Jeezus, read the articles you post you nitwit. As I said, those that had assets/the wealthy, did well. The uber wealthy are responsible for over something like 35%+ of all net gains. The middle class are underwater. The poor worse off than they have been in decades. Those with no home and cash to invest? Screwed. Those that live pay check to paycheck? Screwed x 3. If you owned a home, odds are the asset appreciated. If you didn't own a home but wanted to, you were shit out of luck as the market priced you out, and oh, your rent went up 20% to add insult to injury.
Again, now listen closely so you can learn something. The overwhelming majority of people cannot afford the inflation and cost of living increases that the country has experienced. Even those who are asset/house rich but cash poor (90% of the people in CA, NY, OR and WA) can't afford what the rats have done to the consumables market. Sure their house appreciated and what little they have in the stock market did great but you aren't going to sell those assets now so you can eat. You have to live on month to month income and that has been a problem for the majority of people. When consumables are going up 7-20%, the majority have zero free cash to invest.
Despite Black families experiencing the largest growth in median net wealth — a 60% bump from 2019 — their 2022 levels remained the lowest among all other racial or ethnic groups, and they also saw incomes falter.
The 37% rise in net worth, which was more than double the next-largest upswing on record, was largely fueled by asset growth — specifically
https://www.cnn.com/2022/05/30/homes/us-home-prices-remote-work/index.html and
https://www.cnn.com/2020/12/12/politics/what-matters-december-11/index.html that far exceeded consumer price inflation, Fed researchers said.