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Meet the millennial managers ‘stuck between a rock and a hard place’: they’re taking ‘sanity days,’ dodging layoffs and trying to stay out of the ER

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“I ended up in the ER,” says a senior communications director in his late 30s who works in the public sector, describing waking from a nightmare with chest pains, pins and needles in his left arm, and being short of breath. He was convinced he was having a heart attack. The director, who requested anonymity given the public-facing nature of his role, told Fortune that a doctor diagnosed him with a panic attack, while his therapist suggested it was related to burnout from stress at work, while stopping short of making that diagnosis.

“Essentially, he said, ‘Your org has culpability, they have done this to you.’”

As Fortune reported in July, millennials broke the managerial tipping point in 2025, as the cohort aged roughly 29 to 44 has displaced Gen X as the largest percentage of leaders in the workforce. But what does it mean for “the burnout generation” to be the ones in charge? They’ve found themselves leading in a climate dramatically different than the one their own bosses walked into—often with minimal mentorship or guidance along the way.

Over the past three months, Fortune has heard from more than a dozen millennial managers, coast to coast, private-sector to nonprofit, and found a once-optimistic cohort now sandwiched between old-guard expectations, a daily onslaught of modern pressures, and the promise and peril of new work trends. Several of them, like the comms director who visited the ER, requested anonymity to speak freely about their own struggles and those of their colleagues and organizations.

Some common refrains emerge. Millennials entered the workforce seeking to work for empathetic organizations and leaders who would care about them, and now they’re on the receiving end of a heightened version of those same expectations from Gen Z subordinates. They also revealed a crisis of mentorship, as few of them could reference healthy models of leadership or specific training regimens that equipped them for the responsibilities they have. On the front lines of what Glassdoor chief economist Daniel Zhao describes as an ongoing burnout crisis, millennial managers are forging new models of empathy and flexibility, but often at significant personal cost. As Zhao told Fortune in July, “Millennials right now are in a place where their career pressures might be highest, but there are also these other personal pressures that are really stressing millennials out … in a sense, they’re stuck between a rock and a hard place.”

‘Not very well prepared’

“Millennials as a generation are not very well prepared to take over and … be in charge of all the workforces,” said Andrew Rotz, a financial wellness advisor at Fruitful, who contrasted his experience with his service in the U.S. Navy. As a junior officer in the military, he said, you get “hands-on, on-the-job training” to prepare you for being “in charge of larger and larger organizations.” In the private sector, it’s more like, “Oh, you’ve been here a while, you’re doing a good job, here’s a promotion. That doesn’t instill confidence in the rest of the organization.”

Rotz, who is in his late 30s, added that he’s not saying the military is a perfect model, citing “internal politics,” among other things, “but it’s much better thought out than any civilian process I’ve seen and mostly gets it correct.”

He urged employers to increase workplace transparency, as he has seen major decisions being made too often based on subjective and half-baked perspectives, or a more fully-thought-out process not being shared widely enough. In one instance, he described being responsible for hiring and training a team within roughly 45 days of his own start date with “zero insights into our objectives, metrics, goals” because he wasn’t privy to the strategy behind the org’s decisions. “It ended up being just blame, stress, and lack of accountability” when it became clear that the brand-new team wasn’t going to meet its deadlines. Rotz added that he was being activated from the Navy Reserves to Active Duty for a while and would likely be deployed overseas when this article was published.

Numerous interviewees described abandoned ambitions, or a reluctance to climb higher. “I have 0% interest in moving up,” said the comms director who visited the ER. “I manage with empathy and flexibility but above there’s still a stiff upper lip,” he said, describing a scenario where middle managers who care about their staff get caught in the middle on an “old-style attitude” and a younger cohort who unanimously reject the traditional career ladder. Of his Gen Z staff, he said, “They’ve all said, ‘I don’t want it.’” He said he worries about the next generation of leadership because the millennial management class is so burned out, and his own ambition has been capped: “Why do i want to spend my life in meetings?”

Jane Swift, the former governor of Massachusetts who currently leads Education at Work, a nonprofit focused on the intersection of higher education and the workforce, told Fortune she sees the erosion of structured training programs and successor planning as a crisis in the making: “So we’ve done away with all these training programs, and it all happened when we stopped having these job ladders, right?” Referencing her own political affiliation with the Republican Party and its cliches about instinctively siding with bosses, she said this is a nonpartisan issue, bigger than the old talking point of “blaming the workers” because “people wanted to change jobs all the time.”

