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Medicare

missed fortune super blog itunes 150x150 Taking Ownership Distinguishes the Adults from the Crying InfantsThis week Doug Andrew discussed the following:

Upcoming Free Webinar

Attend our free 90-minute webinar live over the Internet this coming Tuesday, November 29th at 11:00 a.m. pacific (12:00 p.m. mountain, 1:00 p.m. central, 2:00 p.m. eastern), and again at 6:30 p.m. pacific (7:30 mountain, 8:30 central, 9:30 eastern). The topic is “True Asset and Wealth Optimization.” You’ll learn how to choose the right investments for liquidity, safety, rate of return and tax benefits.

Click Here to Register Now

All attendees receive a bonus hardcover copy of Last Chance Millionaire, Doug Andrew’s New York Times best-selling book.

A Political Puff Piece or a Metaphor for Modern America?

A recent feel-good article in the San Francisco Chronicle illustrates the mindset of dependency held by many Americans.

“President Obama spent only a few hours in San Francisco, but he spent only a few seconds to prove why he is the baby-whisperer. Moments after landing at San Francisco International Airport on Air Force One, Obama spotted 6-month-old Josie Knight, who was crying while being held by her mother, Gina Odom, 37, of Oakland.

“It’s OK,” the president said repeatedly, taking the squalling infant into his arms. Obama bounced gently and held her for about 10 seconds before flashing a smile and returning her to Odom.”

This incident isn’t just a harmless human-interest story about a baby-kissing politician; it’s actually a metaphor.

ABC News, reporting on the speech said:

“At a million-dollar San Francisco fundraiser today, President Obama warned his recession-battered supporters that if he loses the 2012 election it could herald a new, painful era of self-reliance in America.”

Did you catch that? The only thing standing between us and having to rely on ourselves is the President.

Self-reliance used to be one of the distinguishing characteristics of an adult. You can’t be truly self-reliant until you are willing to take charge of your own future. This is especially true in financial matters.

If the objective of the president is to have the government provide everything for us, we’re setting ourselves up for failure on a grand scale. Government hasn’t paid off our mortgages, our kids college educations, or helped us get better jobs despite spending nearly $3.6 trillion in economic stimulus money.

If just 20% of that amount had been given to employers instead and they were allowed to hire the employees they chose to, it would have provided a $50,000 per year salary for two years for every single unemployed person in America.

Instead, we’ve seen the unemployment rate swell from 7.2% to 9/2%.

We need to get out of this mentality that big government needs to step in and take care of us. We need to take ownership in our future. Ownership has traditionally been the American way, but it appears to be falling from favor.

It doesn’t have to be this way.

Ownership Equals Power Over Your Financial Future

Even the IRS recognizes and incentivizes the value of taking ownership of your financial future. For instance, in section 163 of the Internal Revenue Code, you’ll find that the cheapest money you can borrow is that used for the purchase of a primary or secondary residence.

Right now you can borrow money at less than 4.5% interest for such a purchase and deduct interest up to $1,000,000 of acquisition indebtedness and $100,000 over and above that in equity indebtedness.

So if you borrow money at 4.5% and it’s deductible, in most people’s tax brackets, it’s only a net cost of about 3%. The government does this to incentivize people in order to make it easier to own a home. This is why the deduction has been in the tax code for decades.

Should Congress decide to do away with the tax deductibility of mortgage interest, it would be a huge discouragement to potential home-buyers.

Now consider what taking ownership means in terms of your retirement.

Our government is obligated to pay out nearly $115 trillion in unfunded liabilities over the next few decades. If you’re expecting government to be able to take care of you in your retirement, you’re likely in for a big disappointment.

The good news is that you can choose to take ownership of your financial future rather than expecting the federal government to pick you up and comfort you.

You can learn to re-direct, legally, otherwise payable taxes to causes you support by learning and applying the Missed Fortune strategies. By taking ownership, you become self reliant and you’ll do far better than you would by depending upon the government to meet all of your needs.

You’ll learn how to protect your retirement nest egg from the devastating triple whammy of rising taxes, growing inflation and continuing market volatility. Your serious money will enjoy liquidity, safety and a guaranteed rate of return all while accumulating and eventually transferring tax-free.

Are you ready to enjoy a greater sense of confidence and self-reliance in your financial future?

The first step to taking ownership is to meet with a Missed Fortune advisor.

Bonus Missed Fortune E-Book: Baby Boomer Blunders The average Baby Boomer has less than $50,000 accumulated for retirement (which means many have less than that), primarily due to bad habits and having money invested in the wrong places where economic downturns can diminish their nest egg. Download this e-book now at www.babyboomerblunders.com.

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missed fortune super blog itunes 150x150 Skip These Mistakes & Own Your Financial Future This week Doug Andrew discussed the following:

Upcoming Free Webinar

Attend our free 90-minute webinar live over the Internet this coming Tuesday, November 8th at 11:00 a.m. pacific (12:00 p.m. mountain, 1:00 p.m. central, 2:00 p.m. eastern), and again at 6:30 p.m. pacific (7:30 mountain, 8:30 central, 9:30 eastern). The topic is “True Asset and Wealth Optimization.” You’ll learn how to choose the right investments for liquidity, safety, rate of return and tax benefits.

Click Here to Register Now

All attendees receive a bonus hardcover copy of Last Chance Millionaire, Doug Andrew’s New York Times best-selling book.

Welcoming the Prospect of a New Painful Era of Self Reliance

ABC News recently reported on president Obama speaking at a San Francisco fundraiser warning that America was poised to enter a “new painful era of self-reliance in America.”

