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This NerdWallet Smart Money episode features a powerful two-part exploration of first-generation wealth building. In the first half, Grace Vandecruze, founder and managing director at Grace Global Capital LLC, shares her inspiring journey from homelessness to financial success, offering practical strategies for building generational wealth. (03:24) The second half addresses a listener's urgent question about rapidly building emergency savings before a potential nonprofit job loss in 2026, with expert advice from personal finance writer Kim Palmer on fast-tracking financial security.
Grace is the founder and managing director at Grace Global Capital LLC, a consulting firm providing M&A financial advisory, restructuring, and valuation services to insurance executives, boards, and financial regulators since 2006. She holds degrees from Pace University in accounting and an MBA from Wharton Business School, and is also a licensed sailor who developed her love for sailing through client relationships in the insurance industry.
Elizabeth is a co-host of the NerdWallet Smart Money Podcast who focuses on helping ambitious professionals make smarter financial decisions and build wealth.
Kim is a personal finance writer at NerdWallet who specializes in budgeting strategies, emergency fund building, and helping people navigate irregular income situations. She previously ran a successful Etsy shop called Palmer's Planners for 3-5 years, creating money planners for different life stages.
Grace emphasizes that first-generation wealth builders must develop strong boundaries when family members ask for money, particularly when those requests come from unhealthy financial mindsets. (15:02) She explains that giving money to family members who haven't developed financial responsibility is "like putting Band-Aid on a cancer - it never ends." The key insight is recognizing that saying no protects both your wealth-building journey and helps family members develop their own financial agency. Grace recommends not disclosing your income to family and friends, noting that "wealth is silent" while "poor is noisy."
Grace passionately advocates for young people to harness compound interest, calling it "the eighth wonder of the world" as Einstein described it. (04:22) She shares that her own investments from her 30s have generated returns of 3000-5000%, demonstrating the incredible power of starting early. The practical application involves consistently investing in the stock market through both employer 401k plans and personal investment accounts, allowing time to work in your favor rather than against you.
Grace implemented a disciplined approach to wealth building by living exclusively off her regular salary while using bonuses strategically. (13:02) Initially, she used bonuses to eliminate her six-figure student loan debt within four years, then redirected bonus money toward investments and real estate purchases. This strategy prevents lifestyle inflation and ensures that unexpected income directly contributes to wealth building rather than increased spending.
Kim Palmer advises that when rapidly building emergency savings, focus on variable expenses like food, entertainment, and personal care rather than fixed costs like housing or loan payments. (28:04) She specifically recommends meal planning, using grocery loyalty programs, and implementing a "no shopping month" challenge to quickly free up cash. The listener's situation revealed a $1,100 monthly spending gap that needed immediate attention through strategic expense reduction.
Grace structures her generational wealth planning with a 100-year timeline, focusing on three key pillars: legal documentation (wills, power of attorney), family financial education conversations, and comprehensive insurance coverage. (20:21) She emphasizes that wealth transfer fails without proper legal frameworks and financial literacy education for inheritors. Grace's mission extends beyond personal wealth to helping one billion more people become insured, recognizing insurance as fundamental to wealth protection and legacy building.