Less financial stability, smaller social safety nets: inside the gen Z investing boom

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Less financial stability, smaller social safety nets: inside the gen Z investing boom

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{

"titleJa": "Z世代の投資ブーム:経済的不安定とオンライン投資文化",

"summaryJa": "Z世代は、経済的な不安定さや社会保障の低下を背景に、過去の世代よりも早く投資を開始する傾向にあります。

暗号資産投資で痛手を経験した人もいますが、今ではAIを活用したロボアドバイザーの利用や、ロボティクス、AIなどの分野への投資にシフトしています。

ETF(上場投資信託)への長期投資が主流で、若年層のコスト意識の高さが将来的なリターンに繋がると期待されています。

一部の若者は積極的にデイトレードや暗号資産取引に挑戦していますが、専門家は長期的な視点での分散投資を推奨しています。

"

}

```

若年層の投資ブームが加速している背景には、経済的な不安定さや社会保障制度の縮小といった構造的な問題があることが指摘されています。特にZ世代(1997年〜2012年生まれ)は、従来の世代よりも早くから投資市場に参入しており、その動機や戦略が注目されています。本記事では、彼らが直面する課題と、多様化する投資スタイルを解説します。

早期参入の背景にある経済的課題

世界経済フォーラム(WEF)の報告によると、Z世代の約30%が若年期に投資を始めています。これは、ミレニアル世代(15%)やX世代(9%)と比較しても高い数字です。彼らが投資に走る背景には、世界的な雇用危機や消費者物価の上昇といった経済的な不確実性が挙げられます。

さらに、社会福祉プログラムの削減や企業による退職金制度の縮小が進んでおり、従来のセーフティネットが失われつつあります。このため、WEFの専門家は「経済的安定性や社会保障制度が少ないため、個々人が自身の経済的幸福について考える責任が重くのしかかっている」と指摘しています。

テクノロジーと投資の民主化

Z世代が市場に参入しやすい大きな要因として、テクノロジーの進化が挙げられます。かつては専門的な知識が必要だった投資が、現代ではスマートフォン一つで手軽に実行できるようになったのです。

例えば、ニュージーランドのフィンテックアプリ「Sharesies」のように、SNS上で情報発信を行いながら、金融教育リソースをプラットフォーム自体が提供しているサービスも普及しています。これにより、彼らは投資に対する信頼感を持ちやすくなっていると説明されています。

一方で、この手軽さは、投資の知識が浅いままリスクの高い投機的な取引に手を出す層も生み出している側面も指摘されています。

分散投資と投機的リスクの二極化

Z世代の投資戦略は二極化しているのが特徴です。多くは、長期的な視点に立ち、低コストで分散された上場投資信託(ETF)への投資を好んでいます。これは、Vanguardの調査によれば、Z世代の約75%が退職口座でETFを保有しているというデータからも裏付けられます。

一方で、少数の層は、暗号資産(クリプト)やデイトレードといった、より投機的でリスクの高い取引に挑んでいます。彼らは「ギャンブルと投資は同じ」と捉えることもありますが、専門家は、これらの高リスクな賭けが長期的に見て望ましくない結果を招く可能性があると警鐘を鳴らしています。

結論

Z世代の投資ブームは、経済的な不安から生まれた自己防衛的な行動と、テクノロジーによる投資の容易さが結びついた現象と言えます。彼らは、安定的な長期投資と、ハイリスクな投機的行動という異なる道を選びながら、自身の経済的な未来を切り開こうとしている状況です。

原文の冒頭を表示(英語・3段落のみ)

Ambrico Ranginui first heard of cryptocurrencies when he was 12 years old. By the time he was 16, he had saved enough from birthday gifts and his allowance to invest.“Growing up in a single mum household, it made me quite a determined person to get ahead,” Ranginui said. “I wanted to find new avenues to make money and crypto was so fascinating at the time.”He’s part of a new boom of gen Z investors who have jumped into markets more enthusiastically than previous generations, and are putting money into everything from safe-haven bonds to AI startups, earlier than ever before.Nearly 30% of the generation born between 1997 and 2012 started putting money into markets in early adulthood, before they even entered the workforce, compared to just 15% of millennials and 9% of gen X, according to a World Economic Forum (WEF) report.Crypto taught Ranginui a fast, painful lesson about financial markets’ volatility. Ranginui said he lived in a state of stress and anxiety for about a year, constantly checking his investments instead of living in the moment with his friends or in his classes.He won’t say how much he lost, but it was enough to stop investing in crypto. “There was always something to be worried about,” he said.Ranginui, now 21, didn’t swear off investing, however. He’s now an investment analyst at Flatmate Ventures, a six-month-old venture capital firm backing student entrepreneurs, and has put his own money into lithium, robotics, and artificial intelligence.Bar chart showing Gen Z investing earlier in life than older generations

The Guardian spoke to more than a dozen active gen Z investors from around the world, who it found through social media and finance discussion threads, about their strategy and motivation. They cite a combination of economic uncertainty, a ubiquitous online investing culture and possibly the lowest barriers to entry in modern history, due to technology and AI, as their reasons for jumping into markets.

Ranguini, for example, said New Zealand’s fintech app “Sharesies”, inspired many of his peers to invest. “They showed up in gen Z spaces [on social media] and with all the financial educational resources available on the platform itself, it made it very easy to trust them and invest.”Gen Z around the world is facing a jobs crisis and a future that may be less economically stable than their parents. Unemployment is nearly 8% for all people aged 22 to 27, compared to about 6% seven years ago and 4.3% across the US, while consumer prices continue to rise globally. At the same time, cuts to social welfare programs and the decline of employer-sponsored retirement plans are stripping away what little safety net exists.This generation has “less financial stability and social safety nets, so the onus shifts to the individual to think about their financial well-being”, said Natalya Guseva, head of WEF’s financial markets and resilience initiatives. At the same time, technology is making it easy to invest in markets. “You just have access to investing in information in the palm of your hand, and so, which is unlike previous generations,” she said.Slow and steadyMany are being very cautious.The majority of gen Z are leaning towards long-term investing in low-cost, diversified funds such as exchange-traded funds (ETFs), according to Andy Reed, head of behavioral economics research in Vanguard.