Do you know what they call people who rely upon themselves?  Adults.

Taking ownership of one’s future is not only possible; it’s essential if we wish to be free to prosper.  Aren’t we supposed to be self-reliant?

It’s not reasonable to expect government to pay off our mortgages, to pay for our healthcare or to pay for our kids’ college education.

If just 20% of the $3.6 billion in stimulus spending were instead given to employers to expand their workforces, it could have created a $50,000/year position for two years for every unemployed person in this country.  Instead unemployment went from 7.2% to 9.2%.

We need to get out of the mindset that big government should be taking care of us.  We need to take ownership in our future.   Ownership makes great things happen.

When’s the last time you washed a rental car or changed the oil in one?   If you own your residence, it’s almost certain that you’ll take better care of it than if you were just renting it.

Taking ownership and being self-reliant is the American way.  This is especially true regarding our financial future.  When we have incentive to take ownership of our own future, we can redirect otherwise payable taxes to causes you support.

These aren’t tax loopholes, they’re decades-old, grandfathered sections of the IRS code that even tax attorneys and CPAs are rarely taught in their training.  These include section 163 of the Internal Revenue Code, which provides tax incentives regarding home ownership.

You need to take ownership in providing for your own retirement instead of counting on the government to provide it for you.  After all, the government is still on the hook for $115 trillion in unfunded liabilities including Social Security and Medicare.  They’ll gladly try to take care of your retirement, but you can do better.

If you take ownership of your own health or even caring for the poor, you get incentives in the form of tax deductions.  All of this is possible if you understand legally how to redirect otherwise payable taxes to the causes you support.

So why don’t more people do it?

The problem is that we simply don’t know what we don’t know and powerful opportunities are missed as we follow the herd.

Seven Ways Most Financial Advisors Fail to Protect Their Clients’ Money

Here are seven things that more than 90% of financial advisors don’t know how to do to protect their clients’ money.

  1. Give you guarantees with an upside potential.   Traditional financial planning in this country usually gives you guarantees but usually without upside potential if the economy does well.  Or they may give you upside potential without any guarantees if the economy loses.  This is one of the reasons so many people lost a third or more of their IRAs or 401(k)s during the last decade. Missed Fortune Indexing strategies enable you to earn a predictable, conservative rate of return even if the economy loses.  At the same time you can enjoy upside potential up to a certain capped rate of return when the economy grows.  Few advisors know how this is done.
  2. Protect you from loss of principal.  The key here is not only to protect your principal you invested, but also in any year that you make money, to turn that money into new protected principal that’s not subject to loss.
  3. Protect you from the effects of inflation.  We’ve been fortunate for the past two decades to have inflation remain steady around 2-3%.  But those days are gone and inflation is likely to rise due to the incredible amount of money that’s been and is being printed.  This means that your rate of return must be able to outpace the rate of inflation, and most investment advisors don’t know how to do that.
  4. Protect you from the danger of rising taxes.  Most advisors simply hope that when the future arrives, you’ll find yourself in a lower tax bracket when you retire.  But that often doesn’t happen for various reasons.  Your dependents have moved out.  Your home is paid off.  You’re not only missing out on these deductions, but Congress is looking to raise taxes too.
  5. They don’t know how to get tax-free returns rather than just tax-deferred returns.  Most people are in a for a rude awakening when they see just how quickly taxes will eat up their nest egg as they’re taxed before contributing to their IRA or 401(k).  They’re then taxed upon withdrawing their funds and taxed again when they try to transfer what’s left to their heirs.  A better way is through investment vehicles that have been grandfathered for more than 4 decades and have been around a lot longer than IRAs or 401(k)s.   They’re safer than municipal bonds and pay a higher rate of return than municipal bonds, plus they accumulate money tax-free and the money transfers tax-free at your passing.
  6. Provide predictable rates of return.  The stock market has only averaged a 3.83% rate of return for the past two decades.  Trying to get an average return of 12% is just not realistic.  But if you choose, you can convert all of your income to generate predictable rates of return of about 8% tax-free.
  7. Help people get their money out of their IRAs or 401(k)s with the least amount of tax impact.  This is where a strategic roll-out can help protect you from some of the tax-deferred woes by getting your money out of those IRAs and 401(k)s and into a vehicle that will allow it to grow tax-free.

If you’d like to empower yourself to learn how to overcome these common mistakes make by many tax planners & financial advisors, it’s time to learn more by visiting with a Missed Fortune Advisor.

Bonus Missed Fortune E-Book: Baby Boomer Blunders The average Baby Boomer has less than $50,000 accumulated for retirement (which means many have less than that), primarily due to bad habits and having money invested in the wrong places where economic downturns can diminish their nest egg. Download this e-book now at www.babyboomerblunders.com.

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missed fortune super blog itunes 150x150 Learning From the Mistakes of OthersThis week Doug Andrew discussed the following:

Upcoming Free Webinar

Attend our free 90-minute webinar live over the Internet this coming Tuesday, October 25th at 11:00 a.m. pacific (12:00 p.m. mountain, 1:00 p.m. central, 2:00 p.m. eastern), and again at 6:30 p.m. pacific (7:30 mountain, 8:30 central, 9:30 eastern). The topic is “True Asset and Wealth Optimization.” You’ll learn how to choose the right investments for liquidity, safety, rate of return and tax benefits.

