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{{Infobox person
{{Infobox person
| name = Wally Weitz
| name = Wally Weitz
| birth_place = United States
| birth_name = Wallace R. Weitz
| nationality = American
| nationality = American
| occupation = Investor, fund manager, philanthropist
| occupation = Investor, fund manager, philanthropist
| known_for = Founder of Weitz Investment Management; board member of Berkshire Hathaway
| known_for = Founder of Weitz Investment Management; board member of Berkshire Hathaway
| education = [[Carleton College]] (Class of 1970)
| education = Carleton College
| employer = Weitz Investment Management
| employer = Weitz Investment Management
| title = Founder and Co-Chief Investment Officer
| title = Founder and Co-Chief Investment Officer
}}
}}


'''Wallace R. "Wally" Weitz''' is an American investor, fund manager, and philanthropist who founded '''Weitz Investment Management''', an Omaha, Nebraska-based investment firm where he serves as co-chief investment officer. A practitioner of [[value investing]], Weitz built a decades-long career managing mutual funds and overseeing portfolios grounded in fundamental analysis and a long-term orientation toward equity markets. In March 2022, [[Berkshire Hathaway]], the conglomerate led by [[Warren Buffett]], nominated Weitz to fill an open seat on its board of directors, underscoring his standing within the American investment community.<ref name="reuters">{{cite news |date=2022-03-11 |title=Berkshire Hathaway nominates Wally Weitz to fill open board seat |url=https://www.reuters.com/business/berkshire-hathaway-nominates-wally-weitz-fill-open-board-seat-2022-03-11/ |work=Reuters |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Beyond his investment career, Weitz and his wife, Barbara Weitz, have engaged in significant philanthropic activity, directing tens of millions of dollars toward educational institutions including [[Carleton College]] and the [[University of Nebraska]].<ref name="pnd">{{cite news |date=2023-06-14 |title=Barbara and Wally Weitz commit $25 million to University of Nebraska |url=https://philanthropynewsdigest.org/news/barbara-and-wally-weitz-commit-25-million-to-university-of-nebraska |work=Philanthropy News Digest |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Their contributions to Carleton College, Weitz's alma mater, have exceeded $45 million in total gifts, funding the construction of a major campus building that bears the family's name.<ref name="weitz_family">{{cite web |title=The Weitz Family |url=https://apps.carleton.edu/weitz/about/weitz_family/ |publisher=Carleton College |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
'''Wallace R. "Wally" Weitz''' is an American investor, fund manager, and philanthropist who founded '''Weitz Investment Management''', an Omaha, Nebraska-based investment firm. A practitioner of value investing, Weitz has spent decades managing mutual funds and institutional portfolios guided by the principle of purchasing securities trading below their intrinsic value. His career in finance has placed him among a notable circle of Omaha-based investors, and in 2022, Warren Buffett's '''Berkshire Hathaway Inc.''' nominated him to join its board of directors, a distinction that underscored his standing in the investment community.<ref name="reuters">{{cite news |date=2022-03-11 |title=Berkshire Hathaway nominates Wally Weitz to fill open board seat |url=https://www.reuters.com/business/berkshire-hathaway-nominates-wally-weitz-fill-open-board-seat-2022-03-11/ |work=Reuters |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Beyond his investment career, Weitz is known for substantial philanthropic contributions, particularly to '''Carleton College''' in Northfield, Minnesota, where he and the Weitz family have contributed over $45 million in total gifts, and to the '''University of Nebraska''', where he and his wife Barbara committed $25 million in 2023.<ref name="carleton-family">{{cite web |title=The Weitz Family |url=https://apps.carleton.edu/weitz/about/weitz_family/ |publisher=Carleton College |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref><ref name="pnd-nebraska">{{cite news |date=2023-06-14 |title=Barbara and Wally Weitz commit $25 million to University of Nebraska |url=https://philanthropynewsdigest.org/news/barbara-and-wally-weitz-commit-25-million-to-university-of-nebraska |work=Philanthropy News Digest |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> His career has encompassed fund management, corporate governance, and significant engagement with nonprofit institutions across the Midwest.


