Sir Michael Moritz honoured as Fellow of Aberystwyth University


The Cardiff-born venture capitalist and philanthropist, Sir Michael Moritz has been honoured as Fellow of Aberystwyth.
Sir Michael is chairman of Sequoia Capital in California’s Silicon Valley where he has worked since 1986.
After studying history at Oxford University, he moved to the US and worked for a while at Time magazine before carving out a career as one of Silicon Valley’s most sought-after investors.
He is a former member of the board of directors of Google and his internet company investments include Google, Yahoo!, PayPal, Webvan, YouTube, eToys, and Zappos.
He was appointed Knight Commander of the Order of the British Empire (KBE) in the 2013 Birthday Honours for services to promoting British economic interests and philanthropic work.
Sir Michael Moritz was presented by Professor Steve McGuire, Head of the School of Management and Business.
Eleven Fellows are being honoured this week by Aberystwyth University during this year’s Graduation ceremonies which take place at the University’s Arts Centre from Monday 14 until Friday 18 July.
The title of Fellow is awarded to individuals who have a close association with Aberystwyth and the University, or who have made an outstanding contribution to professional or public life in Wales.

Details of the award in full -
Cyflwyniad Syr Michael Moritz fel Cymrawd Prifysgol Aberystwyth
Presentation of Sir Michael Moritz as Fellow of Aberystwyth University
Yr Athro / Professor Steve McGuire
Ysgol Reolaeth a Busnes, Prifysgol Aberystwyth
School of Management and Business, Aberystwyth University.
Dechrau / Starts
Sir Michael Moritz
President, Vice-Chancellor
Capitalism has – rather unsurprisingly – been subjected to ferocious criticism in the wake of the recent recession. I spoke recently with one of our alumni who serves on the School’s corporate advisory board. He spoke of his relief that the behaviour of energy companies had for a moment at least, knocked banks off the top of the public hate list! Yet, the individual we honour today reminds us of the power of the market to create new products, services and to improve people’s lives. But the market can only do so, buttressed by effective political institutions and a shared understanding about the social obligations of market participants. This is what Michael Sandel, the Harvard philosopher referred to as ‘the moral limits to markets’.
I want to suggest that successful investing has its foundations in a good university education – hence our ceremony today. Any good university degree gives its holder three things: the ability to gather information (to research); then, the ability to analyse this information through technical skill and imagination; finally, you act on this information, by publishing your results, or investing, or recommending a course of action to top management. Sir Michael’s career displays all these elements.
Sir Michael was born in Wales and educated at the University of Oxford, where he read history. Like his father, Sir Michael excelled in academics and on that basis won a Thouron Scholarship to study at the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania. Upon completion of his MBA, Sir Michael worked first as a journalist for TIME magazine, a career move that would expose him to the fast developing world of Silicon Valley – at the time when few people would even know where this ‘Valley’ was. In 1986 he joined the venture capital firm Sequoia Capital, rising to become chairman. During his time at Sequoia, he invested in a string of start-up companies, some of which have been reasonably successful: Google, LinkedIn, YouTube.
Sir Michael’s career is testimony to the importance of the ability to gather information, assess it, and act on it. Given the ubiquity of Google, can you imagine what it must have felt like for Sir Michael to have listened to the then completely unknown founders of the company, and backed it.
I spoke at the outset of the social and moral obligation of markets. Sir Michael has been a generous supporter of social mobility in the UK and the US by supporting scholarship programmes at Oxford and the University of California. He has also supported the arts and the preservation of historic buildings. Aberystwyth University is unusual among UK universities in being founded by its local community drawing on the generosity of individuals for a social purpose. I hope on that basis, Sir Michael feels at home here.
President, we offer Honorary Fellowship to individuals whose work affects people well beyond their immediate circle. When people use Google, or LinkedIn – or when they visit buildings and attend a top university on a scholarship, they are benefiting from Sir Michael’s efforts.
Mr Llywydd, mae’n fraint ac yn bleser gennyf gyflwyno i chi Sir Michael Moritz, yn Gymrawd Prifysgol Aberystwyth.

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