Click Here to Register Now

All attendees receive a bonus hardcover copy of Last Chance Millionaire, Doug Andrew’s New York Times best-selling book.

Contrast and Comparison

One of the most simple and compelling lessons in economics can be drawn from the experience of two neighboring states and their respective experiences with taxes and unemployment.

Both states were facing budget shortfalls.  Both states needed increased revenues to meet their financial obligations.  Both sought to turn the tide toward economic recovery, but there’s a dramatic difference in the approach taken by each state and a corresponding difference in the results they got.

Anytime government suffers for lack of tax revenue to pay its employees and programs, it has the option of raising taxes to bring in more revenue, or lowering taxes to increase the revenue being taxed.  It can either increase regulation of employees and the associated costs of doing business or it can deregulate and create certainty and confidence among employers so they’ll hire more workers.

In January of this year, Illinois chose to raise taxes to address it’s budgetary concerns.  The results were swift and sure.  But they weren’t the results Illinois was banking on receiving.

From an article in Business Insider:

“[I]n addition to the worst bond rating in the country, the state lost the most jobs of any state last month. The Illinois Policy Institute reported the grim news that “Illinois lost more jobs during the month of July than any other state in the nation, according to the most recent Bureau of Labor Statistics report.

After losing 7,200 jobs in June, Illinois lost an additional 24,900 non-farm payroll jobs in July. The report also said Illinois’s unemployment rate climbed to 9.5 percent. This marks the third consecutive month of increases in the unemployment rate.”

There is a clear correlation between the January tax increase and the subsequent drop in employment numbers. It’s a powerful illustration of the futility of trying to conceal the results of runaway spending by imposing punitive taxes on producers rather than reducing the spending.

If you were a business owner in Illinois, would the prospect of higher taxes motivate you to grow your business?

Faced with a similar budgetary shortfall, Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker asked employers why they weren’t hiring people. Business leaders told him they were feeling uncertainty about whether taxes were about to go up or not. So Wisconsin chose to lower taxes and to deregulate in order to provide the certainty and confidence that job creators were seeking.

The results were astounding.

Wisconsin saw jobs increase dramatically with 39,000 new private sector jobs were created with 14,100 jobs in manufacturing. Wisconsin’s non-farm growth is now two times the national average. One other happy note: the state also managed to turn a $3.6 billion deficit into a surplus in that same time thanks to the increased revenues.

Two states facing similar challenges, took radically difference approaches and got radically different results.  The lesson in this for all of us is that economic growth and prosperity only occur where job creators are operating in a climate of certainty and confidence.

This is worth remembering whenever government leaders propose policies that create uncertainty and less confidence by seeking to raise revenue by increasing taxes and regulation.

Principles of Wealth Accumulation

If you’re seeking greater certainty and confidence in your personal financial future, you’ll need to incorporate proven strategies based upon sound principles.  Here are two principles that can give you an edge.

The first is the miracle of compound interest. It’s a principle Einstein said was one of the least understood phenomena on the planet.

A single dollar, doubling every period for 20 periods, will grow to $1,048,000 if that growth is tax free.

If you have to pay tax on every gain your money makes, that dollar being doubled every period is instead being eaten up by federal or state income taxes. If you’re in a 25% tax bracket that means you’ll actually only have $72,000 to show after 20 doublings. In a 33% tax bracket it will only grow to $27,000.

This is why tax-deferred or taxed-as-earned investments should be avoided in favor of strategies that allow your money to actually grow through compound interest.

The second principle is that of tax-free accumulation. Most Americans accumulate their money in the worst possible place by paying tax on their income as they earn it. Then they place that money in taxed-as-earned investments and pay tax on any of the gains they make. Finally, they pay more tax when that money is transferred to their heirs.

As a result, what should have been a sizable nest egg is quickly consumed by taxes and ultimately ends up as a fraction of what it could have been.

It’s like crawling towards the finish line of financial independence when they could be running or flying. Is it any wonder why so many Americans are dependent upon Social Security and Medicare?

A better choice would be a vehicle that allows your money to accumulate tax-free now and in the future, thanks to sections 72E, 7702 and 101A of the IRS code.  Not only does your money remain safely yours, but you can access it and ultimately transfer it to your heirs tax free.  That’s the power of choosing wisely.

These are just two key principles of wealth accumulation. Missed Fortune strategies incorporate these and many other principles that enable you to enjoy certainty and confidence in your financial future.

Learn more by meeting with a Missed Fortune advisor.

Bonus Missed Fortune E-Book: Baby Boomer Blunders The average Baby Boomer has less than $50,000 accumulated for retirement (which means many have less than that), primarily due to bad habits and having money invested in the wrong places where economic downturns can diminish their nest egg. Download this e-book now at www.babyboomerblunders.com.

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missed fortune super blog itunes 150x150 Creating Certainty in An Uncertain EconomyThis week Doug Andrew discussed the following:

Upcoming Free Webinar

Attend our free 90-minute webinar live over the Internet this coming Tuesday, August 23rd at 11:00 a.m. pacific (12:00 p.m. mountain, 1:00 p.m. central, 2:00 p.m. eastern), and again at 6:30 p.m. pacific (7:30 mountain, 8:30 central, 9:30 eastern). The topic is “True Asset and Wealth Optimization.” You’ll learn how to choose the right investments for liquidity, safety, rate of return and tax benefits.

Click Here to Register Now

All attendees receive a bonus hardcover copy of Last Chance Millionaire, Doug Andrew’s New York Times best-selling book.