== Education ==
== Education ==


Wally Weitz attended [[Carleton College]], a private liberal arts college in Northfield, Minnesota, graduating with the Class of 1970.<ref name="reunion">{{cite news |date=2020-06-22 |title=Carleton Class of 1970 sets new record for 50th reunion giving |url=https://www.carleton.edu/news/stories/carleton-class-of-1970-sets-new-record-for-50th-reunion-giving/ |work=Carleton College News |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> His time at Carleton appears to have had a lasting impact on his life and career; he and his family have maintained a deep and sustained connection to the institution over the ensuing decades, both financially and through programmatic involvement. The Class of 1970, of which Weitz is a prominent member, announced the largest 50th Reunion class gift in the history of Carleton College in June 2020, contributing $64.2 million to the institution.<ref name="reunion" /> Weitz's own giving to the college, detailed further below, has been among the most substantial in Carleton's history and has shaped the physical and programmatic landscape of the campus.
Wally Weitz is an alumnus of '''Carleton College''', a private liberal arts college in Northfield, Minnesota. He is a member of the Class of 1970.<ref name="carleton-reunion">{{cite web |date=2020-06-22 |title=Carleton Class of 1970 sets new record for 50th reunion giving |url=https://www.carleton.edu/news/stories/carleton-class-of-1970-sets-new-record-for-50th-reunion-giving/ |publisher=Carleton College |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> His connection to Carleton has remained strong throughout his career, as evidenced by his extensive philanthropic engagement with the institution. In 2020, the Carleton Class of 1970 announced the largest 50th Reunion class gift in the history of the college, contributing $64.2 million, a total to which Weitz was a notable contributor.<ref name="carleton-reunion" />
 
Weitz's undergraduate education at Carleton, a college known for its rigorous academic curriculum and emphasis on critical thinking, appears to have laid a foundation for the analytical approach he would later apply to investment management. His subsequent career in Omaha, Nebraska, placed him in proximity to one of the most prominent investment communities in the United States.


== Career ==
== Career ==
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=== Weitz Investment Management ===
=== Weitz Investment Management ===


Wally Weitz founded Weitz Investment Management, an investment advisory firm headquartered in Omaha, Nebraska. The firm operates within the tradition of [[value investing]], an approach to equity selection that emphasizes purchasing securities trading below their intrinsic value and holding them over extended time horizons. Weitz has served as co-chief investment officer of the firm, overseeing the management of mutual funds and investment portfolios.<ref name="wsj">{{cite news |date=2022-03-11 |title=Berkshire Hathaway Nominates Wally Weitz to Fill Board Vacancy |url=https://www.wsj.com/finance/investing/berkshire-hathaway-nominates-wally-weitz-to-fill-board-vacancy-11647038290 |work=The Wall Street Journal |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
Wally Weitz founded '''Weitz Investment Management''', based in Omaha, Nebraska. He has served as the firm's co-chief investment officer.<ref name="wsj">{{cite news |date=2022-03-11 |title=Berkshire Hathaway Nominates Wally Weitz to Fill Board Vacancy |url=https://www.wsj.com/finance/investing/berkshire-hathaway-nominates-wally-weitz-to-fill-board-vacancy-11647038290 |work=The Wall Street Journal |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The firm operates as an investment management company, managing mutual funds and investment portfolios. Weitz's investment philosophy is rooted in value investing, an approach that emphasizes the identification and purchase of securities that trade at prices below their estimated intrinsic value. This approach shares intellectual lineage with the investment philosophies of Benjamin Graham and Warren Buffett, the latter of whom is also based in Omaha.


Based in the same city as Berkshire Hathaway, Weitz has operated within a community of investors influenced by the value investing principles associated with Warren Buffett and, before him, [[Benjamin Graham]]. Weitz Investment Management has managed several funds and has been recognized for its disciplined, research-intensive approach to stock selection. The firm's investment philosophy centers on identifying companies with strong fundamentals, durable competitive advantages, and management teams that allocate capital effectively.
Weitz Investment Management has operated from Omaha for decades, making it part of a notable cluster of investment firms and financial institutions headquartered in the city. The firm's presence in Omaha, alongside Berkshire Hathaway and other investment operations, has contributed to the city's reputation as a center of value-oriented investing.


