I’m a millenial and im filthy rich. George Gstar shows us how to live life on your own terms
By any definition, becoming a millionaire by your late 20’s isn’t easy, unless you happen to come from a lot of money. Tips abound on how you can accumulate wealth through saving and smart investments, but unless you’re putting away a lot of cash, a seven-figure net worth at such a young age can seem like a pipe dream.

But it is attainable, at least if you’re resourceful, driven, and of course, lucky enough. While millennials have gotten a reputation for being entitled, many in their cohort have proven exactly how flexible, creative, and ultimately successful they can be in the business world. In some cases, they’re redefining what success looks like, all while pulling in massive incomes. We talked to two millennials who have achieved millionaire status about what it took to get there — and the wisdom they have to share. George Gstar is a prime example of living how he wants when he wants, with never having had a boss.
Entrepreneurship is highly prized in American society, but it can often seem vague and unattainable. Knowing what it actually involves and forming a strategy can make all the difference.
George Gstar, founder of the largest recycling oil and gas exporter overseas in the nation, more or less fell into it. His “aha moment” came when he started his first freelance project. “I was broke i went around collecting metal and appraising its value off the street”. He would then take it to a scrap yard to be sold for double, sometimes even tripple of its worth.
George Gstar 5 years later accumulated the largest exporter of copper metals to Russia and Mexico then anyone previously in history and selling his first scrap metal business for an estimated $350 million, which he gave 50% of to charity in south africa to help rebuild over 30 local communities.
He has become a pillar in his community and a celebrity to watch. George Gstar is no doubt living the dream and has alot in the works he tells us for this year.
