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!

The Rise of Fintech: How Technology Is Reshaping Money and Modern Careers

Fintech has evolved from simple digital banking tools into a global force transforming how we pay, borrow, invest, and manage financial data. With AI, blockchain, and open banking leading the way, fintech is opening new opportunities for consumers, businesses, and professionals across real estate, mortgage, insurance, and finance.

Large CRE Deals Surge in Q3 2025 as Market Confidence Returns

After months of hesitation, the commercial real estate market showed a major resurgence in Q3 2025. Large single‑asset transactions over $10 million jumped to $76 billion — the strongest level since 2022 — signaling renewed liquidity and growing confidence among institutional buyers. While overall volumes remain below peak highs, rising deal counts, stabilizing prices, and increased activity across industrial, multifamily, office, and retail sectors point toward a market steadily moving back toward normalization.

California’s Insurance Crisis: Politics, Wildfires, and a System on the Brink

California’s property insurance market didn’t collapse overnight—it unraveled over years of political delays, soaring wildfire losses, and mounting pressure on insurers and reinsurers. As major carriers pulled out and rate approvals stalled, millions of homeowners were left scrambling for coverage under an overwhelmed FAIR Plan. At the center of the controversy stands Insurance Commissioner Ricardo Lara, whose decisions, industry ties, and behind‑the‑scenes negotiations have drawn sharp criticism. The result is a destabilized market affecting homeowners, real estate professionals, lenders, and entire communities—and the question of whether current reforms can truly fix what’s broken.

Large U.S. CRE Deals Roar Back in Q3 2025, Signaling Investor Confidence

After a slow start to the year, commercial real estate showed a major resurgence in Q3 2025 as large single‑asset deals over $10 million surged past $76 billion in volume. With 1,826 major trades and the strongest growth rate in more than a decade, investor confidence appears to be returning across U.S. markets. While overall volumes still trail the record highs of 2021–2022, the renewed momentum in big‑ticket transactions points to improving liquidity, clearer pricing, and a potentially pivotal turning point for brokers, investors, and industry professionals.

California’s Insurance Meltdown: The Crisis Reshaping Real Estate, Finance, and Insurance Nationwide

California’s property insurance market has unraveled into one of the most expensive and consequential crises in U.S. history. Major carriers pulled back, wildfire risks soared, regulators stalled, and the state’s FAIR Plan exploded in size — leaving hundreds of thousands of homeowners without affordable coverage. Now, with victims underinsured, premiums surging, and a billion‑dollar bailout looming, the fallout is spilling beyond California. For real estate, mortgage, finance, and insurance professionals across the country, this is a warning of what happens when rising climate risks collide with outdated regulatory systems.

Florida’s Next Mega-Development: Winchester Ranch Set to Add Nearly 9,000 Homes in Sarasota County

Sarasota County is on the brink of one of its largest modern expansions as the Winchester Ranch project moves closer to approval. Spanning more than 3,100 acres near North Port, the planned mega-development could bring up to 8,999 homes plus major commercial and industrial space. With construction projected to begin in 2027–2028, the community has sparked both excitement over new housing opportunities and concerns about environmental impact, placing it at the center of Florida’s ongoing growth debate.