=== Berkshire Hathaway Board Nomination ===
=== Berkshire Hathaway Board Nomination ===


On March 11, 2022, Berkshire Hathaway Inc. announced that it had nominated Wally Weitz to fill an open seat on its board of directors.<ref name="reuters" /> The nomination was reported by multiple major news outlets, including Reuters and ''The Wall Street Journal'', which identified Weitz as the founder and co-chief investment officer of Weitz Investment Management.<ref name="wsj" />
On March 11, 2022, '''Berkshire Hathaway Inc.''', the multinational conglomerate holding company led by Warren Buffett, announced that it had nominated Wally Weitz to fill an open seat on its board of directors.<ref name="reuters" /> The nomination was reported by major financial news outlets including Reuters and ''The Wall Street Journal''.<ref name="wsj" />


The nomination to Berkshire Hathaway's board represented a significant recognition of Weitz's career and reputation within the investment community. Berkshire Hathaway, led by Warren Buffett, is one of the largest and most closely watched companies in the world, and seats on its board are occupied by individuals selected for their business acumen, integrity, and alignment with the company's long-term investment philosophy. Weitz's nomination signaled the high regard in which he was held by Buffett and Berkshire's leadership.<ref name="reuters" /><ref name="wsj" />
The nomination to the Berkshire Hathaway board represented a significant recognition of Weitz's standing in the investment community. Berkshire Hathaway's board has historically included individuals with deep expertise in investing, business management, and corporate governance. Weitz was identified in the announcement as the founder and co-chief investment officer of Weitz Investment Management.<ref name="reuters" /><ref name="wsj" />


Reuters reported that the nomination was intended to fill an existing vacancy on the board.<ref name="reuters" /> ''The Wall Street Journal'' provided further context, noting Weitz's role as co-chief investment officer at his firm and situating the appointment within the broader context of Berkshire's board composition.<ref name="wsj" />
Berkshire Hathaway's selection process for board members has been closely watched by investors and financial analysts, given the company's prominence and the personal involvement of Warren Buffett in governance decisions. The nomination of Weitz, a fellow Omaha-based value investor, reflected the close-knit nature of the Omaha investment community and the shared intellectual framework that connects many of its leading figures.


== Philanthropy ==
== Philanthropy ==
Wally Weitz and his wife, Barbara Weitz, have been significant philanthropists, directing substantial resources toward educational institutions and nonprofit organizations, primarily in Nebraska and Minnesota.


=== Carleton College ===
=== Carleton College ===


The Weitz family's philanthropic relationship with Carleton College has been among the most notable in the institution's history. Wally Weitz and the Weitz family have contributed over $45 million in total gifts to the college.<ref name="weitz_family" /> This giving has supported both capital projects and programmatic initiatives on campus.
Wally Weitz and the Weitz family have been among the most significant benefactors of '''Carleton College'''. The family's total contributions to the college have exceeded $45 million.<ref name="carleton-family" /> This philanthropic relationship has shaped the physical campus of the college and supported a range of academic and experiential learning programs.


==== The Weitz Center for Creativity ====
==== The Weitz Center for Creativity ====


The most visible manifestation of the Weitz family's generosity to Carleton College is the '''Weitz Center for Creativity''', an academic building on the Carleton campus in Northfield, Minnesota. The building, which was formerly a middle school and high school, was converted and opened in the fall of 2011.<ref name="history">{{cite web |title=History |url=http://apps.carleton.edu/weitz/about/history/ |publisher=Carleton College |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The center serves as a hub for arts and interdisciplinary programming at Carleton.
The most visible expression of the Weitz family's support for Carleton College is the '''Weitz Center for Creativity''', an academic building on the Carleton campus. The building, which formerly housed a middle school and high school, was renovated and repurposed as a center for the arts. It opened in the fall of 2011.<ref name="weitz-history">{{cite web |title=History |url=http://apps.carleton.edu/weitz/about/history/ |publisher=Carleton College |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>


The Weitz Center houses a variety of facilities. In addition to classrooms, the building contains the Perlman Teaching Museum, which provides exhibition space and educational programming related to the visual arts.<ref name="museum">{{cite web |title=Teaching Museum |url=http://apps.carleton.edu/weitz/tour/teaching_museum/ |publisher=Carleton College |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The center also includes a theater and two dance studios, supporting the college's performing arts programs.<ref name="theater">{{cite web |title=Theater and Dance |url=http://apps.carleton.edu/weitz/tour/theater_and_dance/ |publisher=Carleton College |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
The Weitz Center for Creativity houses a range of facilities designed to support interdisciplinary arts education. These include classrooms, the '''Perlman Teaching Museum''', a theater, and two dance studios.<ref name="weitz-teaching-museum">{{cite web |title=Teaching Museum |url=http://apps.carleton.edu/weitz/tour/teaching_museum/ |publisher=Carleton College |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref><ref name="weitz-theater-dance">{{cite web |title=Theater and Dance |url=http://apps.carleton.edu/weitz/tour/theater_and_dance/ |publisher=Carleton College |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Perlman Teaching Museum serves as an educational space where art is integrated into the broader liberal arts curriculum, allowing faculty from various disciplines to use the museum's collections and exhibitions in their teaching.


