Millenials make up a quarter of the U.S. population and fuel $1.3 trillion of spending, so it’s no surprise big publicly traded firms have their eyes on Gen Y.
Young, hip, driven. Gen Y entrepreneurs are the next billionaires.
Young people often feel invincible, so life insurance is at the bottom of their priority lists.
Millennials are starting to invest for the future at a much younger age than their parents' generation, undeterred by higher tuition costs, reports of shrinking job prospects and higher housing prices, according to the TD Investor Insights Index.
Millenials think differently than the generations before them. Here's what motivates them.
Canadian investors aged 25 to 34 drove a two-point increase in the latest Manulife Financial Investor Sentiment Index as younger people are becoming increasingly financially conscious.
Marc Almon, a 34-year-old film producer, caught the entrepreneurial bug early on.
Tara Newbigging insists she’s more than just a fitness instructor. “I change people’s lives,” she says.
Jerome Downey knows what it’s like to fail. At 24, when most people are trying to land full-time jobs, he launched Downey Mortgage & Financial, a Nova Scotia-based brokerage offering discount financing.
Beauty may only be skin deep, but for Parham Aarabi, 36, it’s a multimillion-dollar business. His software lets users see the results of cosmetic corrections without the pain of the procedure.