A 25-Year-Old Wants To Know How So Many 24-Year-Olds Seem To Have $400K Investment Accounts. 'I Just Can't Fathom How It's Possible'

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A 25-Year-Old Wants To Know How So Many 24-Year-Olds Seem To Have $400K Investment Accounts. 'I Just Can't Fathom How It's Possible' Adrian Volenik Sat, June 20, 2026 at 7:01 AM PDT 8 min read RKLB Building wealth is hard enough without constantly seeing stories of people your age who appear to be far ahead. That’s the frustration one 25-year-old investor shared after repeatedly seeing posts from people in their early 20s claiming to have investment accounts worth hundreds of thousands of dollars. Posting on Reddit’s r/Money forum recently, the investor explained that they graduated from college in 2023, paid off student loans a few months later and opened an investment account the same year. Since then, they’ve focused on saving aggressively and investing as much as possible. Even so, they said their investment account has grown to about $40,000, with a total net worth of roughly $51,000 and no debt. All I see is an endless sea of posts of people my age somehow posses...

Fake romance to missed deliveries: How to protect yourself from three common scams

Fake romance to missed deliveries: How to protect yourself from three common scams 39 minutes ago Share Save Add as preferred on Google Kevin Peachey Cost of living correspondent Getty Images Nobody thinks they will become the victim of a scam, until they are. A record four million cases of fraudsters stealing money were registered last year, according to UK Finance, a banking trade body - with plenty more going unreported. Sam Little, a 35-year-old former contestant of BBC show The Traitors, revealed last week he had lost 40,000 in life savings to a phishing scam. "I like to think I'm savvy, but it can catch anyone," he said. Here are three of the most popular tricks used by fraudsters and how to avoid them. 1. Stolen bank details The scam : "Hi Mum, I've got a new phone" or messages about missed deliveries. Fraudsters send out mass messages suggesting that the recipient needs to update their details. It is just a way of harvesting vital banking details in order to steal money. In the case of the "Hi Mum" text, the message is usually followed by an urgent request to send money. Banks reported a surge in "Hi Dad" scams in the run-up to Father's Day. Messages about missed deliveries usually include a link which, when clicked on, take the recipient to an official-looking website. It is run by fraudsters and gathers banking information which is then used in so-called remote-purchase fraud - when criminals buy things from stolen card details. Some 423m was lost this way last year, according to UK Finance. How to avoid it : Type, don't tap. Experts urge people to avoid tapping on links. If a message claims to be from, for example, Royal Mail, then type out the genuine Royal Mail website. Card details can be stolen in many different ways, such as through data breaches. But fraudsters often need a One-Time Passcode (OTP) to complete a theft. These should be treated as carefully as bank details and never given to someone who calls pretending to authorise a transaction. It may seem obvious, but fraudsters are skilled in keeping you on the phone for ages to trick you into giving the number. 2. Romance scams The scam : "I love you, can you send money so I can visit you." The victim joins a dating website, chats to someone with whom they build a relationship over time, until eventually there is a request for money. On average victims of romance scams, which are at a record high, send 10 payments to the fraudster. Some never accept their loved one isn't real. The fraudster uses fake pictures, often taken from the profiles of people innocently posting on social media. After being groomed, victims are told of an accident, or the supposed partner needing help to pay for a ticket to meet up. How to avoid it : It isn't very romantic, but when meeting someone on a dating website put their picture in a...

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