In 2017, a new addition to the Weitz Center was completed, focused on music and performing arts. This expansion added a performance hall, rehearsal spaces, and faculty offices, substantially increasing the building's capacity and scope.<ref name="music_addition">{{cite web |title=Arts Addition |url=https://apps.carleton.edu/arts/blog/?story_id=1681944 |publisher=Carleton College |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The building has received LEED Gold certification, recognizing its sustainable design and construction practices.<ref name="facility">{{cite web |title=Facility |url=https://apps.carleton.edu/weitz/about/facility/ |publisher=Carleton College |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
In 2017, a new addition to the Weitz Center was completed, expanding the facility to include music and performing arts spaces. The addition incorporated a performance hall, rehearsal spaces, and faculty offices, significantly broadening the scope of creative activities supported by the building.<ref name="weitz-music">{{cite web |title=Weitz Center Music and Performing Arts Addition |url=https://apps.carleton.edu/arts/blog/?story_id=1681944 |publisher=Carleton College |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The building has been certified as '''LEED Gold''', reflecting its adherence to environmental sustainability standards in design and construction.<ref name="weitz-facility">{{cite web |title=Facility |url=https://apps.carleton.edu/weitz/about/facility/ |publisher=Carleton College |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>


The naming of the center reflects the scale of the Weitz family's contributions to the college and their commitment to supporting the arts and creative inquiry within a liberal arts educational setting.<ref name="weitz_family" />
The Weitz Center has become a central hub for the arts at Carleton, bringing together programs in visual arts, theater, dance, music, and cinema and media studies under one roof. Its design and programming reflect an emphasis on interdisciplinary collaboration, a hallmark of the liberal arts approach to education that Carleton espouses.


==== The Weitz Fellowship ====
==== The Weitz Fellowship ====


The Weitz family's philanthropy at Carleton College also extends to programmatic initiatives. The '''Weitz Fellowship''' is a program that provides one-year, paid, full-time positions within the nonprofit sector to graduating Carleton seniors.<ref name="fellows2025">{{cite news |date=2025-06-05 |title=Carleton announces Class of 2025 Weitz Fellows |url=https://www.carleton.edu/news/stories/class-2025-weitz-fellows/ |work=Carleton College News |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The fellowship places recent graduates in nonprofit organizations, primarily in Nebraska, where they gain professional experience while contributing to community-based work.
The Weitz family's philanthropy at Carleton College extends beyond physical infrastructure to include experiential learning programs. The '''Weitz Fellowship''' is a program that provides graduating Carleton seniors with one-year, paid, full-time positions within the nonprofit sector in Nebraska.<ref name="weitz-fellows-2025">{{cite web |date=2025-06-05 |title=Carleton announces Class of 2025 Weitz Fellows |url=https://www.carleton.edu/news/stories/class-2025-weitz-fellows/ |publisher=Carleton College |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>


The program has been ongoing for multiple years. In the 2023–24 cycle, selected fellows traveled to Nebraska for an introduction to their fellowship year, meeting with current and former fellows, the Weitz family, and members of the Carleton Career Center.<ref name="fellows2023">{{cite news |date=2023-05-16 |title=2023-24 Weitz fellows travel to Nebraska for introduction to fellowship year |url=https://www.carleton.edu/news/stories/2023-24-weitz-fellows-travel-to-nebraska-for-introduction-to-fellowship-year/ |work=Carleton College News |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> In June 2025, Carleton announced that eight seniors from the Class of 2025 had been awarded the Weitz Fellowship.<ref name="fellows2025" /> As of early 2026, the 2025–26 Weitz Fellows were sharing updates about their experiences working in Nebraska's nonprofit sector.<ref name="fellows2026">{{cite news |date=2026-01-22 |title=Updates from Omaha: The 2025–26 Weitz Fellows share their work so far |url=https://www.carleton.edu/news/stories/updates-from-omaha-weitz-fellows/ |work=Carleton College News |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
The fellowship program connects Carleton graduates with nonprofit organizations in Omaha and elsewhere in Nebraska, providing participants with professional experience while supporting the work of community-based organizations. In 2025, eight Carleton seniors were awarded the fellowship.<ref name="weitz-fellows-2025" /> The program has operated for multiple years, with fellows reporting on their experiences working in Nebraska's nonprofit sector.<ref name="weitz-fellows-2026">{{cite web |date=2026-01-22 |title=Updates from Omaha: The 2025–26 Weitz Fellows share their work so far |url=https://www.carleton.edu/news/stories/updates-from-omaha-weitz-fellows/ |publisher=Carleton College |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>


