Gen Z, RichTok, and the Race for Financial Independence: Why Young Investors Are Getting Their Money Advice From Social Media

Gen z richtok lifestyle

A new Fortune deep dive reveals something older generations may find surprising: more than half of Gen Z investors say they entered the stock market because of social media. Not textbooks. Not traditional advisors. TikTok, Instagram, YouTube, and the viral world of #RichTok.

The study—part of a five-year survey of 300,000 people by the Oliver Wyman Forum—shows that 55% of Gen Z and 44% of millennials credit social media as the top influence in their decision to start investing. For a generation raised on short videos, curated lifestyles, and algorithm-powered advice, the typical financial advisor in a suit is no longer the go-to.

The Rise of Finance Influencers (and “Funance”)

Creators like Vivian Tu, known as Your Rich BFF, have made investing feel approachable. Tu, with millions of followers across TikTok and Instagram, turns complex financial concepts into digestible, entertaining content—sometimes comparing stock market dynamics to the Kardashians or The Real Housewives.

Then there’s Rebecca Ma, aka Becca Bloom, whose luxury lifestyle content—feeding her cat caviar, filming her designer hauls—draws millions of views. While not a financial educator, her aspirational lifestyle embodies the dream fueling many Gen Z investment decisions: financial independence and the freedom to live big.

According to Fortune’s reporting, the rising pressure to “make it” is real. In 2022, only 18% of people said they felt financial pressure as a marker of success. By 2025, that number jumped to 33%, ballooning even higher among low-income earners and baby boomers nearing retirement.

Gen Z Is Investing Earlier Than Any Generation Before

A World Economic Forum survey found that over half of Gen Z began learning about investing before even entering the workforce—compared to only 20% of Baby Boomers. Nearly a third of Gen Z began investing in college or early adulthood, double the rate of millennials.

The driver? Economic uncertainty. With a shaky job market and pessimism about the future of Social Security, Gen Z is laser-focused on building wealth early and independently. As Natalya Guseva of the World Economic Forum put it, Gen Z increasingly believes they “can’t rely on governments and pensions” the way previous generations did.

AI Is Becoming Gen Z’s Financial Advisor

Younger investors are embracing artificial intelligence at unprecedented levels. Nearly half of participants in the Oliver Wyman survey said they consult AI when investing—up sharply from the previous year.

Interestingly, Gen Z mostly uses AI as a teacher or “sounding board,” not a fully autonomous investor. Many say AI makes them feel more understood than human advisors. And in a revealing trend, Gen Z trusts institutions more when those institutions offer AI-powered tools.

Crypto: The Default Entry Point for Young Investors

While older generations build portfolios of stocks, bonds, and diversified assets, Gen Z leans heavily toward cryptocurrency. According to the WEF survey, crypto represents more than one-third of the portfolios of 71% of Gen Z investors—far higher than any other age group.

The reason isn’t just exposure. Guseva notes that crypto has outperformed traditional finance in marketing and accessibility. Gen Z finds crypto easier to access and even easier to “understand” than stocks or bonds.

This shift highlights a generation eager for high-risk, high-reward opportunities—and skeptical of slow, traditional paths toward wealth.

What This Means for the Future of Financial Education

Gen Z’s hunger for financial literacy is undeniable. They want independence, stability, and options—and they’re turning to creators, AI, and alternative assets to get there. But while social platforms offer speed and entertainment, professionals know that financial literacy built on structure—not virality—is what leads to long-term success.

That’s where institutions like Cameron Academy quietly make a difference. Whether someone is pursuing real estate, finance, mortgages, insurance, or other licensed careers, structured education provides the foundation TikTok alone can’t supply. The new generation wants freedom—and knowledge remains the most powerful shortcut to achieving it.

As Gen Z continues redefining money, markets, and success, one thing is clear: they aren’t waiting for permission. They’re building their futures now—one #RichTok, investment app, and AI-powered decision at a time.

More Articles

Getting licensed or staying ahead in your career can be a journey—but it doesn’t have to be overwhelming. Grab your favorite coffee or tea, take a moment to relax, and browse through our articles. Whether you’re just starting out or renewing your expertise, we’ve got tips, insights, and advice to keep you moving forward. Here’s to your success—one sip and one step at a time!

A Time of Reckoning for Commercial Real Estate: What Professionals Need to Know in 2026

The commercial real estate industry is finally confronting years of delayed financial reality as banks begin calling in billions in troubled loans, pushing office loan delinquencies to record highs. With more than 12 percent of office loans now delinquent and nearly a trillion dollars in commercial and multifamily debt maturing this year, lenders are tightening standards and forcing borrowers to present real data, stronger strategies, and actionable plans. Regional banks face the most risk, while real estate professionals who master data literacy and investment analysis will be best positioned to thrive in this new era.

12 States Leading the Surge in CFP Growth for 2026

CFP professionals are in higher demand than ever, and new data from SmartAsset and the CFP Board shows that some states are becoming hotspots for this booming field. California leads the nation, now home to nearly one in every ten Certified Financial Planners. As Americans seek deeper financial guidance, states with strong economies and growing populations are seeing the fastest rise in licensed advisors—signaling major opportunity for both new and seasoned professionals.

Commercial Real Estate Poised for a Full Recovery in 2026 as Investment Activity Surges

After years of market disruption, commercial real estate is finally showing strong signs of a comeback, with major investment firms projecting 2026 as the year the sector fully stabilizes. New reports from Hines, CBRE, and Colliers point to rising leasing activity, renewed buyer appetite, and a rebound toward pre‑pandemic investment levels. Manhattan is leading the recovery, premium office spaces are dominating demand, and suburban markets are gaining traction—setting the stage for significant opportunities for real estate professionals, investors, and brokers preparing for the next market cycle.

The 2026 Job Market Freeze: Why Hiring Is Stuck and Where the Real Opportunities Are

The 2026 labor market is entering a “low‑hire, low‑fire” freeze—job openings remain above pre‑pandemic levels, yet companies are delaying hiring decisions as they navigate economic uncertainty, tariffs, and shifting immigration policies. Despite the slowdown, major pockets of growth remain, especially in healthcare, construction, civil engineering, and Sunbelt regions. AI is reshaping some industries but replacing very few jobs, with less than 1% of skills at high risk of automation. For professionals willing to adapt, upskill, or shift industries, 2026 offers strategic opportunities—particularly in licensed fields like real estate, mortgage, insurance, and finance, where education and credentials can unlock stability and upward mobility.

Mortgage Rates Hit Three‑Year Low at 6.09%, Opening a Rare Window for Buyers

Mortgage rates slipped to 6.09% this week, marking their lowest point in three years and surprising analysts after strong job numbers. The drop improves affordability for many families and signals a pivotal moment for buyers, investors, and real estate professionals as market conditions cool and stabilization continues into 2026.

AI Proptech Unicorns: How $1B+ Startups Are Transforming Commercial Real Estate in 2026

Artificial intelligence is now the driving force behind the fastest‑growing proptech companies, with AI-native startups claiming the majority of the $16.7 billion invested in real estate technology last year. From tenant communication automation to self‑navigating construction vehicles and AI-powered investor management systems, four new unicorns—EliseAI, Bedrock Robotics, Juniper Square, and Vantaca—are leading a sweeping shift across commercial real estate. Their rise signals a new era where professionals must embrace automation, data skills, and continuous education to stay competitive in an industry evolving at record speed.