Author: Admin

How a dog changed Todd Richter forever

Henry was a stray pup living on the streets of Memphis, Tennessee. He was a small Shih Tzu mix without a home and with a variety of health problems. Henry faced malnutrition, stomach issues and failing health. He also faced euthanization. Only 24 hours remained for Henry. Then Bideawee found him.

This New York City based shelter and rescue organization began in 1903. It was founded by Flora D’Auby Jenkins Kibbe who departed France for America, bringing with her a model founded in Paris that took stray dogs off the street. More than 100 years later, Kibbe’s organization had grown immensely and encountered Henry. As luck would have it, a prominent member of the health field — including animal health — would also encounter Henry.

Todd Richter was en route to a business meeting at Bideawee when Henry crossed his path. His fate was sealed from that point forward. Not only did Henry get the veterinary attention that he needed, but he found a new home with Todd Richter in Manhattan. And now, he’s a building and city celebrity alongside his fur-dad. Richter also discovered a passion for animals. Today, he serves on the Board of Directors for Bidawee, helping other animals find positive futures like Henry did.

Todd Richter attributes successes to his studies

Todd Richter

Todd Richter has grown into a successful businessperson in years and decades past. He is currently the managing director for Bank of America’s global healthcare investment group — a job that he attained in 1999 following significant experience in healthcare research. That experience includes 18 years spent with Morgan Stanley directing the firm’s healthcare services equity research efforts.

For Richter, it was his collegiate education at two universities that set him up for success and a lengthy career in the healthcare field. It created a sturdy foundation from which he could grow and prosper. Richter is a 1979 graduate of the College of William & Mary, a premier public research university. He earned his bachelor degree there, also committing himself wholly to the school’s golf program. It is that program and its coach from which Richter’s true growth began. His studies continued at the Kelley School of Business at Indiana University. Richter was a 1981 graduate of the prestigious business school, gaining his Masters in Business Administration in two years.

Todd Richter holds great pride for both of these educational institutions and attributes both to making him the businessman that he became. In appreciation, Richter recently provided endowments to both schools to aid other students like him.

Todd Richter Establishes Endowments

Todd Richter

Following a very successful career spanning three decades, Todd Richter wants to share his financial gains with others. Richter is currently the managing director for Bank of America’s global healthcare investment group. This job began in 1999 after 18 years of dedication working with Morgan Stanley.

Now that he has worked for more than 30 years and become one of the leading analysts in the healthcare industry, Todd Richter has chosen to give back to the educational institutions that built him into the businessperson that he is today. Those academic places are the College of William & Mary, where he earned his undergraduate degree in 1979, and the Kelley School of Business at Indiana University, from which he earned an Masters in Business Administration in 1981. To each, Richter donated $5 million, for a total of $10 million. This created an endowment at each school for other students and faculty to benefit from in their endeavors. This sizable contribution — a lasting legacy beyond his constant donations of time, leadership and mentorship — to each university will allow for others to grow in their successes just as Richter did in the previous 30 years.

Todd Richter Likes to Make Money for Clients and Help Those Who Made Him

Todd B. Richter

For a great many years now, Todd B. Richter has been considered among the most prolific and successful securities analysts on Wall Street, especially in the area of healthcare. However, most who actually know him understand well, there is a lot more to him than financial success and making money for others. As one example, he has a philanthropic side that has led to Todd’s creation of a $5 million endowment to the College of William & Mary’s golf team. This endowment should serve to keep the team solvent forever, but it will do so for several decades, at least. Todd Richter also set up another $5 million endowment for the Kelley School of Business at Indiana University, which was intended to provide them with enough funding to support professors, graduate fellowships, and several other activities designed to keep the pipeline of future financial analysts fir generations.Todd Richter has always been passionate in his support of education for the financial analysts who will keep his industry solid for generations to come.