The Weitz Fellowship reflects the family's interest in connecting Carleton students with civic and community organizations, particularly in their home state of Nebraska. It represents a bridge between the liberal arts education provided by Carleton and the practical work of the nonprofit sector.
Each cohort of Weitz Fellows travels to Nebraska for an introduction to their fellowship year, meeting with current and former fellows, the Weitz family, and members of the Career Center staff at Carleton.<ref name="weitz-fellows-2023">{{cite web |date=2023-05-16 |title=2023-24 Weitz fellows travel to Nebraska for introduction to fellowship year |url=https://www.carleton.edu/news/stories/2023-24-weitz-fellows-travel-to-nebraska-for-introduction-to-fellowship-year/ |publisher=Carleton College |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The program reflects the Weitz family's commitment to both Carleton College and the state of Nebraska, serving as a bridge between the educational institution and the communities where the family has deep roots.


==== 50th Reunion Class Gift ====
==== Class of 1970 Reunion Gift ====


In June 2020, Carleton College announced that the Class of 1970—Wally Weitz's graduating class—had set a new record for 50th reunion giving, contributing $64.2 million to the college. This was described as the largest 50th Reunion class gift in the history of the institution.<ref name="reunion" /> While the gift represented collective contributions from multiple class members, Weitz's status as one of the most prominent and wealthiest alumni of the class suggests a significant individual role in achieving this milestone.
In 2020, the Carleton Class of 1970—Weitz's graduating class—set a new record for 50th reunion giving, contributing a total of $64.2 million to the college. This was announced as the largest 50th Reunion class gift in Carleton's history.<ref name="carleton-reunion" /> While the gift represented the collective contributions of the entire class, Weitz's status as the class's most prominent philanthropist and his established pattern of major giving to Carleton indicate his role as a significant contributor to this total.


=== University of Nebraska ===
=== University of Nebraska ===


In June 2023, it was announced that Barbara and Wally Weitz had committed $25 million to the University of Nebraska. The gift was intended to create an endowed fund supporting the university's programs and initiatives.<ref name="pnd" /> Barbara Weitz serves as a university regent, and the couple's commitment reflected their sustained engagement with higher education in Nebraska. Philanthropy News Digest reported on the gift, describing it as a major contribution from a university regent and her husband.<ref name="pnd" />
In 2023, Barbara and Wally Weitz committed $25 million to the '''University of Nebraska'''. The gift was intended to create an endowed institute at the university.<ref name="pnd-nebraska" /> Barbara Weitz has served as a regent of the University of Nebraska, further connecting the couple to the institution.<ref name="pnd-nebraska" /> The gift represented one of the larger individual commitments to the University of Nebraska system and underscored the Weitz family's philanthropic focus on educational institutions in their home state.


The University of Nebraska gift, combined with the Weitz family's contributions to Carleton College, represents a philanthropic portfolio directed primarily at educational institutions. The total publicly documented giving from the Weitz family to these two institutions alone exceeds $70 million.
=== Nebraska Journalism and Nonprofit Support ===


=== Nebraska Journalism ===
The Weitz family's philanthropic interests in Nebraska extend beyond higher education. The '''Nebraska Journalism Trust''', which operates the '''Flatwater Free Press''', a nonprofit news organization covering Nebraska, has been part of the broader ecosystem of nonprofit engagement in the state. In 2024, the Flatwater Free Press announced expansions to its board and staff, reflecting the growth of nonprofit journalism in the region where the Weitz family has been active philanthropically.<ref name="flatwater">{{cite news |date=2024-03-07 |title=New at the Nebraska Journalism Trust: More directors, hires and Silicon Prairie Startup Week |url=https://flatwaterfreepress.org/new-at-the-nebraska-journalism-trust-more-directors-hires-and-silicon-prairie-startup-week/ |work=Flatwater Free Press |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
 