Swift described a chicken-or-the-egg problem where employers stopped being loyal to employees but employees also figured out that they needed to job-hop to advance in the careers. The end result is no “job ladders” like the ones she encountered when she entered the workforce in the 1980s, where you come into a training program with a clear progression afterwards. “We’re not training people as managers, so we have to go and figure that out,” but entry-level training is lacking, too. She said she feels “crazy” talking to some business leaders, because “AI is eating” entry-level jobs, but most of them want people with a few years of experience first. “Nobody trained millennials to be managers,” she said, “because we did away with these training programs.”

Economic experts are increasingly raising the possibility that the ladder to success may be taking on a different shape in the 2020s. Alex Bryson of University College London, who focuses on Gen Z’s rising sense of “despair,” told Fortune that he stumbled on a striking quote in his work, although he hasn’t seen research to back it up more substantively: “Moving on up the ladder, it feels as if, perhaps, for some of them, somebody’s removed some of the rungs.”

Nick Maggiulli, chief operating officer at Ritholtz Wealth Management and author of the New York Times best-seller The Wealth Ladder, told Fortune that “something weird’s going on” because the economy “wasn’t built to handle this many people with this much money.” He said that the wealth ladder isn’t meant to be climbed forever, and you often need to step back and ask yourself: “Do I need to keep climbing? Is this right for me?”

An empty feeling

Several millennial managers described hit-the-ceiling moments where more money or status brought little additional happiness, and often more problems to solve. A 37-year-old radiology director at a health system in Massachusetts said he’s gotten multiple pay increases and makes double what he did 10 years ago, but after a certain monetary threshold around $150,000, he stopped feeling the impact of a higher income. “I still feel just the same … probably just as happy or unhappy.” (He also noted that inflation and his four kids have eaten into his wallet a fair amount.)

One particular promotion, he recalled, “sort of felt empty. I remember the day my boss brought me [the financial terms] and nothing felt different. I just thought, ‘I have more things to solve now, more problems to solve.’”

Across healthcare, education, tech, and non-profit sectors, managers described relentless cycles of attrition, regime change, and ever-ratcheting expectations from above. Some of this is pandemic-related. The comms director who went to the ER over stress said that he believes there was a need to “take the foot off the pedal” when the pandemic ended, but he saw an older generation of managers realizing, “Oh, that’s how hard they can work.” He said return-to-office mandates were designed for the lowest-performing 5% of the workforce instead of the top 5%, and this is backwards.

A software engineer who works in big tech described emotional whiplash coming out of the pandemic. “It’s been rough the last couple years, honestly, with layoffs and a lot of uncertainty, and return to office.” She said she had “some really difficult conversations” about the end of remote work, on top of which she has to maintain a notoriously high standard at what she described as a ruthless company. “Doing great at other companies is not enough for here.”

She said a gallows humor has set in among her managerial peers, as they openly talk about what entrepreneurial project they’ll start when their own inevitable layoff arrives. Their Slack channel is called #buying-small-biz, she said, and it grew as an offshoot of one where they talked about how much they hated the end of remote work policies. “We all have to be thinking about what’s next, and we’re like, ‘Okay, cool, what business are we gonna start? When inevitably, you know …. Everybody knows what’s coming.” Commenting on the plight of herself and fellow managers, she added: “We’re definitely squeezed.”

Sanity days

Kaylan, a 38-year-old manager who leads a team at a major healthcare system that assists with escalated claims and benefit issues, similarly recounted how persistent understaffing carried potential medical risk. Calling herself a “high achiever,” she said that when most of her team juggles three projects on any given day “at one point I was probably working on 15 different projects in some way, shape, or form.”

She said she stopped and took stock of her workload when her own director was admitted to the hospital. Referring to this person as a mentor-type figure who has supported her growth and her career, she said her director didn’t elaborate on their hospital visit, but she suspects it was from stress. “That made me open my eyes and say, ‘You know, I don’t want to burn myself out to the point where I’m so stressed that I, too, end up in the hospital.’” She said that she took that cue to begin working with a therapist and began talking about different ways to implement boundaries for a healthier way of working.

Given their close relationship, she said it was a “wake-up call” for both of them, and they joke about mental health, somewhat darkly. She says she has a lot of PTO days unused and “I jokingly tell my director that those are my sanity days. And he laughs, because he’s like, ‘Man, I should probably take some sanity days with you.’” She clarified that they are really just “mental health days,” but both she and her director are better at giving good advice than taking it. She said she thinks the workforce in general has to start doing something differently “so we don’t all end up in the hospital because of stress.”