The Dean of the Kelley School has heaped great praise on the value of Todd Richter’s largesse, especially in the form of the Richter Fund. The Dean said the effects of the Fund on the Kelley School’s solvency are “far-reaching” and that the money goes a long way to making sure the Kelley School stays healthy and productive for years. He has stated his belief that his gift will “ensure that future generations of the Kelley community will come to know Todd and be inspired to engage with the School as he has done and continues to do.” That’s not exactly feint praise; it shows that Todd Richter’s aim of keeping the pipeline of financial analysts to Wall Street will continue for generations.

These days, Todd Richter works at the Bank of America, where he has been a managing director of their healthcare investment group since 1999, which means he has more than two decades experience from that position. From there, he leads the group when it comes to financial sponsor coverage, but he also develops investments and other transactions that fulfill what the bank feels are key financial trends and important strategies. He also spent a lot of time as a senior research analyst on health insurance and managed care issues. Before that, he served largely the same role with Morgan Stanley for 18 years. That means his career trajectory has been steady for abut four decades. That makes him one of the best analysts in the industry, and the accolades he’s received have been deserved.

Golf Course Lessons Learned by Todd B. Richter

 

Todd B. Richter has had a 30+ year career in the healthcare financial field; a career that has flourished and discovered numerous accolades across its span. That career was built humbly upon an education at the College of William & Mary, a historic public research institute of higher learning in Williamsburg, Virginia. Richter graduated in William & Mary’s Class of 1979, earning a degree in finance. And while the education was superior at this Virginia school, it’s Richter’s extra-curricular activities that he speaks of most highly.

Todd Richter attributes much of his successes, including their foundation, to his time on the college’s golf team. There, he said, he learned valuable lessons under legendary coach Joe Agee, who was an emeritus professor of kinesiology. Said Richter about Agee and the competitive edge that he gained under his tutelage, “Being able to focus under pressure, or, as Coach Agee used to tell us, ‘set your priorities,’ is key. Athletics helps you hone your competitive instincts beyond just the intellectual experiences you get in the classroom.”

Richter earned a world-class education at William & Mary before continuing his studies at Indiana University’s Kelley School of Business. He graduated from the latter with his Masters of Business Administration in 1981, serving in the financial field since that time.

Todd B. Richter Intends To Be the Best and Praise Those Responsible

Todd Richter

 

Todd B. Richter has been considered one of the most prolific and successful healthcare industry analysts on Wall Street for many years now, but there is a lot more to him than financial success and making a lot of money. As one example, his philanthropic side has led to Todd’s creation of a $5 million endowment to the College of William & Mary’s golf team, which is sufficient to keep them solvent forever. In addition, he set up another $5 million endowment for the Kelley School of Business at Indiana University, to provide them the funds to support professors, graduate fellowships, and several other activities designed to support the school for generations.

Todd Richter has always been passionate in his support of education for the financial analysts who will keep his industry solid for generations to come. The Dean of the Kelley School has heaped great praise on the value of the Richter Fund, saying the effects of the Fund on the Kelley School’s solvency are “far-reaching” and that the money goes a long way to making sure the Kelley School stays healthy and productive for years. He has stated his belief that his gift will “ensure that future generations of the Kelley community will come to know Todd and be inspired to engage with the School as he has done and continues to do.” That’s not exactly feint praise; it shows that Todd Richter’s aim of keeping the pipeline of financial analysts to Wall Street will continue for generations.

These days, Todd Richter works at the Bank of America, as a managing director of their healthcare investment group. From that perch, he leads the group when it comes to financial sponsor coverage, but he also develops investments and other transactions that fulfill what the bank feels are key financial trends and important strategies. He also spent a lot of time (He has been with Bank of America for nearly a quarter-century) as a senior research analyst on health insurance and managed care issues. Before that, he served largely the same role with Morgan Stanley for 18 years. That means his career trajectory has been steady for abut four decades. That makes him one of the best analysts in the industry, and the accolades he’s received have been deserved.