Wally Weitz has also been involved in supporting journalism in Nebraska. In March 2024, the Flatwater Free Press, a nonprofit news organization covering Nebraska, reported on developments at the Nebraska Journalism Trust, including new board members and hires.<ref name="flatwater">{{cite news |date=2024-03-07 |title=New at the Nebraska Journalism Trust: More directors, hires and Silicon Prairie Startup Week |url=https://flatwaterfreepress.org/new-at-the-nebraska-journalism-trust-more-directors-hires-and-silicon-prairie-startup-week/ |work=Flatwater Free Press |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Weitz family's engagement with local journalism initiatives in Nebraska reflects a broader philanthropic interest in civic infrastructure and public information.


== Personal Life ==
== Personal Life ==


Wally Weitz is married to Barbara Weitz. The couple resides in the Omaha, Nebraska area, where Wally's investment firm is headquartered.<ref name="pnd" /> Barbara Weitz has served as a regent of the University of Nebraska, a role that involves governance and oversight of the university system.<ref name="pnd" />
Wally Weitz is married to '''Barbara Weitz'''. The couple resides in Omaha, Nebraska, where Wally has based his investment management firm. Barbara Weitz has been involved in public service, serving as a regent of the University of Nebraska.<ref name="pnd-nebraska" /> Together, the couple has engaged in philanthropic activities focused on education, the arts, and the nonprofit sector, with particular emphasis on institutions in Nebraska and Minnesota.


The Weitz family's philanthropic activities suggest deep ties to both Omaha and the broader Nebraska community, as well as to Carleton College in Minnesota. Their giving has focused on education, the arts, nonprofit capacity building, and journalism, reflecting interests that span the cultural and civic landscape of the communities where they live and to which they are connected.
The Weitz family's philanthropic activities have been a collaborative endeavor, with Barbara and Wally jointly committing significant resources to institutions including Carleton College and the University of Nebraska.<ref name="carleton-family" /><ref name="pnd-nebraska" /> Their giving has reflected a consistent set of priorities: supporting liberal arts education, fostering creativity and the arts, and strengthening the nonprofit sector in Nebraska.


== Recognition ==
== Recognition ==


Wally Weitz's nomination to the board of directors of Berkshire Hathaway in 2022 represented one of the most prominent forms of professional recognition in the American business community. Berkshire Hathaway board seats are among the most closely watched corporate governance positions in the United States, and the nomination reflected the confidence of Warren Buffett and Berkshire's leadership in Weitz's judgment, character, and investment philosophy.<ref name="reuters" /><ref name="wsj" />
Wally Weitz's career in investment management and his philanthropic activities have brought him recognition in both the financial and educational communities.


The naming of the Weitz Center for Creativity at Carleton College in honor of the Weitz family constitutes a significant institutional recognition of their philanthropic contributions. The building, which opened in 2011 and was expanded in 2017, serves as a lasting acknowledgment of the family's impact on the college's arts and academic programs.<ref name="history" /><ref name="weitz_family" />
His nomination to the '''Berkshire Hathaway''' board of directors in 2022 represented one of the most prominent acknowledgments of his stature as an investor. Berkshire Hathaway, with a market capitalization among the largest of any publicly traded company, selects its board members with care, and the nomination was covered by Reuters, ''The Wall Street Journal'', and other major financial publications.<ref name="reuters" /><ref name="wsj" />


The Weitz Fellowship program at Carleton College further ensures that the Weitz name is associated with civic engagement and professional development for young graduates entering the nonprofit sector. Each year, a new cohort of Weitz Fellows carries the family's philanthropic legacy into communities across Nebraska.<ref name="fellows2025" /><ref name="fellows2026" />
At Carleton College, the naming of the '''Weitz Center for Creativity''' in honor of the Weitz family serves as a lasting recognition of the family's contributions to the institution. The building's LEED Gold certification and its role as a central arts facility on campus have made it one of the most prominent structures at the college.<ref name="weitz-facility" /> The '''Weitz Fellowship''' program further carries the family name, connecting it to the professional development of Carleton graduates working in Nebraska's nonprofit sector.<ref name="weitz-fellows-2025" />


The record-setting 50th Reunion gift from the Carleton Class of 1970, totaling $64.2 million, also brought attention to Weitz and his classmates for their collective generosity to their alma mater.<ref name="reunion" />
The $25 million commitment to the University of Nebraska in 2023 also brought public recognition to the Weitz family's philanthropic efforts, with the gift announced through major philanthropy news outlets.<ref name="pnd-nebraska" />


