutual life insurance, you don't need to worry about whether private equity firms are playing games - because those aren't the companies you're working with. Rob's bottom line: When you're informed about how these companies are actually structured, you know what to do. Vet who you work with. Understand what products actually do. Build wealth through systems designed for long-term policy owner benefit, not quarterly shareholder profits. &amp;amp;nbsp; Websites Referenced:   PerfectSpiralCapital.com/podcast (Free Toolkit)   </description>
  <author_name>Between the Lies Podcast</author_name>
  <author_url>https://perfectspiralcapital.com</author_url>
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