A Crisis of Confidence

The Rasmussen Report recently stated that 9% of Americans rate the economy as good or excellent while 67% say it’s in poor shape. It’s not exactly surprising.

But just 37% of those surveyed by Rasmussen say they have confidence in the stability of the U.S. banking system. That’s down from nearly 68% in the summer of 2008 and is the lowest measure of confidence recorded yet.

At a time when economists and others wonder if the U.S is about to enter another recession, most American believe the recession never ended. Only 13% believe the jobs market is better than it was a year ago while 50% say it’s worse.

It bears repeating that amidst all the talk of the debt ceiling and deficits and economic uncertainty, America does not have a revenue problem. We have a spending problem.

This means we need to aggressively go after ways to raise the revenue that’s being taxed and not raise the taxes.

The Bureau of Labor Statistics recently released data about the state of Wisconsin that shows that during the month of June nearly 18,000 jobs were created. Of those, nearly half of them were in the state of Wisconsin.

In fact, in the last 6 months, nearly 39,000 new jobs were created in the private sector in Wisconsin with nearly 14,100 jobs created in manufacturing. Wisconsin’s non-farm growth is nearly 2 times the national average.

Governor Scott Walker was interviewed by Fox News and asked what the secret is to how he’s turned things around in Wisconsin since he took office in January.

His response:

“We changed the business climate. When we said that Wisconsin is open for business back in January, we meant it. We passed major tort reform and regulatory relief. We reduced the tax burden of job creators, pulled away the state tax on health savings accounts, even created a new economic development corporation to show that when we said Wisconsin is open for business–it wasn’t just a slogan.”

“We didn’t wait 6 months or a year, we did it right away. On top of that, I think the fiscal reforms we put in place: taking a $3.6 billion deficit and turning it into a surplus, those are the things job creators are looking for. They want stability. They want certainty. They’re certainly not seeing it at the federal level, but they’re seeing it in Wisconsin.”

There are two key things that Governor Walker did to stimulate that turnaround.

  1. He changed the business climate by empowering businesses to create jobs.
  2. He reduced the tax burden on job creators.

He got government out of the way and that’s why Wisconsin is having success.

When asked what he recommended we do on a national level, Walker suggested the federal government get its fiscal house in order and get out of the way.

The Antidote to Uncertainty: Predictable Systems

If you wish to eliminate the uncertainty in your financial future, you need to learn Missed Fortune strategies that put you solidly in control.

If you’re feeling confused, isolated and powerless because of the economy, you need to learn how to create certainty in your life.  Our confidence grows with our certainty.

Imagine knowing how to protect yourself from the danger of taxes going up by using sections of the IRS code that have been around for decades which enable you to accumulate your money safely, predictably and tax free.

Visualize the peace of mind that comes from linking the return on your money to those things that inflate when we experience inflation.  It’s no secret that the federal government is printing money to help pay its obligations like Social Security, Medicaid and Medicare.

Even during times of inflation, you’ll still enjoy a rate of return that keeps up with or even outpaces the rate of inflation.  But you’ll need to understand the Missed Fortune strategies that make it possible to do so.

When you’re positioned to beat the tax and inflation power curve, your money will be safely hedged against inflation and will remain tax free now and in the future when you need it.

With Missed Fortune strategies, you’ll also learn how to overcome the uncertainty and volatility of the stock markets so you don’t lose when the economy goes down and your money grows when it goes up.  It’s called indexing and it’s a way to create the kind of certainty that makes all the difference.

Learn more by meeting with a Missed Fortune advisor.

Bonus Missed Fortune E-Book: Baby Boomer Blunders The average Baby Boomer has less than $50,000 accumulated for retirement (which means many have less than that), primarily due to bad habits and having money invested in the wrong places where economic downturns can diminish their nest egg. Download this e-book now at www.babyboomerblunders.com.

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missed fortune super blog itunes 150x150 Monetary Myopia: Why Soaking the Rich Wont Solve the Debt CrisisThis week Doug Andrew discussed the following:

Upcoming Free Webinar

Attend our free 90-minute webinar live over the Internet this coming Tuesday, August 16th at 11:00 a.m. pacific (12:00 p.m. mountain, 1:00 p.m. central, 2:00 p.m. eastern), and again at 6:30 p.m. pacific (7:30 mountain, 8:30 central, 9:30 eastern). The topic is “True Asset and Wealth Optimization.” You’ll learn how to choose the right investments for liquidity, safety, rate of return and tax benefits.

Click Here to Register Now

All attendees receive a bonus hardcover copy of Last Chance Millionaire, Doug Andrew’s New York Times best-selling book.

The Bush Tax Cuts As a Bargaining Chip

There’s been a lot of talk recently about the national debt, the debt limit debate and the likely solutions. But there are some facts that must be considered in order to see the big picture.

For instance, the Congressional Budget Office is using their March 2011 baseline rather than the January 2011 baseline when they assume that the Bush tax cuts will expire at the end of 2012.

This means that the tax cuts will not count as savings with regard to discretionary spending. In other words, the tax cuts expiring won’t give anybody any credit toward anything except a tax increase.

If those tax cuts were extended, the Congressional Budget Office would treat those tax cuts as if they added $5 trillion more to the national debt. In reality, these tax cuts would actually generate new revenue by leaving the money in the hands of the American people who would spend, save and invest it.

The tax cuts were initiated after 9/11 to bolster confidence in the economy by getting the money moving again and raising the revenue rather than raising the taxes.