The myth and trap of the ‘cool boss’

There’s also a peculiar tension in the millennial management style: Determined not to replicate the rigid, hierarchical approach of their Gen X and boomer predecessors, millennials often strive to be the “cool boss”—open, transparent, and supportive. But sources told Fortune this approach can muddy the waters between leadership and friendship, engendering new vulnerabilities.

The radiology director described the start of his managerial career in a manner similar to what Rotz described: someone who seemed capable who was elevated without much training or guidance. In his mid-20s, he said, he was “thrust into a leadership position somewhat against my will.” He described a lack of standout mentors while saying that he has had some good mentorship on the clinician side of his practice, and one boss in particular was great “but also had immense responsibilities and so our 1:1s become more operational and less about my personal growth.” This boss sent him to a leadership program that lasted six months and still impacts his management style today: “It was great.” As an individual contributor, though, he said he underwent a “horrible onboarding program” and he worked to fix that when he got into management himself.

The radiology director said he struggled for years with managing people who started as his peers, trying to balance being “the cool leader” and navigating the situation as a new authority figure. “I let the lines blur because I was able to retain some of the people who were still my peers,” he said. “I did have to start setting boundaries because one of my buddies [and direct reports] would text me, saying, ‘Hey, I’m hungover.’”

A senior engineer at Netflix distinguished between millennials who try to be a “cool boss or a friend boss” and their more reserved Gen X counterparts: “My millennial manager is much more in tune with the human side … but the boundary has always been clear.” He framed it as an issue with an “intense” workload that can stretch far beyond a traditional 9-to-5 commitment. “If we work late one day, we come to work later the next day, or something like that. It can be intense, because you end up thinking about work when you’re outside, because there’s so much happening.”

Heather Hagen, director of employment services at a nonprofit in Colorado, spoke positively about the mentorship she’s received and about leading with empathy for her team. Hagen said she’s fascinated by the idea that millennials wear a “mask” as managers, that sometimes slips off when they get tough with their reports. She said she chooses to take on more responsibilities at work so her staff doesn’t get burned out, but acknowledges that she’s creating a culture of heightened expectation for her reports. “Maybe that’s kind of self-serving in the end, because I know that if I have a solid team who’s doing the work, I don’t have to deal with other people’s burnout, or other people leaving.” She described it as “I want this for you, but also, like, if everything goes bad, it would really be a problem for me.”

Hagen said she learned earlier in her career when it was “kind of like the veil lifted.” A former executive director told her “the reality of the finances” would always determine management priorities, even at a non-profit. She added that she thinks many millennial managers understand this, but they still seem to want to “package it up in a way that feels more caring and genuine to our teams.”



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Crypto wallets now feel a lot more like Venmo

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Crypto wallets are having a moment. The latest example is Kalshi announcing an integration with Phantom to offer event contracts to the wallet’s 15 million users. While the prediction market angle is intriguing (these markets are a HUGE story right now), the news also highlights the light-speed advancements taking place in the wallet realm.

Consider how, just three years ago, the only thing you could do with Phantom was access the Solana blockchain. MetaMask, meanwhile, was limited to Ethereum. Sure, alternatives like Coinbase Wallet offered access to more assets but, like other wallets of the time, it suffered from a ghastly interface that required users to run a gauntlet of sub-nets, confusing gas fees, and more. The experience was miserable for crypto natives. For everyone else, it was nigh impossible.

Then something changed. After years of promises, developers finally succeeded in pushing the clunky technical elements to the background, while adding a host of practical features. The result has been an uptick in useful real-world applications, including Phantom’s Kalshi offering, and also in souped-up new offerings like Coinbase’s rebranded Base as well as Robinhood Wallet.

This new generation of wallets offers the best aspects of decentralized crypto by making the customers the ultimate custodians of their assets. At the same time, they offer interfaces that are starting to feel like Venmo or online banking apps—which should be table stakes for any of these products looking to break into the mainstream. The question now is where these wallets will fit in day-to-day life. Will they become the successor to web browsers, as Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong and others have predicted, or will they be something else entirely?

