Todd Harrison, a former trader and hedge fund president, is the founder and CEO of Minyanville (minyanville.com). In the 1960s, Dr. Seuss
revolutionized the way young readers first learned English. In the 1970s, Carl
Sagan and Isaac Asimov helped simplify the vast mysteries of science.
Schoolhouse Rock taught us the particulars of the political process. Yet the societal
need for fiscal literacy remains largely ignored, despite the mounting deficits
and structural imbalances that are percolating under a seemingly calm financial
surface.  | HOOFY THE Bull and Boo the Bear. | In an effort to meet that need, I created Minyanville, an
animated infotainment community where metaphorical critters serve as vehicles of
fiscal literacy. I imagined that a measured mix of content, community and
creativity would provide fresh flavor in a white-shoe world. With help from a
determined team, I designed the characters, built a platform and, with the
markets providing a daily script, prepared to lift the veil and tell the Wall
Street tale. The result was a cast of fun–but educational–characters with
distinct takes on the financial world: Hoofy the Bull, a bank president; Boo the
Bear, a retired dot-com millionaire; Daisy the Cow, a practical teacher; Sammy
the Snake, a wise bureaucrat; and Snapper the Turtle, the go-to guy.My personal involvement with Wall Street began with the myopic
motivation that the quickest way to make money was to stand near the cash
register. I didn’t know much about Wall Street other than the fact that most
financial professionals lived the type of lifestyle that we are conditioned to
aspire to: expensive suits, fancy rides, snazzy shoes. I remember thinking that
one day, that would be me. At whatever the cost and no matter what the
sacrifice, that was where I wanted to be. I got my first taste of the flickering ticks as a college
intern at Morgan Stanley in London. I was verbally abused, physically drained,
emotionally spent and, by the time I was done, completely sold. After I
graduated in 1991, I found myself sitting on Morgan’s vaunted derivatives desk
in New York. Over the next 10 years, I did what I had to do on the sell side,
found my way to the buy side and became president of a $400 million hedge fund.
Life was good, or so I thought, because I had the toys that society bestows on
those with money. Forget for a moment all the time that vanished while I sat in
front of my screens. There would be many more dinners with friends, plenty of
opportunities to find a bride and countless hours to relax. Fiscal Fitness Franchise The autumn of 2001 planted seeds that profoundly changed my
perception of reality. The 9/11 terrorist attacks shook my core as, from my
window down the street, I watched the planes hit and people jump. I cannot say
the horror was the genesis of my new beginning, however my perspective clearly
shifted. I questioned the difference between having fun and being happy. Maybe I
realized that net worth and self-worth are mutually independent. Whatever it
was, a powerful energy brewed within, and it needed a home. I eventually stepped down from my presidential perch to create Minyanville, which became that
cyber town populated with those critter characters, striving to make sense of
the market and explain it to others. I have long maintained that a bull market and bear market
coexist daily, with the residual grist dripping down to the front pages of
tomorrow’s financial press. In a world where reasons are often assigned to the
rhymes, a real-time assimilation of competing market forces–filtered through
some of the brightest minds in the financial world–seemed like an intuitive
framework for shared learning and the foundation for a fiscal fitness
franchise. The first to join the journey included a group of people who
shared a vision for what financial information could and should be. They
included a cast of creative thinkers such as Casey Cannon, who came out of
George Lucas’ Industrial Light and Magic, and John Succo, the former head of
derivatives at Lehman Brothers. That was the genesis of a community predicated
on honesty, integrity and a common mission: to unveil the world of finance and
make it approachable.
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