From 2001 to 2003 President Bush lowered the lowest bracket from 15% down to 10% and raised the threshold from about $46,000 to $58,000 before you jumped from a 15% bracket up to a 25% bracket. By every objective measurement, during this time the government raised more tax revenue that if they had kept the tax rates high and raised taxes further.

When these Bush tax cuts expire, taxes will go up and it will hinder the economy rather than stimulate it.

The White House sees the expiration of these Bush era tax cuts as a powerful tool to influence congressional talks about deficit reduction measures. By threatening to veto any attempt to extend the tax cuts, especially for the wealthiest Americans, the president hopes to exert greater control over reforming the U.S. tax code in order to raise taxes on the rich.

The talk in Washington D.C. is to tax married couples making over $250,000 per year at a tax rate that’s nearly 20% higher than what they currently pay. Instead of being taxed at 43% their tax rate will shoot up to 62.5%.

Even single tax filers are wearing a target with those who earn $125,000 or more a year will be facing possible tax rates of 60% or higher.

The philosophy of raising taxes by going after the rich out of a sense that “they can afford it” is going to cause the economy to take several steps backwards. Unemployment will not go down. We cannot spend our way out of this crisis.

Taxes Are Only One Third of The Coming Triple Whammy

Taxes are heading up. Even, if by some miracle, the Bush tax cuts are extended, there are still plenty of unfunded liabilities that will necessitate raising our taxes some other way. Medicare and Social Security alone account for nearly $110 trillion worth of obligations that are owed to their intended recipients.

The biggest dangers of the next decade are that taxes are going up, inflation will continue to rise because the government has been printing mass amounts of money, and market volatility will continue.

The specter of double digit inflation is a daunting one for those who remember the high inflation of the early 1980s. Yet during that era, by using Missed Fortune strategies, those who linked their returns to the things that inflate were earning 15.5% on conservative, tax-free investments.

When inflation and interest rates are low, these same strategies can have you earning rates of 8-9% tax-free.

Market uncertainty over the past decade has spooked those people who, starting in 2001, went nearly 3 years on a down market and were just about to break even when the bottom fell out again in 2008. Most investors have lost nearly 40% of their IRAs and 401(k)s and their confidence is shaken.  The good news is that there’s a far better way to grow your serious money.

By taking ownership of your future, you can eliminate the triple whammy of the coming decade.

Is your serious money ready to weather the almost certain prospect of higher taxes? Could you maintain your standard of living when a 5% rate of inflation causes the cost of living to double every 15 years? Is your money positioned to remain safe when the market declines and to grow whenever the market grows?

Once you understand and live the Missed Fortune strategies, your answer will be a confident “Yes!”

Learn more by meeting with a Missed Fortune advisor.

Bonus Missed Fortune E-Book: Baby Boomer Blunders The average Baby Boomer has less than $50,000 accumulated for retirement (which means many have less than that), primarily due to bad habits and having money invested in the wrong places where economic downturns can diminish their nest egg. Download this e-book now at www.babyboomerblunders.com.

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missed fortune super blog itunes 150x150 The Paradox of Increasing Tax Revenues By Lowering TaxesThis week Doug Andrew discussed the following:

Upcoming Free Webinar

Attend our free 90-minute webinar live over the Internet this coming Tuesday, August 9th at 11:00 a.m. pacific (12:00 p.m. mountain, 1:00 p.m. central, 2:00 p.m. eastern), and again at 6:30 p.m. pacific (7:30 mountain, 8:30 central, 9:30 eastern). The topic is “True Asset and Wealth Optimization.” You’ll learn how to choose the right investments for liquidity, safety, rate of return and tax benefits.

Click Here to Register Now

All attendees receive a bonus hardcover copy of Last Chance Millionaire, Doug Andrew’s New York Times best-selling book.

The Secret To Increasing Tax Revenues: Lower the Tax Rates

In all the talk about the debt ceiling situation, there still isn’t broad recognition of the fact that our nation faces a spending problem rather than a revenue problem.

If the Bush tax cuts were extended, the Congressional Budget Office would still claim that’s costing up to $5 trillion. But tax cuts generate new revenue. The reason President Bush instituted the tax cuts in the first place was when the economy was in a tailspin following the 9/11 attacks.

Bush felt that it was better to raise the revenue that was being taxed rather than raising the taxes. When we face lean times, we tighten our belts and increase our income while decreasing our outgo.

Government always seems to be the last ones to cut back on spending in difficult times.

After 9/11 President Bush realized that the best thing to raise tax revenue for social programs was a tax decrease. He lowered the lowest bracket from 15% to 10% and he raised the threshold from about $46,000 to $57,000 before you jumped from a 15% bracket to a 28% bracket.

By all accounts, the government raised more tax revenue by getting cash flowing than if they had kept taxes high and raised them further.

When the Bush tax cuts expire at the end of 2012, higher taxes are going to hinder growth rather than help it.

The White House has one important tool to influence Congress on budget matters, and that’s the prospect of extending the Bush tax cuts beyond next year. There’s already a lot of talk about “going after the rich” in Washington D.C. these days so higher taxes are looking very likely.

After $5 trillion of increased federal debt, the unemployment rate is still sitting above 9% despite all the stimulus spending that was supposed to put the economy back on track.

This won’t help the economy or unemployment.

The 3 Challenges Your Nest Egg Will Face In the Next Decade

One way or another we’re likely to see taxes go up. Even if the Bush tax cuts are extended, there are still over $110 trillion of unfunded liabilities like Social Security and Medicare.

