The 1960s left a big impression on me. My father was a World War II Navy veteran and worked for the phone company for 40 years before he retired. One thing he was adamant about was standing up to bullies. Not necessarily fighting authority, because that was the last thing he wanted, but not allowing yourself or anyone else to be bullied or pushed around. That is a lesson I carried with me through adulthood.
When I graduated from high school in 1978, there were some financial constraints in my family and my college choices were narrowed to any school I wanted to attend, as long as it was free. With my family background, there was a strong emphasis placed on going to a military academy because it was a quality education, essentially for free.
In 1982, when I graduated from SUNY Maritime, we were in the midst of a short-lived but very deep recession. The shipping industry had dried up. I was hanging around, living at home, bartending, coaching basketball and doing nothing constructive. At the urging of my parents, I started looking for a real job. Someone I knew from coaching basketball and from around town suggested I go for an interview at E.F. Hutton. I went and was offered a job. After becoming friendly with the people I worked with, I heard that you could make hundreds of thousands of dollars a year. I had never heard of anyone making that kind of money. I told myself then, “I don’t know what this is, but I’m going to figure it out.”
I loved the pace. As a trader I didn’t have to prepare cases that were going to go to court in six months or a year. I didn’t have to write papers that were due in three months. I went in every single day with a clean slate. My goal was to generate commissions for the firm I worked for, and I found I was good at it. I could focus on a lot of different things at once. It fit my personality well. The people I worked with were great, and it was just a lot of fun for a long time.
On a trading desk, you spend a lot of time with someone. You’re literally shoulder to shoulder for 10 to 12 hours a day, oftentimes for dinners into the evening, and you travel together. You didn’t have to be able to split the atom to trade stocks, but you had to have reasonable intelligence as evidenced by a college degree. But the question I would always ask myself is, “If I have to spend 11 hours a day with this person, is that going to be okay?” It was less about native intelligence than just how you got along with people.
I react to things quickly, and I’m hard-pressed to consider myself as remaining calm. But, in a funny way, when things were at their worst, was when I was at my best. My trial by fire was the crash of ’87. I was 26 years old, and it was the single biggest trading day I ever had. I made over three million dollars trading that day. After that, I remember thinking to myself, when things were at their worst— whether it was an outbreak of war or market crisis—everybody in this massive trading room was looking at me so it’s critically important how I carry myself. Whether it’s an athletic contest or busy trading day, when things are at their craziest, is when you want to slow everything down.
When I got into the world of business, I knew nothing. I didn’t know how to act, how to dress. A lot of the students that I see at Adelphi are the first ones in their families to go to college. I try to show them how the game is played. I show them the things that no one showed me. I like to think that, from my experiences, I have the ability to give them a little bit of what they have to know to navigate in the business world.
Adelphi University, New York, is a highly awarded, nationally ranked, powerfully connected doctoral research university dedicated to transforming students’ lives through small classes with world-class faculty, hands-on learning and innovative ways to support academic and career success. Adelphi is one of just four companies and the only university on Long Island to be named among America’s Best Employers by State for 2023 by Forbes.
A surge in 2024 rankings by U.S. News & World Report—up 19 spots as a Best College, up 85 spots for Social Mobility and up 35 spots as a Best Value College—supports Adelphi’s rising reputation. Adelphi serves more than 7,400 students at its beautiful main campus in Garden City, New York—just 23 miles from New York City’s cultural and internship opportunities—and at dynamic learning hubs in Brooklyn, the Hudson Valley and Suffolk County, as well as online.
More than 119,000 Adelphi graduates have gained the skills to thrive professionally as active, engaged citizens, making their mark on the University, their communities and the world.
Todd Wilson
Strategic Communications Director
p – 516.237.8634
e – twilson@adelphi.edu