Finance vs FOMO: How Social Media Is Messing With Your Money
“My friend made ₹20,000 in one week with that stock.”
“Everyone’s buying crypto. Should I?”
“She bought a luxury car and she’s younger than me. Am I missing out?”
These thoughts are more common than you think. Welcome to the age of FOMO—Fear of Missing Out—where social media is not only shaping your lifestyle, but subtly influencing your money moves, often without your knowledge.
FOMO used to be about missing a party. Today, it’s about missing profits.
Financial influence
Social media has become the new stock tip uncle. But this time, it’s not just one uncle—it’s thousands of influencers, friends, relatives, and strangers flashing profits, luxury, and lifestyle upgrades.
From viral Reels about “3 Stocks That Will Make You Rich” to tweets about the “Next Big IPO” or YouTube videos with “1000% Crypto Gains,” financial FOMO is real—and growing.
The problem? We see the highlight reels, not the balance sheets.
Nobody posts about their investment losses, EMIs, or the anxiety that comes with bad financial choices. We see the new car, not the crushing EMI. We see the profits, not the risks.
And the algorithm keeps pushing more of what gets attention, not necessarily what’s right.
FOMO
Why does FOMO affect even the most rational minds?
Herd Mentality: We’re wired to follow the crowd. “If everyone is investing in this stock, it must be good.”
Instant Gratification: “Why wait 10 years for compounding when I can double my money in 3 months?”
Social Comparison: Platforms like Instagram and LinkedIn amplify this. We compare our financial progress with filtered stories of success.
Fear of Regret: “If I don’t act now, I’ll regret it forever.”
It’s emotional finance, not logical finance.
Impact
Let me share a quick story. Ritesh, a 30-year-old software engineer, was doing well. He had a steady SIP going, decent savings, and a long-term plan. Until one day, he saw a video about a trending small-cap stock. The influencer claimed 3x returns in 6 months.
Without research or strategy, Ritesh exited his SIP mid-way and put the money in that stock. Three months later, the stock crashed 40%. His losses were not just financial—but emotional. He felt defeated, scared to invest again, and more than anything—ashamed.
This is the cost of FOMO-driven decisions. And this story isn’t rare. I’ve seen:
People take personal loans to invest in crypto.
New investors panic-sell during a market dip because “Twitter said to book profits.”
Young professionals over-spend just to match a lifestyle they saw online.
Dealing with FOMO
The answer isn’t to quit social media. It’s to build financial immunity. Here’s how:
Start with your why: Before you invest or spend, ask: “What goal does this serve?” If you don’t have a goal, even the best investment is just noise.
Personalise your plan: Just because someone made money on X doesn't mean it's right for you. Your income, family, risk appetite, and values are unique. Your plan should be too.
Use the 48-hour rule: Feeling tempted by a hot tip or flashy offer? Wait 2 days. FOMO fades. Facts remain.
Clean your feed: Unfollow hype-based influencers. Follow educators and certified advisors. Let your scroll feed your goals, not your anxiety.
Focus on process, not popularity: Investing is not about excitement—it’s about consistency. If it feels boring, you're probably doing it right.
Focus over fear
In a world of reels and retweets, it’s easy to feel like you’re falling behind. But here’s the truth: You don’t need to win the race. You just need to run your race.
Personal finance is personal. What works for someone else may not work for you. And what’s popular isn’t always profitable. So the next time you feel that urge to jump into something “everyone is doing,” pause, breathe, and ask: “Is this my strategy—or just my FOMO talking?”
Real wealth isn’t measured in screenshots. It’s measured in peace of mind, purpose, and long-term growth.
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