“They are probably the most cost-savvy generations which will pay off in the long run,” he said. “They are learning about investing quite early on and are genuinely showing interest in participating in the market.”About 75% of gen Zers hold ETFs in their retirement accounts compared to just 60% of baby boomers, according to a recent Nasdaq study.That is exactly what Shivana Anand, 23, software engineer, is doing. As soon as she entered college, she opened a Roth IRA, a tax-free retirement account, and invested in diversified index funds. At the time, she had a paid internship which helped her fund her investments. Her account automatically deposits a set amount each month, passively growing her portfolio. She is based in California.“My money should be working for me,” she said. “I invest so money doesn’t become so stressful and I rather invest slowly and steadily, which is the tried and true method, than actively manage a portfolio and worry about not calling the right bet.”Anand said her portfolio was currently in the mid-six-figure range.Gambling or investing?A smaller cohort of gen z is taking on riskier and speculative bets such as day-trading and crypto.“Young people are taking on risks like gambling and prediction markets without fully understanding that risk that they’re taking on,” he explained. “Ultimately what they might not realize is that these bets can lead to worse outcomes in the long run.”Minwoo Lim, 28, founder of trading app PnL, dove head-first into this world after fulfilling his mandatory military service six years ago in South Korea. Lim often trades commodities like crude oil instead of traditional stocks. He lives in South Korea but his company is based in Dubai.“Gambling, by its definition, is risking everything by earning a lot of money,” Lim said. “It’s the same with trading.”Only about 4% of day traders earn enough to make a living and about 10% are profitable, meaning at least 90% fail.Lim grew up in a family of investors and traders. To him, it was a natural path to follow once he had gathered enough savings. However, Lim’s degree in neuroscience, he says, gave him a psychological edge that helped him become a profitable trader.Earlier this year, Lim made a 1,000 euro profit after holding long positions on crude oil, meaning he bought when the price was low and sold when the price increased significantly after the US and Israel attacked Iran.“Most gen Z traders may not be profitable because they underestimate human behavior,” he said. “First is strategy, then discipline and last is psychology. It’s a trinity.”Understanding psychology can help traders overcome potential greed, fear and cognitive biases that may cloud judgement, Lim explains, “we [gen Z] are very greedy. We want to earn more and work less.”Despite Lim’s trading career, he doesn’t advise gen Z to follow suit.“Those who invest long term are ultimately going to win over those trading or in crypto,” he said. “Trading is for those who are willing to commit their lives to it – disappear from the world for two or even more years. You’re probably better off buying S&P 500 and leaving it for 10 years.”AI adviceNearly 41% of gen Z reported they would trust the machine to manage their portfolio, and many are actively using it.Kelly Noel Mbunui Kameni, 22, based in Kenya, she uses AI to double check her investments. Kameni invests in exchange-traded funds (ETFs) and the S&P 500.“I would take a picture of my portfolio and ask ChatGPT for suggestions such as diversification,” she said. “AI is just very convenient. If I don’t have the time to read a company’s financial documents, I just turn to AI and it sums up the documents. Then I make a decision based on that.”Kameni, who is on a scholarship for her undergraduate degree in finance, said she allocates a small part of her scholarship to her portfolio.So far, she has invested about 50,000 Kenyan shillings (roughly $400 USD), enough to start a small business in the country. She plans to continue investing enough so she doesn’t have to work a corporate job while she gets her masters and doctoral degrees.“I am enjoying learning about finance and putting my money to work through investing.” she said. “ I don’t wish to give my life to an exploitative company and my investments will fund the life I want.”

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