In the domestic virtual asset market, male investors doubled that of women. Men in their 30s and 40s accounted for about 40% of the total.

In the domestic virtual asset market, male investors doubled that of women. Men in their 30s and 40s accounted for about 40% of the total.
According to Cha Kyu-geun of the Cho Kuk Innovation Party, a member of the Yonhap News Agency and the National Assembly's Strategy and Finance Committee on the 30th, as of the end of February, there were a total of 15.16 million members who could check their gender and age at the nation's top five exchanges (upbit, bitsome, coin one, cobbit, and goggles). This is the sum of cases in which the same person has accounts on multiple exchanges.
Among them, 10.13 million were men, slightly more than double that of women (5.03 million). In terms of age group, those in their 30s accounted for the most with 4.51 million, followed by 3.97 million in their 40s, 2.92 million in their 20s and under, and 2.64 million in their 50s. Only 1.12 million elderly people are in their 60s or older.
When the age group is subdivided by gender, the proportion of men in their 30s (3.1 million) and men in their 40s (2.67 million) accounted for 38.1% of the total. Men in their 20s (2.16 million), men in their 50s (1.59 million), women in their 30s (1.42 million), and women in their 40s (1.3 million). Women in their 50s (1.06 million) and women in their 20s (760,000) were more common than men in their 60s (610,000), and women in their 60s (500,000) were the least.
There were 12.6 million investors with virtual assets of less than 1 million won, accounting for 83.1 percent of the total. Considering that 1 Bitcoin is about 125 million won, the majority seems to have less than 0.008 Bitcoin coins.
There were 1.57 million investors with virtual assets of 1 million won to 10 million won, 830,000 for 10 million won to 100 million won, and 160,000 for more than 100 million won.
The largest number of investors with more than 100 million won in virtual assets was 36,000 men in their 40s. There were 35,000 men in their 50s, which was similar. Only 14,000 women in their 40s invested more than 100 million won, but more than 20,000 women in their 50s were relatively noticeable.
Among small investors with less than 1 million won, men in their 20s or younger (2 million) were about three times more than women (680,000), making the proportion of men particularly large compared to other age groups.