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  • 6 months ago
Trained protection dogs are gaining popularity as an elite form of home security; however, experts caution that not all dogs marketed as “trained” are capable of providing real-world protection, according to Benzinga. The global protection dog industry was valued at $1.2 billion in 2024, and buyers are advised to approach purchases with the same scrutiny as they would for home security systems. According to Alex Bois, managing director of Texas-based Canine Protection International, many dogs featured on social media are sport-trained performers, not protectors. CPI sells only 24 dogs per year, each costing over six figures, and is raised for off-leash protection in family settings. Buyers should visit training facilities, observe dogs in off-leash environments, and avoid sellers who use flashy marketing, conceal training methods, or make unrealistic claims.

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00:00It's Benzinga, bringing Wall Street to Main Street.
00:02Trained protection dogs are gaining popularity as an elite form of home security,
00:06but experts caution that not all dogs marketed as trained are capable of real-world protection,
00:10according to Benzinga.
00:12The global protection dog industry was valued at $1.2 billion in 2024,
00:16and buyers are urged to approach purchases with the same scrutiny as home security systems.
00:21According to Alex Boyce, managing director of Texas-based Canine Protection International,
00:25many dogs featured on social media are sport trade performers, not protectors.
00:30CPI sells only 24 dogs per year, each costing over six figures,
00:35and raised for off-leach protection in family settings.
00:38Buyers should visit trading facilities, observe off-leach behavior,
00:41and avoid sellers who use flashy marketing, hide trading methods, or make unrealistic claims.
00:46For all things money, visit Benzinga.com.
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