Todd Buchholz
Former White House Director of Economic Policy and Managing Director of Tiger Hedge Fund
Renowned economist, White House advisor, and best-selling author
Todd Buchholz connects the dots between Wall Street, Main Street,
and financial capitals throughout the world.
An internationally known consultant on global markets and winner
of Harvard’s annual teaching prize, Buchholz advises the world’s
leading companies and “lights up economics with a wickedly
sparkling wit.” (Associated Press)
Todd has been featured alongside such luminaries as Colin Powell,
Michael Porter, and Jeff Bezos.
He has been invited to guide corporate and political leaders
around the world, from the UK and New Zealand parliaments, to the
Mexican and Abu Dhabi stock exchanges, to tech and entertainment
firms in Seoul.
As a frequent commentator on the state of the markets, Todd
Buchholz brings his experience as a former White House director
of economic policy, a managing director of the $15 billion Tiger
hedge fund, and a Harvard economics teacher to the cutting edge
of economics, fiscal politics, finance, and business strategy.
Buchholz is a frequent guest on ABC News, PBS, and CBS, and he
recently hosted his own special on CNBC.
Before joining Tiger, Buchholz was President of the G7 Group,
Inc, an international consulting firm whose clientele included
many of the top securities firms, investment banks and money
managers in New York, London, and Tokyo, including Goldman Sachs
and Morgan Stanley. His commentaries were closely read by
officials at the Federal Reserve, Bundesbank and Bank of England.
Buchholz won the Allyn Young Teaching Prize at Harvard and holds
advanced degrees in economics and law from Cambridge and Harvard.
He was a fellow at Cambridge University in 2009, holds several
engineering and design patents and is a co-producer of the
Broadway smash “Jersey Boys.”
Buchholz is the inventor of the Math Arrow, a mathematical matrix
that makes numbers more intuitive to children. Martin Cooper,
widely recognized as the inventor of the cellular phone, has
called the Math Arrow “ingenious.”
Buchholz has authored numerous critically acclaimed and
best-selling books on the economy and leadership, many of which
he has developed into successful lectures and speaking events.
His books have been translated into a dozen languages and are
used in universities worldwide, including at NYU, Duke, and
Princeton. Author Buchholz is praised for his examination of
economics, business and entrepreneurship in the context of global
society.
The Sunday TIMES (UK) called The Price of
Prosperity: Why Rich Nations Fail and How to Renew
Them ”highly entertaining, far-sighted and enjoyably
acerbic.” The Wall Street Journal named the book to its
exclusive list of “Eight Summer Must-Reads” for 2016. Market
Shock: 9 Economic and Social Upheavals that Will Shake Our
Financial Future, was released to rave reviews and dubbed
“outstanding” by the Wall Street Journal.
Buchholz has also published the best-selling New Ideas from
Dead Economists, New Ideas from Dead CEOs, From Here to Economy,
and Lasting Lessons from the Corner Office, which garnered high
praise from the New York Times and Financial
Times. Named by Publishers Weekly as a “top ten” book
for 2011, his book Rush: Why You Need and Love the Rat
Race has been praised by the Financial Times, Toronto
Globe & Mail, Los Angeles Times and the BBC, among many
others. Buchholz has penned articles for the New York Times,
Wall Street Journal, Washington Post, Forbes, and Reader’s
Digest.
Buchholz is widely sought for his depth of experience, sharp wit
and honest, entertaining delivery. He puts global politics and
financial markets into perspective and offers a positive
understanding of the challenges and opportunities facing today’s
markets.
An experienced media personality, Buchholz gave a lecture at the
White House entitled “Clarity, Honesty and Modesty in Economics,”
and has delivered keynote speeches before such influential
corporate and financial institutions as Microsoft, IBM, Goldman
Sachs and the United States Chamber of Commerce. He has served as
a consulting advisor to the White House, Allstate, SAP, and
Toyota, and he is routinely asked to provide perspective in
newspapers such as the Wall Street Journal and
the New York Times.
SESSION:
Economic Update