JP Richardson is the founder and CEO of Exodus, another leading wallet that recently added a suite of stablecoin payment tools. He told me the browser analogy doesn’t really fit, arguing wallets are better seen as a superior type of banking app—one that will be able to bridge disparate financial services. “We believe it should not be three apps, it should be one app. Why can’t you take your brokerage app, and tap and buy groceries?” he asked.

Trevor Traina, the founder of a wallet called Kresus, whose customers include Sotheby’s auction house, has another take. He believes the tools will have a much broader footprint. He sees a world where wallets are not just for managing our assets, but also become repositories for vital documents such as a will, insurance, or a law license. 

The technology is certainly there to support Traina’s vision. That includes blockchains, which can supply a permanent and tamper-proof ledger, but also newer privacy tools like zero-knowledge proofs. Together, this tech provides a way to safeguard all of one’s personal data, while also being able to meet the constant need to show identification that modern life demands. All of this could get more interesting still if wallets like Sam Altman’s World App, which includes an anti-bot biometric layer, get more traction.

Now for the cold water: Just because you build it doesn’t mean they will come—or come anytime soon at least. I spoke with analyst James Wester, one of the shrewder observers of the crypto and fintech scene, and he pointed out that the idea of an “everything app” has been around for years but shows few signs of getting adopted. A big reason for this is inertia.

Right now, our existing apps and payment tools work pretty well, so it’s unlikely we’ll see mass wallet adoption anytime soon without some sort of external nudge. Wester points out that Apple Pay and Google Pay have been around for a decade, yet a huge number of people keep paying with physical cards—because they can. This will change as younger people who are well versed in tech and crypto make up a greater portion of the economy. But until then, wallet makers may have to find a way to make their suddenly attractive products downright irresistible.

Jeff John Roberts
jeff.roberts@fortune.com
@jeffjohnroberts

DECENTRALIZED NEWS

Stablecoins at YouTube: In a landmark moment for crypto in mainstream commerce, YouTube is now giving U.S. creators on the platform the option to receive payment in the form of PayPal’s stablecoin PYUSD. (Fortune)

Circle’s new privacy coin: Stablecoin giant Circle is working with an upstart blockchain called Aleo to issue a spin-off of its flagship token called USDCx, which will let banking clients obscure private transaction histories. (Fortune)

Charters for all: The OCC issued national trust bank charters to Circle, Ripple, BitGo, Paxos and Fidelity Digital Assets. The move comes amid a broader move by the agency to issue more such charters, which do not allow taking customer deposits or accessing FDIC insurance. (Axios)

Tokenization tipping point? The SEC issued a no-action letter to the DTCC, which will let the country’s main clearing house custody stocks on the blockchain. The permission applies only to 1,000 of the most liquid stocks, but is a key first step for what is likely to be a wholesale shift toward putting custody and record keeping on-chain. (Bloomberg)

Think I’ll buy me a football team: Tether, whose CEO is Italian and a lifetime fan of Juventus, made a bid to buy the storied football club. Its board rebuffed the offer even as the publicly-traded club struggles to keep up with financial dominance of Premier League teams and Real Madrid. (Reuters

MAIN CHARACTER OF THE WEEK

Do Kwon in Podgorica, Montenegro, in 2024—before he was extradited to the U.S.

Filip Filipovic—Getty Images

Do Kwon is arguably the second most notorious fraudster in crypto history. Now, the Terra Luna founder, known for his “steady lads” rallying cry, will get to test how steady he is after a U.S. judge sentenced him to 15 years in prison. If it’s any consolation, this earns him Fortune Crypto’s weekly Main Character designation.

MEME O’ THE MOMENT

Satoshi Nakamoto wanted to reinvent finance. Now, he’s at the New York Stock Exchange.

@NYSE

The cult of Satoshi keeps spreading as the New York Stock Exchange becomes the latest venue to install a physical statue of the Bitcoin creator. 



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Magnificent 7 isn’t that magnificent: 5 stocks have underperformed the market this year

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S&P 500 futures were up 0.44%  this morning after the index lost 1.07% on Friday, a day after setting a new all-time high on Dec.11.

The index is still up 16% year-to-date—an above-average performance for U.S. stocks. Analysts have long complained that the index is dominated by the “Magnificent 7” tech stocks. Between October 2022 and November 2025 roughly 75% of gains in the S&P 500 came from this handful of companies.

But as we draw near to the close of the year, only two of those stocks—Alphabet and Nvidia—have beaten the market as a whole, year to date:

What appears to be happening is that investors are picking between winners and losers in tech, as opposed to just herding into the index or tech stocks as a whole. That’s probably healthy if you are worried that AI spending is creating a bubble in tech stocks.