When government needs more revenue, it’s a safe bet that they’ll be raising our taxes in any number of ways. If your retirement nest egg is tax-deferred, it’s highly likely that those higher tax rates will deplete your money faster than you can imagine.

But higher taxes are only one of the challenges we’re likely to face over the next decade.

Inflation is also likely to sneak up from it’s usual 3% to more like 5, 6, 7 or even 10% thanks to the government printing money virtually nonstop. Inflation will raise the cost of living and that too will increase the speed with which your retirement money is spent.

Market uncertainty is the third danger we face just like in the last decade where many people lost roughly 39% of the value of their IRAs and 401(k)s and still haven’t broken even. Even a million dollar nest egg isn’t going to cut it where we’re headed in this country.

The good news is that strategies exist that will allow you to take ownership of your future and eliminate the dangers of market volatility, inflation and higher taxes.

When your money accumulates in tax free vehicle that’s grandfathered into the IRS code, you don’t have to worry higher taxes eating up your nest egg. When you tie your return to those things that inflate during inflationary periods, your money continues to grow.

And when you position your serious money to grow when the market grows and to remain safe when the market falls, market volatility is no longer a threat to your wealth.

You have options when you understand these strategies.

Learn more by meeting with a Missed Fortune advisor.

Bonus Missed Fortune E-Book: Baby Boomer Blunders The average Baby Boomer has less than $50,000 accumulated for retirement (which means many have less than that), primarily due to bad habits and having money invested in the wrong places where economic downturns can diminish their nest egg. Download this e-book now at www.babyboomerblunders.com.

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missed fortune super blog itunes 150x150 The Economic Realities That Can No Longer Be IgnoredThis week Doug Andrew discussed the following:

Upcoming Free Webinar

Attend our free 90-minute webinar live over the Internet this coming Tuesday, July 12th at 11:00 a.m. pacific (12:00 p.m. mountain, 1:00 p.m. central, 2:00 p.m. eastern), and again at 6:30 p.m. pacific (7:30 mountain, 8:30 central, 9:30 eastern). The topic is “True Asset and Wealth Optimization.” You’ll learn how to choose the right investments for liquidity, safety, rate of return and tax benefits.

Click Here to Register Now

All attendees receive a bonus hardcover copy of Last Chance Millionaire, Doug Andrew’s New York Times best-selling book.

Americans Aren’t Feeling So Optimistic These Days

U.S. voters continue to be largely pessimistic about the country’s future.  We need to be able to think about a bigger and brighter future, but we’re not feeling that way.  The latest Rasmussen Reports national telephone survey of likely voters shows that 46% of those surveyed think America’s best days are in the past.

37% say they believe that America’s best days are still ahead.  And 16% say they’re not sure.

Optimism about the nation’s future has generally been in the mid to high 3os for most of the Obama presidency.  With a number of economic indicators hitting new lows in recent days, it’s not surprising that voters continue to favor a government with less services and lower taxes.

65% say they’d favor a smaller government over one with more services and higher taxes.

David Walker, the former comptroller for the General Accountability Office, recently resigned because he was not allowed to tell the American public the truth about the escalating national debt.  In 2007 it was at $9 trillion and he said we had nearly $63 trillion in unfunded liabilities including Medicare and Social Security that we don’t have money in our coffers to pay.

In October 2009 our government was operating totally in the red for nearly a year and three months until January of 2011 when Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid announced that the government was finally solvent enough to cover what it was paying out in benefits again.

Both parties say we need to cut at least $4 trillion over the next 10 years, but David Walker says that more will be required to keep the government solvent.

He says we can’t do that without both spending cuts and tax increases.  Walker says first we’ll need to make several billion dollars in cuts immediately in discretionary spending.   Next he says we’ll need to cut $100 billion in the 2012-2013 budget.

The third and final part of his debt remedy deal is to institute budget controls with pay-as-you-go requirements, annual spending caps and specific debt to GDP targets.  If the targets aren’t hit by late 2013, buzzers would sound, lights would flash and the deal would trigger automatic draconian spending cuts and higher taxes.

Every tax payer in this country should be paying very close attention.  An economic reality check is getting closer.

What To Expect In the Next Decade

Dave Ramsey recently pointed out that Americans now have more in their 401(k) than they did in October of 2007 when everything fell apart.  There are actually two reasons for that.

Number one, people have added money to their 401(k) over the past 4 years.  Secondly, if they didn’t add money and their 401(k) was linked to the S&P 500 Index, for instance, over the past 10 years you’ve barely made 2.99% by the end of first quarter 2011.

Contrast that with people who’ve followed the Missed Fortune strategies during this last ten years experienced predictable, safe tax-free growth of 7.23% growth and have doubled their money from where they started.

Market uncertainty will be a part of the next decade as well.  Wall Street has lost more than 45% of the typical investor’s money twice in the last decade.  The typical equity mutual fund investor has only averaged a 3.83% return for the past 8 years.

There is a much better way to put your serious money to work.

With a Missed Fortune strategy like Indexing, you don’t lose a dime when the market goes down and you start earning again the second the market goes up.  With a Missed Fortune strategy like linking your returns to those things that inflate, inflation helps you rather than hurts you.

And with the Missed Fortune strategy of accumulating your money in a tax free vehicle, you avoid the higher taxes that are surely on the way.

Learn how to put these strategies to work for you. Talk to a Missed Fortune advisor today.

Bonus Missed Fortune E-Book: Baby Boomer Blunders The average Baby Boomer has less than $50,000 accumulated for retirement (which means many have less than that), primarily due to bad habits and having money invested in the wrong places where economic downturns can diminish their nest egg. Download this e-book now at www.babyboomerblunders.com.

