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Almost A Third Of Investors Under 25 Have Bought Meme Stocks

Published Jun 19, 2026
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Summary:
  • About 30% of US stock investors aged 18 to 24 have bought meme stocks, versus 12% of those aged 45 to 54, per industry data.
  • Roughly a third of Gen Z investors have money in prediction markets like Polymarket.
  • Young investors own AI stocks at higher rates than any older group.

The group that says the system is rigged is also chasing the riskiest bets in the market.

That clash shows up in hard numbers, from meme stocks to options.

Trading Like Betting

A parlay, a meme stock, and a weekly options trade all share one shape. You put in a little, you might win a lot, and you get a story to share if it hits.

A meme stock is just a share that goes viral online. Options are deals that pay off if a stock moves the right way by a set date.

So a parlay and a weekly call option are the same bet in different clothes. Both need a few things to go right, and fast.

The numbers back up the pattern. A Morgan Stanley survey found 60% of bettors aged 21 to 34 have placed parlays.

That rate is nearly 30% higher than the general crowd. Young traders also favor quick, easy bets over long holds.

"Nobody is coming to save you." That is how writer Emily Sundberg summed up the mood at a Bloomberg podcast taping.

The instinct, she said, is to grab the cash while you still can. It is less about saving slowly, and more about swinging for a big hit.

Want to understand the moves Wall Street is actually watching? Market Briefs breaks it down every morning, and you get a free investing masterclass when you join.

Where The Money Is Going

The risk shows up in three places. Young investors are loading up on meme coins, prediction markets like Polymarket, and hot AI stocks.

Prediction markets let people bet on real events, from elections to interest rates. They have pulled in about a third of Gen Z investors.

The meme-stock gap is just as wide. About 30% of investors aged 18 to 24 have bought them, versus 12% of those aged 45 to 54, industry surveys show.

AI stocks are a favorite too. Most young investors own them, a bigger share than any older group, surveys show.

Why Now

The reasons are easy to see. Home prices are high, costs keep climbing, and many fear AI will take their jobs.

There is also a deep distrust of the usual rules. That leaves fast gains looking like one of the few open doors.

Most of Gen Z say they feel left behind on money. Even so, the mood is not all gloom.

More US investors say they feel secure now than a year ago. So the bets are not only about fear, but also hope for a quick win.

Both feelings push toward the same risky trades.

Worth Noting

A group this big, betting this way, is no longer a side show. Its taste for risk is now a real force in the market.

For now, the cash is chasing the fastest win it can find. And it shows no sign of slowing down.

If you want this kind of read every morning, join 350,000+ investors at Market Briefs - a free 45-minute investing course comes with it.

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