Crypto becomes second most widely-owned asset class for women: eToro survey

While traditional asset classes fail to foster broader adoption among women, crypto seems to have found success in bringing women on board, according to a recent survey. 

Data sent to Cointelegraph by the eToro team highlighted that crypto is now the second most widely-owned asset class for women second only to cash. This comes from the results of eToro’s latest Retail Investor Beat, which surveyed around 10,000 global retail investors in 13 countries.

According to the survey results, there is a significant rise in crypto ownership among women. Data shows that ownership increased from 29% in the third quarter of 2022 to 34% in the last quarter. According to the eToro team, this suggests that crypto is “succeeding where traditional financial markets have sometimes failed” which is by bringing more women in.

<em>Retail investors who owned crypto in 2022 Source: eToro</em>

While crypto adoption among women has taken flight in the last quarter of 2022, ownership among men only increased by one percent in the same time period. 

Meanwhile, despite crypto being considered last year’s worst-performing asset class, the overall amount of global investors owning crypto rose from 36% to 39% on a quarter-on-quarter basis.

Apart from being driven by women jumping in, the data was also influenced by older investors buying the dip. Retail investors holding crypto aged 35-44 and 45-54 rose by 5% each, suggesting that older investors are also accumulating crypto.

As for the reasons why more investors are getting into crypto, 37% of the survey participants said that they are taking the opportunity to make high returns while 34% said that they believe in the power of blockchain and think crypto is a transformative asset class.

Related: NFT gaming trends in 2023: Industry execs expect more big players to jump in

Apart from retail investors expressing their belief in blockchain technology by investing, businesses are also starting to do the same. On Jan. 12, CasperLabs found that among the 603 businesses that participated in a survey, 90% have already deployed blockchain in some capacity.

Source