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missed fortune super blog itunes 150x150 Taking On Debt Like a Ship Taking On WaterThis week Doug Andrew discussed the following:

Upcoming Free Webinar

Attend our free 90-minute webinar live over the Internet this coming Tuesday, May 31st at 11:00 a.m. pacific (12:00 p.m. mountain, 1:00 p.m. central, 2:00 p.m. eastern), and again at 6:30 p.m. pacific (7:30 mountain, 8:30 central, 9:30 eastern). The topic is “True Asset and Wealth Optimization.” You’ll learn how to choose the right investments for liquidity, safety, rate of return and tax benefits.

Click Here to Register Now

All attendees receive a bonus hardcover copy of Last Chance Millionaire, Doug Andrew’s New York Times best-selling book.

Like a Ship Taking On Water

Our national ship is taking on a lot of water in the form of debt. It’s easy to see the waterline is rising. This is due to misguided management in the financial industry coupled with addictive government deficit spending.

National and corporate leaders have done what every Ponzi scheme architect has done by bringing in new money to cover for old promises.

Take Social Security for example. If this program didn’t bring in new money to cover current recipients income it would quickly go bankrupt.

Baby boomers are starting to retire and the workforce is shrinking. When Social Security was started, there were 15 workers contributing for every one recipient. But those numbers have shifted to where we now have 3 or 4 workers for every recipient of Social Security.

It won’t be long before we’re down to 2 workers for every recipient and government will have to take more and more of our income to pay out what it has promised.

Social Security debt is at $62 trillion. To get the sense of how much money that is, $1 trillion dollar bills lined up end to end would reach from here to the moon and back 200 times.

This means that, after adjusting for inflation, the federal government has obligated itself to paying more than $100 trillion that it has not collected from by withholding from American workers paychecks.

The government doesn’t have the money to cover its expenses and the only way it can get it is by withdrawing money from our paychecks each month or by printing more money–causing inflation.

The bottom line is we’re going to have more and more people in the wagon and fewer and fewer workers pulling.

The day of reckoning could come as soon as the next 10-15 years. Or it could be partially happening now.

The government has already been collecting less in Social Security than it has been paying from October of 2009 to January of 2011.

If solvency is defined as barely bringing in enough to cover what is paid out, we’re in big trouble.

More Trouble On the Horizon

Medicare is six time larger in terms of unfunded obligations according to former U.S. Accountability Office comptroller David Walker.

With current figures it would require $700,000 from every full time working individual in America in order to cover the huge social security and medicare liability.

The U.S. national debt is over $14.3 trillion and the interest alone accrues at just under 41 billion dollars an hour.

In an article outlining 3 ways your Social Security payments are already being cut by Alicia Manelle says, “Lost in the debate is the fact that even under current law, Social Security will provide less retirement income relative to previous earnings than it does today.”

Social Security may no longer be the mainstay of the retirement system for many people.

There are 3 main issues that are fast approaching.

1. The retirement age is going to be extended from 65 to 67 depending upon when you turn 65.

2. The increase in Medicare premiums from 5% to 12%.

3. The taxation of Social Security benefits.

These dangers should be clear to you by now.

Taxes are going to go up. Inflation will decrease the purchasing power of the dollar. And market volatility will continue for the foreseeable future.

Those who have learned and applied Missed Fortune Strategies have learned how to protect their serious retirement money from rising taxes, inflation and market uncertainty.

They can sleep soundly at night knowing that their money is accumulating tax free, not tax deferred. Their returns are linked to those things that inflate so inflation becomes a help and not a hindrance.

They’ve repositioned their serious cash to participate in any upside the market may experience without risking their principal in the market.

The Missed Fortune strategies have worked for them for nearly 3 decades. They will work for you. Contact a Missed Fortune advisor to learn how.

Bonus Missed Fortune E-Book: Baby Boomer Blunders The average Baby Boomer has less than $50,000 accumulated for retirement (which means many have less than that), primarily due to bad habits and having money invested in the wrong places where economic downturns can diminish their nest egg. Download this e-book now at www.babyboomerblunders.com.

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missed fortune super blog itunes 150x150 Countering The Coming Triple Whammy This week Doug Andrew discussed the following:

Upcoming Free Webinar

Attend our free 90-minute webinar live over the Internet this coming Tuesday, May 10th at 11:00 a.m. pacific (12:00 p.m. mountain, 1:00 p.m. central, 2:00 p.m. eastern), and again at 6:30 p.m. pacific (7:30 mountain, 8:30 central, 9:30 eastern). The topic is “True Asset and Wealth Optimization.” You’ll learn how to choose the right investments for liquidity, safety, rate of return and tax benefits.

Click Here to Register Now

All attendees receive a bonus hardcover copy of Last Chance Millionaire, Doug Andrew’s New York Times best-selling book.

Why Taxes Must Go Up

Taxes will be rising. The writing is on the wall.

Federal debt has gone from $9 trillion up to $14 trillion in the last 5 years alone.

According to an article by Curtis Dubay of the Heritage Foundation, Congress would need to more than double income tax collections just to cover the deficit and the debt that we’ve added in the last 5 years.

He says that income tax revenue would have to increase over 144% just to cover the overspending that’s already taken place.

If Congress were to only tax those making over $250,000 per year, which the president has advocated, their top tax rates would have to rise to levels of 132% and 142%.

