Reid Holloway’s client roster has included Young & Rubicam, Inc., Philip Morris, Pfizer Pharmaceuticals, and The Trump Organization.
Mr. Holloway began his career as an editor with Harcourt Brace Jovanovich Publications in 1976.
In 1978 he joined Sanford C. Bernstein & Co., ...
more Reid Holloway’s client roster has included Young & Rubicam, Inc., Philip Morris, Pfizer Pharmaceuticals, and The Trump Organization.
Mr. Holloway began his career as an editor with Harcourt Brace Jovanovich Publications in 1976.
In 1978 he joined Sanford C. Bernstein & Co., Inc. (now a unit of Alliance Capital), an investment research and management firm now handling roughly half a trillion dollars in client assets, where he instituted and managed the company’s communications department.
In 1980 he joined W.R. Grace & Co. as a speech writer and deputy director of public affairs. He served on the presidentially appointed Grace Commission appointed by Ronald Reagan, orchestrating the heavy public speaking schedule of corporate legend Peter Grace, including cash development activities for the commission’s work. He managed selected community and corporate affairs and corporate-giving projects.
In 1987 Mr. Holloway joined Edward S. Gordon Company, Inc. (now ESG/Insignia) and directed the firm’s marketing and communications activities related to large leasing and investment transactions, including the sale of 2.5-million-square-foot One New York Plaza to Chase Manhattan Bank (now a unit of J.P. Morgan Chase).
Mr. Holloway was graduated from Colgate University in 1975. He pursued additional studies in finance and accounting at New York University’s Graduate Business Administration Program in 1980.
Mr. Holloway is a published commentator on political and financial affairs, widely quoted in the news media and an intermittent guest on a variety of talk shows. Mr. Holloway published studies in 1996, 2000, 2004, 2008, 2012 and 2016 forecasting the outcome of the Electoral College, along with specific popular vote totals for each state, within one half of one percent of the actual tallies. His 2012 forecast was featured in a cover story of Barron’s Magazine.
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