They say money does not buy happiness. Tell that to the guy flying private, blissfully spared from crying babies and reheated meals. Money buys power, and power buys immunity, freedom from rules, friction, and the smell of other people’s struggle. Musk did not stack a $378 billion wealth on hugs. Wealth flows to those who shove and build strength, not those who share. Aggressive behaviour is strongly linked to wealth as psychiatrist T. Byram Karasu showed. In finance, ruthlessness is the business model.
Greed is good
The Finance Bro is not a man, he is a movement. Forged in the adrenaline-slicked halls of Wall Street, he emerged from the rubble of deregulation clutching a Bloomberg terminal in one hand and a protein shake in the other. Fuelled by testosterone, cortisol, and capital gains, he lives in a world where power is personal, ambition unregulated, and brutality is not a side effect, but a KPI. A Cambridge study found that traders with higher testosterone levels made more profitable trades, turning hormones into hard cash. In short: the more primal the instinct, the fatter the bonus.
With 100-hour workweeks and average bonuses hitting $176,700—over three times the U.S. median household income—Finance Bros did not just shape the financial landscape; they defined a lifestyle. Their grind set standards, emulated far beyond Wall Street. Today, tech titans like Elon Musk, Jensen Huang, Jeff Bezos, and Mark Zuckerberg are deeply driven by the Finance Bro’s values. Musk famously said “nobody ever changed the world on 40 hours a week”. The Wolf of Wall Street wasn’t fiction, it was Jordan Belfort’s life, proving that in modern capitalism greed, aggression, and unhinged bravado are now the basics. In an economy obsessed with velocity and risk, the bold get the bonus. And they showed that men, under new values, led by Finance, want to lead the world again.
But behind the muscle-flexing of the Finance Bro lies a more fragile reality where overconfidence masks risk. Hyper-masculine cultures, prized in parts of Wall Street, don’t just reward boldness, they also penalise caution. Studies suggest that men whose masculinity is threatened are more prone to reckless financial behavior, chasing quick wins to prove their worth and leading sometimes to crash and collapse. It’s no coincidence that Enron collapsed under a “make the numbers” cult, or that the 2008 financial crisis was driven by short-term gain at the expense of long-term sanity.
Finance Bro and Threatened Masculinity
Historically, men have dominated military roles, a trend that persists today. In France, approximately 85% of military personnel are male, while in the United States, the figure stands at about 82%. This male predominance aligns with biological factors; men typically have testosterone levels ranging from 300 to 1,000 nanograms per deciliter (ng/dL), whereas women’s levels are between 10 to 55 ng/dL. Testosterone has been associated with increased aggression and risk-taking behaviours. As traditional social roles decrease, these inherent traits may find expression in other high-stakes environments.
Indeed, traditional avenues for expressing masculine aggression, such as military service, have declined and many men find themselves seeking alternative outlets for these innate drives. The modern service-oriented economy, dominated by sectors like healthcare and education, often fails to accommodate these traditionally masculine traits, leading to a pervasive sense of displacement among men. The evolving labour market has seen a significant shift, the service sector is now 50% of the global market with women increasingly occupying roles in this sector. As of 2021, 59% of employed women globally worked in services, up from 44% in 2000. In contrast, the percentage of men in the service sector was 45% in 2021. This transition has led to discussions about the changing roles of men in society, as traditional male-dominated industries have declined. Figures like Jordan Peterson have gained prominence by addressing perceived crises in masculinity, resonating with young men seeking direction in a rapidly evolving societal landscape.
Once it was war. Then it was work. Now, men in suits seek meaning in money, markets, and innovation. The Finance Bro archetype, turbocharged by cinematic icons like Gordon Gekko, Jordan Belfort, and Patrick Bateman, has become a cult of ambition for a generation of men adrift. High-stakes finance offers a seductive substitute: stress as status, burnout as virtue, winning as identity.
A.I.
This isn’t just nostalgia for testosterone, it’s performance-enhancing capitalism. Studies have shown that men disproportionately gravitate to high-stress, competitive environments (APA, 2020), especially where performance can be quantified and rewarded. But as AI creeps into trading floors and automates the adrenaline out of the game, even this refuge is under siege. Once, men feared being replaced by women. Now, they fear being replaced by code. And that, ironically, was probably written by a Tech Bro.
Statement
As traditional male roles erode and automation encroaches on high-powered work, Finance Bros embody a new masculine myth where aggression, ambition, and burnout are badges of honour. Hyper-masculine finance culture is not just about money, but about identity in crisis. In a world where even testosterone has a shelf life, the trading floor may be masculinity’s final proving ground before the algorithms take over.