Remnant Finance - Infinite Banking (IBC) and Capital Control
Connect with Rohit Punyani: https://ownersasset.com/resource-library [https://ownersasset.com/resource-library]Book a call: https://remnantfinance.com/calendar Out Print the Fed with a 1% target per week: https://remnantfinance.com/options Email us at info@remnantfinance.com or visit https://remnantfinance.com for more information FOLLOW REMNANT FINANCE Youtube: @RemnantFinance (https://www.youtube.com/@RemnantFinance) Facebook: @remnantfinance (https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61560694316588) Twitter: @remnantfinance (https://x.com/remnantfinance) TikTok: @RemnantFinance Don't forget to hit LIKE and SUBSCRIBE _____________________________ In this episode, Hans welcomes back Rohit "Ro" Punyani from The Owner's Asset for his third appearance, this time for a deep dive on retirement planning that takes apart the conventional model and rebuilds it around income and freedom rather than net worth. They walk through why Monte Carlo simulations and the 4% rule fail in the real world, how sequence of returns risk quietly destroys plans, and why net worth is the wrong number to chase. From there they lay out the two bookends of every plan, the 25X accumulation rule and the 12X annuity rule, and land on the middle ground: roughly 30% in risk-free assets paired with dividend growth equities, structured so you never have to sell unrealized losses. Chapters: 00:00 – Opening segment 02:55 – Freedom vs. surety of income: two definitions 05:25 – Re-pensionizing America and why the wealthy never stop 08:45 – Why entrepreneurship is about who you become 12:30 – Why Monte Carlo simulations don't work 14:55 – Sequence of returns risk explained 16:50 – Why even a linear 9% return runs out of money 18:35 – Where to start: the two bookends 19:25 – The 4% rule and the 25X heuristic 20:25 – The annuity bookend and the 12X heuristic 22:30 – The annuity's Achilles heel: inflation 24:40 – Inflation riders and the joint annuity strategy 27:55 – Net worth is not a proxy for income 30:50 – Why age 65 is arbitrary 33:50 – Building toward a dream part-time job 36:05 – The 30% rule and the Ernst & Young study 43:35 – The S&P: great for accumulation, terrible for distribution 45:00 – Dividend achievers, aristocrats, and kings 47:35 – The magic number is 8: yield on cost explained 51:15 – Earn compound interest, pay simple interest 56:00 – Why this strategy is so hard to run 57:35 – The Bessembinder study and why indexing works 01:04:05 – A plan is not a plan if you can run out of money 01:06:20 – Closing segment Key Takeaways: Retirement isn't the absence of work, it's freedom, the ability to do what you want, when you want, with whoever you want. The people who retire to something thrive; the ones who only retire from something often don't last. Net worth is not a proxy for income. Retirement planning is income planning. A zero-dollar net worth with $20,000 a month of guaranteed income beats a huge number you're too scared to spend down. You can average 7%, withdraw 4%, and still go broke. The average return doesn't matter, the sequence does. A couple of down years early in retirement force you to sell principal, and no Monte Carlo simulation can model human behavior, lifestyle creep, or a long-term care event. Know your two bookends. Multiply your target income by 25 (the 4% rule) for the high end of what you need to save, and by 12 (an 8% annuity) for the low end. For $100K a year, that's $2.5M versus $1.2M, and the right answer for most people sits in the middle. Index to dividend growth, not just the S&P. Roughly 40% of the S&P's total return since inception has come from dividends, and dividend aristocrats have historically raised payouts faster than inflation, giving you an inflation-indexed income stream instead of forcing you to decide what to sell, when, and how much.
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