-->

Friday, August 10, 2018

Google CFO Ruth Porat says suing Uber was the only right path - Recode
src: cdn.vox-cdn.com

Ruth Porat (born 1957) is a British-American financial executive, who currently serves as chief financial officer (CFO) of Alphabet Inc. as well as its subsidiary Google. Porat was CFO and executive vice president of Morgan Stanley from January 2010 to May 2015.


Video Ruth Porat



Early life and education

Porat was born to a Jewish family in Sale, Greater Manchester, England, the daughter of Dr. Dan and Frieda Porat. She moved at a young age to Cambridge, Massachusetts, where her father was a research fellow in the physics department at Harvard University. Her father later relocated the family to Palo Alto, California three years later where he worked at the SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory for 26 years. Porat has a bachelor of arts degree in Economics & International Relations from Stanford University, and holds a master of science degree in industrial relations from London School of Economics and an MBA with distinction from Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania.


Maps Ruth Porat



Career

Morgan Stanley

Porat began her career at Morgan Stanley in 1987 and left in 1993 to follow Morgan Stanley President Robert F. Greenhill to Smith Barney in 1993 and returned to Morgan Stanley in 1996. Before becoming CFO, she served as Vice Chairman of Investment Banking, from September 2003 to December 2009 and Global Head of the Financial Institutions Group from September 2006 through December 2009. She was previously the co-head of Technology Investment Banking and worked for Morgan Stanley in London. While a banker at Morgan Stanley, she is credited with creating the European debt financing that saved Amazon from collapse during the dot-com melt down in 2000. Her financial partner during the Internet investment banking craze was Mary Meeker, who is the godmother to Porat's three children.

During the financial crisis, Porat led the Morgan Stanley team advising the United States Department of the Treasury regarding Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, and the New York Federal Reserve Bank with respect to AIG. In the 2011 HBO movie "Too Big to Fail," Porat is played by Jennifer van Dyck. In May 2011, she presented to the Bretton Woods Committee hosted by the International Monetary Fund in Washington, D.C. on post-crisis reform and financial legislation, and to the World Economic Forum in Davos, in 2013 on "trust" levels within and of the financial sector.

In 2013, it was reported that President Barack Obama would nominate Porat as the next Deputy Secretary of the Treasury. However, it was reported later by Bloomberg News and The New York Times that Porat had contacted White House officials to withdraw her name from consideration because of improving conditions at Morgan Stanley and the acrimonious confirmation process inflicted upon then Treasury Secretary-nominee Jack Lew.

Porat's career was analyzed in the McKinsey & Company study "How Remarkable Women Lead". She was named "Best Financial Institutions CFO" in a poll conducted by Institutional Investor for its "2014 All-America Executive Team".

Google

On March 24, 2015, it was announced that Porat would join Google as their new CFO as of May 26, 2015. Bloomberg Business reported that her hiring deal amounted to $70 million. She has been credited with boosting Google's share price by reorganizing the company and imposing financial discipline for the first time. For the "2018 All America Executive Team", she was named "Best Internet CFO" by Institutional Investor. Porat spoke at the Fortune Most Powerful Women Summit in Dana Point, California, on Wednesday, Oct. 19, 2016, in her capacity as Chief Financial Officer of Alphabet Inc. and Google. At Google, in addition to Finance, Porat also has Business Operations, "People Ops", Google's Human Resources function, Real Estate and Work Place Services reporting to her.

In 2017, Porat was listed as the 25th most powerful woman in the world by Forbes.


Ruth Porat & Zanny Minton Beddoes - Leaders Of Our Time - YouTube
src: i.ytimg.com


Boardships

She is a vice chair of the Board of Trustees of Stanford University, a member of the Board of Directors of Stanford Management Company the Borrowing Advisory Committee of the United States Treasury, the Board of Directors of The Council on Foreign Relations, the Board of Trustees of the Economic Club of New York, and the Bretton Woods Committee. She is a member of the Advisory Council of the Hutchins Center on Fiscal and Monetary Policy at the Brookings Institution.


Alphabet's Ruth Porat and Intel's Brian Krzanich are coming to ...
src: cdn.vox-cdn.com


Political views

Porat supported Senator Hillary Clinton when she ran for president in 2008, hosting a fundraiser at her apartment in The Dakota in New York City, and did the same in 2016. In 2011, Porat expressed her support for increased taxes on the wealthy and declared on the topic of significant spending decreases that "we cannot cut our way to greatness."


Ruth Porat Archives - Business Pundit
src: www.businesspundit.com


Personal life

Porat has been married to Anthony Paduano, a partner in the law firm of Paduano & Weintraub, since 1983. Porat is a survivor of breast cancer.

In September 2015, Porat reportedly paid $30 million for a house in Palo Alto.


Google CFO Ruth Porat and Google suppliers discuss Google's ...
src: i.ytimg.com


References

Source of article : Wikipedia