Rich people do not save money.
They move it.
The difference between wealthy people and everyone else is not how much they earn.
It is how many times they use each dollar.
This concept is called capital velocity.
Here is how it works.
You deposit $10,000 at your bank.
They pay you 0.5% interest.
Then they turn around and lend that same $10,000 to someone else at 7%.
Your money just worked twice.
The bank kept the profit.
Now imagine you could do the same thing.
You build cash value inside a properly structured life insurance policy. (Whole life or IUL)
You borrow against it through a policy loan.
You take that loan and put it into a business, a rental property, or an investment.
Here is the part most people miss.
Your cash value keeps growing as if you never touched it.
The loan is not a withdrawal. It is collateral.
So your money is now working in two places at the same time.
That is velocity.
A 401(k) charges you penalties and taxes if you pull money out early.
A savings account stops earning interest the moment you withdraw.
A policy loan does none of that.
Your cash value keeps compounding uninterrupted.
This is the exact strategy banks have used for over 100 years.
They own over $205 billion in life insurance policies.
Bank of America alone holds $25 billion.
They do not do this for the death benefit.
They do it for the velocity.
I put together a free guide showing an IUL versus a 401k so you guys can compare them side by side. Check it out here.
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