About this episode
In 1877, Cornelius Vanderbilt died as the richest man in America — worth $105 million (over $2 billion today). Less than 50 years later, at a Vanderbilt family reunion, not a single millionaire remained.The Rockefellers? Still one of the most powerful family dynasties on the planet.Same era. Same kind of entrepreneurial wealth. Completely different outcomes.So what did the Rockefellers know that the Vanderbilts didn't?It wasn't how they made money. It was how they kept it.In this episode of The Wealth Warehouse Podcast, David Befort and Paul Fugere break down one of the most foundational wealth-building lessons you'll ever hear — and most people will never learn it because they're too busy spending what they earn.Here's the hard truth: "The worst thing you could possibly do is that money that you work, you sweat, you bleed for — don't spend it."The Vanderbilts liquidated everything. They spent. They built mansions. They became socialites. They had a great time — for about two generations. Then it was gone.The Rockefellers? They built trusts. They used permanent life insurance. They practiced a simple but powerful principle: borrow against your money, don't spend it. Buy. Borrow. Die. The loan gets repaid by the death benefit. The wealth stays in the family. Forever.And here's the part that might change the way you think about every dollar in your pocket right now:You don't have to be a Rockefeller to use the Rockefeller method.Dave and Paul walk you through exactly how this works in the real world — with real clients making real decisions right now:A military pilot and UPS aviator who understood this principle immediately and structured his policy to buy his next home without ever spending his own cashA client sitting on $50,000 who's wrestling with whether to use it as a down payment — and why Dave says that could be one of the most expensive decisions he ever makesWhy Paul is pulling equity out of his own home and flowing it into a system where he controls it — not the bank, not the walls of a house, not a 401k he can't touch without penalty"If you have enough cash to solve a problem, you don't have a problem."Most people think they only have two choices with their money: save it or spend it. Dave and Paul flip that completely on its head.Your dollar is already working in more than one place at a time. Banks are using it. Hedge funds are using it. The DTC is leveraging your 401k shares while you're not looking. The question is — are you ge