johnsan, I can't...don't know where to!Quote:
Originally Posted by johnsan
To all others who have requested the link - done! :smiley:
/Karin
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johnsan, I can't...don't know where to!Quote:
Originally Posted by johnsan
To all others who have requested the link - done! :smiley:
/Karin
Hi Karinc,
Please send me the link to [email protected]
Thanks for your help
svraman
Hi Karinc,
Please send me the link to [email protected]
Thank you,
Frank
Please e-mail me the link. Thank you.
[email protected]
Hey this sounds really interesting. Please send the information to [email protected]
Please send me the insurance info at [email protected]
Thanks Karen
Birgir
Hmm. Sounds good. Can you forward me the info. [email protected].
Many thanks.
Hi Karinc,
Please send me the link to [email protected]
Thanks for your help
Cero
Sent to everybody that asked!:wink:
Karin
Though I didn't get involved with it in the past but I heard that from a former colleague, as a former broker I can confirm that such a , I forgot the exact description, "secondary insurance market" does exist, primarily in the UK and US, and maybe in some parts of Europe known as Germany e.g. but is almost a secret and the public exposure is near zero.
Karin, dear, would you please send me your link to my email addy: senshi 'at' safe-mail.net
I'd like to take a closer look at it and please anyone if you have any DD done please share. How I said this market really exists and the returns that can be achieved are actually quite high from what I recall. My idea is that perhaps wealthy private banking clientele may happen to be introduced to this type of investment/insurance or by a UK insurance company that has an office in your country. But then surely NOT with such incredible returns! *lol* I think dealing directly with the source will let you get a bigger chunk of the pie but it has to be thoroughly checked if this company doing that is fully legit and has a proven track record as $35 to me seems rather low for such a return.
Also I have to read and more important to understand the terms, for now I don't think that this company which owns your insurance (i.e. is beneficiary) would be keen to wait 30-40 years (I'm still young!) to receive its rewards. They pay up to US$ 120,000 to receive $200,000 decades later? Can't be, cause only the inflation would have eaten up everything and then they would make a loss. My idea is that they must trade those papers like hell on the "Secondary Market", use those as longterm "riskless" assets in order to maybe to be able to trade on margin (e.g. 12:1) with other lucrative (unknown to the public) investments or receive/issue loans on a margin like banks do, for example they have insurance policies worth 1 Million US$ and receive from banks a credit line of 12 Million US$ to trade bonds or better yet, participate in riskless Private Placement Opps with darn high yields as such bank programs require funds of 10 Million+ to get a seat. However, this is only my opinion.