Since it’s not possible to tax above 100%, these are literally impossible tax levels.

According to the Congressional Budget Office, if the president’s 2012 budget is enacted, interest payments alone will total $931 billion in 2021.  That’s 20% of all tax receipts.

95% of all tax revenues would be spoken for by mandatory entitlement programs before Congress could even consider allocating for defense or any other essential function of government.

Raising taxes will not solve the problem as long as spending continues unchecked.

Tax rates would have to be raised perpetually to keep pace with this.  This is why taxes will be going up.

The Coming Triple Whammy

In most decades, you’ll have 7 years of market growth and 3 years of market decline.  If you had your money in the market during the last decade, you experienced a total of 5 down years, so your 401(k) or IRA is already behind the curve.

Most Americans are only up an average of 2.99% over the last decade thanks to market uncertainty.  This is just one facet of the three-pronged challenge before us.

We also have taxes almost certainly going higher when the Bush tax cuts expire in 2012.

And finally, we have the specter of inflation on the horizon.

So how do we deal with this triple whammy?

To protect yourself from rising tax rates, you must be able to employ strategies that have been part of the Internal Revenue Code for decades.  These strategies enable you to accumulate, access and transfer your money tax free.

Instead of deferring your taxes to a future time when taxes are going up, you set money aside where it will be tax free now and in the future.

Inflation can be countered by linking your return to those things that go up when there is inflation.  This means inflation helps rather than hinders you.

The third danger of market volatility can be nullified by using Missed Fortune strategies that index your money to the market without having to risk your money in the market.  In those years that the market grows, your money grows.  In those years that the market goes down, you don’t lose your money.

The window of opportunity is short, but it’s open right now.  This is the time to reposition your money in order to counter the triple whammy of taxes, inflation and market uncertainty.

Visit with a Missed Fortune advisor and take control of your financial future.

Bonus Missed Fortune E-Book: Baby Boomer Blunders The average Baby Boomer has less than $50,000 accumulated for retirement (which means many have less than that), primarily due to bad habits and having money invested in the wrong places where economic downturns can diminish their nest egg. Download this e-book now at www.babyboomerblunders.com.

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missed fortune super blog itunes 150x150 Dont Let Your Retirement Funds Run DryThis week Doug Andrew discussed the following:

Upcoming Free Webinar

Attend our free 90-minute webinar live over the Internet this coming Tuesday, March 1st at 11:00 a.m. pacific (12:00 p.m. mountain, 1:00 p.m. central, 2:00 p.m. eastern), and again at 6:30 p.m. pacific (7:30 mountain, 8:30 central, 9:30 eastern).

The topic is “True Asset and Wealth Optimization.” You’ll learn equity management and how to choose the right investments for liquidity, safety, rate of return and tax benefits.

Click Here to Register Now

All attendees receive a bonus hardcover copy of Last Chance Millionaire, Doug Andrew’s New York Times best-selling book.

Not Enough in Qualified Plans

A recent Wall Street Journal article, “Retiring Boomers Find 401(k) Plans Fall Short,” noted that the 401(k) generation is beginning to retire, and the result isn’t a pretty sight.

It said that the median household headed by a person age 60 to 62 with a 401(k) has less than one-quarter of what’s needed in that account to maintain his standard of living in retirement.

That’s according to data compiled by the Federal Reserve and analyzed by the Center for Retirement Research at Boston College.

Even counting Social Security, pensions and other savings, most 401(k) participants appear to have far too little savings for the long haul.

People are expecting to work longer and they feel like they’ve lost their future. In 2008, the average American had lost as much as 31 percent in the value of their IRAs and 401(k)s.

By the end of the year, many had lost as much as 50 percent and still haven’t earned it back yet.

In 30 years, 401(k)s have gone from a small program to a multi-trillion dollar industry. But they’re not what we thought they were.

Recently, Vanguard has started suggesting that workers contribute 12 to 15 percent —including employer contribution—into their 401(k)s because of the stock market’s weak returns and uncertainty about Medicare and Social Security.

The answer isn’t socking away two, three or even six times more money.

I can prove it to you.

Make Your Money Work For You

You shouldn’t leave your money in tax-deferred plans, only to watch it erode due to taxes and inflation down the road.

Most people don’t understand that even a $1 million nest egg won’t get you very far 30 years from now.

You have to break free of the blunders that are holding you back. These are blunders like thinking that IRAs and 401(k)s are the best ways to save for retirement, or thinking you’re going to be in a lower tax bracket when you retire.

Taxes will go up and inflation is just around the corner.

The U.S. Congressional Budget Office predicts that by mid-century, most middle-income Americans will be paying 50 to 60 percent of their earnings in taxes. That’s because of our tremendous debt and Social Security.

The folks who follow the Missed Fortune strategies didn’t lose a dime in their retirement accounts in 2008. In fact, they doubled their money in the last 10 years.

Using conservative strategies, such as indexing, I’ve averaged about 8.2 percent. When inflation happens, I tie my funds to the things that are inflating.

Isn’t it time you converted your IRAs and 401(k)s to better strategies? Isn’t it time you secured a brighter and more prosperous tomorrow?

Meet with a Missed Fortune advisor to get started planning your future.

Bonus Missed Fortune E-Book: Baby Boomer Blunders

The average Baby Boomer has less than $50,000 accumulated for retirement (which means many have less than that), primarily due to bad habits and having money invested in the wrong places where economic downturns can diminish their nest egg.

Download this e-book now at www.babyboomerblunders.com.

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