The best example of this is Oracle, which is up a respectable 14% year to date but has declined 42% from its high in September. Investors have not liked the extra debt that Oracle has taken on, at increasingly wider interest spreads above the risk-free benchmarks, to fund its AI buildout. 

Wall Street is not yet ready to declare the AI gold rush a bubble. “If this is a bubble, it is still in its early stages,” Deutsche Bank analysts Adrian Cox and Stefan Abrudan said in a recent deep-dive research note on AI.

Thus far, the capital expenditure and the revenue is real: it’s hitting the top and bottom lines of Alphabet and Nvidia, and that’s why valuations for those companies are so healthy. “The charge is led by well-established Big Tech companies with multiple revenue streams, who are paying for their investment in data centers mostly out of free cash flow and from which they are generating immediate returns from enterprise customers,” Cox and Abrudan wrote.

“We think that reports of a bubble are exaggerated (for now),” they said.

Elsewhere: Asian markets were down today but markets in Europe largely rose in early trading. The STOXX Europe 600 was up 0.63% at the time of writing; The U.K.’s FTSE 100 was up 0.74%.

Here’s a snapshot of the markets ahead of the opening bell in New York this morning:

  • S&P 500 futures were up 0.44%  this morning. The last session closed down 1.07%. 
  • STOXX Europe 600 was up 0.63% in early trading. 
  • The U.K.’s FTSE 100 was up 0.74% in early trading. 
  • Japan’s Nikkei 225 was down 1.31%. 
  • China’s CSI 300 was down 0.63%. 
  • The South Korea KOSPI was down 1.84%. 
  • India’s NIFTY 50 was down 0.12%. 
  • Bitcoin was at $89K.
Join us at the Fortune Workplace Innovation Summit May 19–20, 2026, in Atlanta. The next era of workplace innovation is here—and the old playbook is being rewritten. At this exclusive, high-energy event, the world’s most innovative leaders will convene to explore how AI, humanity, and strategy converge to redefine, again, the future of work. Register now.



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Visa launches stablecoins advisory practice to keep up with crypto wave

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Another major financial institution is doubling down on stablecoins and on crypto. This time, it’s Visa. The company announced on Monday the launch of its Stablecoins Advisory Practice, a service which aims to aid fintechs, banks, and other businesses with their strategy and implementation of stablecoins. 

“Helping our clients grow is frankly the reason we exist in stablecoin,” said Carl Rutstein, global head of Visa Consulting and Analytics, in an interview with Fortune. “What Visa is doing in this space is just one more area where our clients have a need.” 

Stablecoins are a type of cryptocurrency designed to maintain a constant value by means of reserves that peg them to a fiat currency, typically the U.S. dollar. They have recently been embraced by a wide range of companies from the traditional financial sector following President Donald Trump’s signing of the Genius Act in July, legislation which creates rules for issuing the digital asset. In the months since, other payments powerhouses like Paypal and Mastercard have boosted their stablecoin capabilities. 

Rutstein said that Visa’s stablecoins advisory has dozens of clients, among whom are Navy Federal Credit Union, the credit union VyStar, and a financial institution called Pathward. He said the practice will help businesses with their strategy, tech and operations, and implementation of stablecoins. Its clients use cases for stablecoins include cross-border transactions, especially to countries with volatile currencies, and business-to-business transactions. After using Visa’s advisory, Rutstein said some businesses may push forward with stablecoins, while others may conclude there is not a customer need. The company said that it expects the practice will grow to hundreds of clients. 

Visa is by no means new to crypto. In 2023, the company piloted stablecoin settlement using USDC, and it now has over 130 stablecoin-linked card issuing programs in more than 40 countries. Visa also has about $3.5 billion in annualized stablecoin settlement volume. 

“Stablecoins may represent an opportunity to enhance speed and lower cost in payments,” said Matt Freeman, senior vice president of Navy Federal Credit Union, in the statement. “So with the support of Visa, we are evaluating how this technology could fit into our broader strategy to deliver meaningful value to our 15 million members worldwide.”

Join us at the Fortune Workplace Innovation Summit May 19–20, 2026, in Atlanta. The next era of workplace innovation is here—and the old playbook is being rewritten. At this exclusive, high-energy event, the world’s most innovative leaders will convene to explore how AI, humanity, and strategy converge to redefine, again, the future of work. Register now.



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