Be Your Own Bank: Secrets Every Saver Needs Now

Be Your Own Bank: Secrets Every Saver Needs Now

Note: This article originally appeared on https://themoneyadvantage.com

If you want to get your money to do the most, learn these essential keys to be your own bank. (NOTE: "be your own bank" does not mean that you are literally a bank or creating a bank, rather we mean emulating the idea of banking.)

Instead of being a saver who's a star-student customer of the bank, this is how you supercharge your savings to control capital, earn interest, and increase your cash flow as you model the banking system - the most profitable business model in the world.

So if you want to keep your money at your disposal and earn maximum returns at the same time (without having to put your money in a position of risk), check out podcast episode right now!

In this podcast episode, you'll discover the three simple steps to be your own bank:

  • 1: Keep cash reserves
  • 2: Own the reservoir
  • 3: Master the art of arbitrage

Where Does Being Your Own Bank fit into the Cash Flow System?

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Being your own bank is a process of managing your cash flow so that you keep and control as much of your money as possible. This system is better known as Privatized Banking, and is one step in your journey to time and money freedom.

That’s why we’ve developed the 3-step Business Owner’s Cash Flow System as your roadmap to go from just surviving, to a life of significance, purpose, and financial freedom. 

The first stage is the foundation. You first keep more of the money you make by fixing money leaks, becoming more efficient and profitable. 

Then, you protect your money with insurance and legal protection and Privatized Banking

Finally, you put your money to work, increasing your income with cash-flowing assets.

Be Your Own Bank Step #1 - Keep Cash Reserves

Why do we use the banking system? What do we want it to do for us?

As a customer of the bank, you put your money in the bank for safekeeping, between uses.

If you shift your lens and look at banking from the bank's perspective, you'll quickly learn why they're the most profitable business model in the world.

The banker stores your cash and pays you for the use of that cash.

Because the banker stores cash, that capital offers opportunities to make loans that will be repaid at interest. This means that because the bank has capital reserves, they have opportunities to put their money to work.

Check out our article on increasing your cash flow by modeling the bank to see what benefits the bank gets.

So how can you store capital, so you can get the banker's benefits?

You have to start by keeping cash reserves. The way to accomplish this is to pay yourself first.

True savings is capital that you control.

What do we mean by control? This leads us to step #2.

Be Your Own Bank Step #2 - Own The Reservoir

The easiest way to see if you are holding your cash where you have control is to ask who is getting the most use of that capital? Who gets the guarantees, earns the interest and cash flow, and has access to use that money? Spoiler alert: usually, it's another person, bank, or financial institution.

You can think of all the money you earn flowing into your own reservoir. But, most often, it doesn't stay in your own reservoir for long.

When you spend it, either through your lifestyle, by making loan payments, taxes, or even saving where someone other than you has control of your money, your dollars flow out of your reservoir into someone else's.

Your Money That's Not In a Reservoir You Own

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For example, when you make your mortgage payment, that check leaves your reservoir and enters the mortgage company's reservoir. They now can use that capital. Even if you think of the principle payment as going into your equity, with an outstanding mortgage, the bank owns your home, even though you have the keys. You'd still need their permission to use that capital, so it's not in a reservoir you control.

When you pay the grocer, you transfer your cash to their ownership, and they now get to use that cash.

Paying taxes puts your dollars in the reservoir of the IRS, who now gets the most use out of that capital.

And when you invest your dollars, most often, you put your money in the control of a financial institution.

Even savings is not exempt. If you save in the bank, the bank now has the use of that money to earn a return with that cash.

The only way to own the reservoir is to have ownership rights to get to use it. That means you have it at your disposal and still earn a maximum return at the same time, while maintaining value without loss.

In other words, you're in control when you have maximum safety, liquidity, and growth.

The Ideal Reservoir You Own

You can be your own bank and own the reservoir with the Infinite Banking Concept, a strategy of using high cash value whole life insurance with a mutual company.

Nelson Nash recognized this power of specially designed life insurance, created the Infinite Banking Concept, and taught others how to design policies to maximize high cash value and long-term growth.

So how do you own the reservoir with a participating whole life policy?

The premiums you put into the policy are like cash deposits into your own banking system. The cash value is a store of capital that won't drop in value. Safety, check.

You can access your cash value by taking a loan against your policy, so you get use of that money. Liquidity, check. 

As a policy owner, you own the company and participate in the earnings through dividends. Because of dividends, plus guaranteed interest growth, your long-term internal rate of return is far more competitive than any other tool to store your reserves.

Whole life insurance gives you the most safety, liquidity, and growth compared to other places to store your savings.

And, on top of that, your reserves continue earning uninterrupted compound interest, even while you use that same money outside your policy to earn a secondary, external rate of return. Competitive, uninterrupted growth, a big, hearty CHECK.

All these benefits mean that your policy is indeed a reservoir you control.

But just putting your money into life insurance policy won't get you the banker's benefits. You have to use your cash value, not just hold it. The way to put your cash value to work is by mastering the art of arbitrage.

Be Your Own Bank Step #3 - Master The Art Of Arbitrage

Banks don't just take your deposits, hold them forever, and wait around for you to come take your money out. For them, that would be a losing proposition. After all, remember, they are paying you interest to store your capital in their vault.

The engine of banking really comes from their mastery of arbitrage.

Simply stated, banks acquire capital at a low cost, and deploy it to earn more than their cost of capital.

If the bank pays 1% on deposits, they turn around and create loans at 5%. (Because of fractional reserve banking, this is an even sweeter deal, because they can hold one dollar in reserves, and create nine more dollars to lend out.)

If it costs the bank one cent to make five cents, that's a 400% return! (Profit/cost = $0.04/$0.01 = 400%)

Now think about this. Banks lend out money that's highly likely to be repaid. They make loans and extend credit for businesses, mortgages, and cars to financially stable people. That's how they lower their risk and increase their returns.

To model the bank and use arbitrage, you want to put your money to work earning more than your cost of capital.

Find profitable investments you know and control, with a high likelihood of payment.

If a life insurance loan costs you 5% interest, and you can earn 12% in a real estate investment, your arbitrage is 140%. And this is the external rate of return, on top of the internal return your already earning inside the life insurance policy itself.

The Bottom Line for Every Saver

If you like to skim, here's the bottom line:

  • Be your own bank by owning and controlling capital
  • Earn compound interest
  • Start by maximizing the cash you keep and storing it in a better bank with mutual whole life insurance
  • Use arbitrage (leverage) to earn higher rates of return

By the way, if you're one of those savers who is serious about learning how to put this whole process on steroids, get the Investor's Quick and Easy Guide to Privatized Banking: How to Earn a Return in 2 Places at the Same Time, with the Same Money, so you can keep your money available and earn maximum returns at the same time and get your money to do the most effortlessly... without having to put your money in a position of risk!

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Success leaves clues. Model the successful few, not the crowd, and build a life and business you love.



Lucas Marshall

CEO & Co-Founder at The Money Advantage

4 年

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