MEXC finds that 67% of Gen Z crypto traders use AI tools, resulting in fewer panic sells Gino Matos · 5 seconds ago · 2 min read
Those who used bots during stress periods logged 47% fewer panic-sell events than manual traders.
Cover art/illustration via CryptoSlate. Image includes combined content which may include AI-generated content.
A growing majority of Gen Z crypto traders are turning to artificial intelligence (AI) to guide their strategies and it’s making them less prone to panic selling.
According to a July 24 report from MEXC Research, which analyzed over 780,000 Gen Z trading accounts in the second quarter, found that 67% of users aged 18 to 27 had deployed at least one AI-powered bot or strategy in the past 90 days.
Traders using AI-driven tools recorded 47% fewer panic-sell incidents during periods of market stress compared to those trading manually.
A tactical ‘on–off’ relationship
Gen Z’s engagement with AI isn’t passive. The cohort averaged 11.4 days per month using AI tools, which is more than double users over 30. Furthermore, they accounted for 60% of all AI bot activations on the exchange.
Yet, they don’t leave bots running indefinitely, as 73% switched them on during volatility or news spikes and turned them off during low-volume, sideways markets. Overall, 58% of Gen Z AI interactions occurred during periods of elevated readings on MEXC’s internal volatility index.
This behavior points to fluid control rather than full delegation. Gen Z configures conditions and lets automation execute when emotions are most likely to interfere. They also check AI-generated signals 2.4 times more often than traditional indicators, suggesting they view machine output as the primary decision feed in fast markets.=
Generational differences
MEXC’s data indicates that AI is serving as both a risk-management layer and a convenience feature. Gen Z traders using bots were 1.9x less likely to trade reactively in the first three minutes of major events, a window that MEXC flags as prone to costly errors.
They were also 2.4x more likely to employ structured stop-loss and take-profit rules, reinforcing that automation is being used to maintain absolute boundaries, not just identify entries.
Cross-generational comparisons reveal that millennials continue to lean toward thesis-driven, chart- and report-heavy workflows, treating AI as a supplement to pre-set strategies.
Only 22% of millennials and 7% of Gen X reported turning to AI during high-volatility windows, versus Gen Z’s 73%.
Psychologically, millennials seek a sense of persistent manual control. Gen Z toggles autonomy based on stress, noise, and attention bandwidth, a pattern mirroring those seen in gaming and social platforms.
MEXC projects that by 2028, more than 80% of Gen Z traders will rely on AI for full-cycle portfolio management, from dynamic rebalancing to tax automation.
That demand aligns with broader forecasts, putting the AI trading platform market at nearly $70 billion by 2034, growing over 20% CAGR from 2025 to 2034.