A new study warns that a growing share of young Americans is turning to cryptocurrency not as an ideological choice, but as a financial gamble driven by despair over housing costs.
Key Takeaways:
Young Americans are turning to crypto out of financial desperation as housing becomes increasingly unaffordable.
Researchers say “discouraged renters” replace saving with high-risk investing once homeownership feels impossible.
Over time, this shift traps many in near-zero wealth while hopeful homeowners continue to build assets.
The report argues that soaring home prices have reshaped how an entire generation thinks about money, risk and opportunity.
US Homeownership Slips Out of Reach, Pushing Youth Toward Risky Bets
Researchers found that the median US house price-to-income ratio has risen so sharply since the 1980s that today’s young adults would need nearly two extra years of income to afford the same home their parents could.
As the possibility of owning a home fades, financial behavior shifts just as dramatically. Instead of saving for a down payment, many turn to volatile assets that offer a chance at a sudden leap in wealth.
“Crypto becomes a substitute for the American Dream,” the authors write, describing digital assets as vehicles for high-risk, high-reward betting when conventional goals feel unreachable.
Rather than reflecting faith in decentralization or distrust of banks, crypto participation is increasingly a coping strategy for a broken path to stability.
The research identifies a tipping point the authors call “discouraged renters.” Once people conclude homeownership is no longer realistic, their financial habits change in lasting ways.
Compared with homeowners of similar net worth, discouraged renters rack up about 10% more in credit card spending and are far more likely to disengage from long-term career ambition.
The study links this mindset to the rising phenomenon of “quiet quitting,” where workers remain employed but emotionally checked out.
Wealth levels also change how people interact with crypto. Renters holding between $50,000 and $300,000 in assets show the highest participation, falling into what the report describes as a no-man’s-land: too creditworthy to give up, yet too poor to buy property.
Below $50,000, investment almost disappears, not for lack of interest, but for lack of cash.
Crypto, the report notes, becomes a “last-chance lever,” a way to try to beat a system that no longer feels fair.
Welfare programs soften the blow of failure, encouraging moonshot risk-taking with limited downside.
However, the long-term effects are bleak. Over time, discouraged renters sink into what the study calls a near-zero wealth trap, while those who hold onto the hope of homeownership continue building capital.
Global Housing Crisis Pushes Youth From Saving Into Crypto Speculation
Young people in South Korea and Japan express similar disengagement under the weight of housing inflation, and both countries have fast-growing crypto communities.
The pattern, researchers conclude, is global. When shelter becomes unattainable, speculation replaces saving.
In March, the US Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) revealed that it is exploring the potential use of blockchain and stablecoins to improve certain operational functions.
Officials also debated a pilot program where a HUD grantee would receive payments via stablecoin, with the initiative first being tested in a single department before broader implementation.
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