== Legacy ==
== Legacy ==


Wally Weitz's legacy spans both the investment world and the philanthropic landscape of the American Midwest. As the founder of Weitz Investment Management, he built a firm rooted in the principles of value investing that has operated for decades out of Omaha, a city synonymous with the discipline thanks to the presence of Warren Buffett and Berkshire Hathaway. His nomination to the Berkshire Hathaway board in 2022 placed him among a select group of individuals entrusted with governance responsibilities at one of the most significant companies in American corporate history.<ref name="reuters" /><ref name="wsj" />
Wally Weitz's legacy encompasses his contributions to value investing and his philanthropic impact on educational and cultural institutions. As the founder of Weitz Investment Management, he built an investment firm in Omaha that has operated for decades, managing capital according to the principles of value investing. His nomination to the Berkshire Hathaway board placed him in the governance structure of one of the most prominent companies in the world, further cementing his position within the Omaha investment community.


Through their philanthropy, Wally and Barbara Weitz have left a tangible imprint on multiple institutions. The Weitz Center for Creativity at Carleton College serves as both a functional academic building—housing classrooms, a museum, a theater, dance studios, a performance hall, and rehearsal spaces—and a symbol of the transformative potential of alumni giving to liberal arts colleges.<ref name="history" /><ref name="museum" /><ref name="theater" /><ref name="music_addition" /> The building's LEED Gold certification also reflects a commitment to environmental sustainability in campus construction.<ref name="facility" />
His philanthropic legacy is anchored by the Weitz Center for Creativity at Carleton College, a facility that has transformed the arts experience at the college. The center's interdisciplinary design, housing visual arts, theater, dance, music, and cinema under one roof, reflects an approach to arts education that emphasizes collaboration across traditional disciplinary boundaries. The 2017 expansion of the center to include music and performing arts spaces extended this vision further.<ref name="weitz-music" />


The Weitz Fellowship program extends the family's influence beyond bricks and mortar, creating a pipeline of Carleton graduates into Nebraska's nonprofit sector. By funding full-time, paid positions for recent graduates, the program addresses both the professional development needs of young people and the capacity challenges facing community organizations.<ref name="fellows2025" /><ref name="fellows2023" /><ref name="fellows2026" />
The Weitz Fellowship program represents another dimension of his legacy, creating a pipeline between Carleton College and Nebraska's nonprofit sector. By funding paid, full-time positions for recent graduates in nonprofit organizations, the program has supported both the professional development of young people and the capacity of Nebraska's nonprofit institutions.<ref name="weitz-fellows-2025" /><ref name="weitz-fellows-2026" />


The $25 million commitment to the University of Nebraska, announced in 2023, further demonstrates the breadth of the Weitz family's educational philanthropy, extending their giving beyond Wally's alma mater to an institution central to their home state.<ref name="pnd" />
Together with Barbara Weitz, Wally has directed substantial resources toward strengthening educational institutions in both Minnesota and Nebraska, with total giving to Carleton College exceeding $45 million and a $25 million commitment to the University of Nebraska.<ref name="carleton-family" /><ref name="pnd-nebraska" /> This pattern of giving has positioned the Weitz family as one of the most significant philanthropic forces in the Midwestern educational landscape.
 
Taken together, Weitz's career and philanthropy represent a model of long-term value creation—both financial and civic—anchored in Omaha, Nebraska, and extending to institutions and communities across the Midwest.


== References ==
== References ==
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Latest revision as of 07:18, 24 February 2026




Wally Weitz
BornWallace R. Weitz
NationalityAmerican
OccupationInvestor, fund manager, philanthropist
TitleFounder and Co-Chief Investment Officer
EmployerWeitz Investment Management
Known forFounder of Weitz Investment Management; board member of Berkshire Hathaway
EducationCarleton College

Wallace R. "Wally" Weitz is an American investor, fund manager, and philanthropist who founded Weitz Investment Management, an Omaha, Nebraska-based investment firm. A practitioner of value investing, Weitz has spent decades managing mutual funds and institutional portfolios guided by the principle of purchasing securities trading below their intrinsic value. His career in finance has placed him among a notable circle of Omaha-based investors, and in 2022, Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway Inc. nominated him to join its board of directors, a distinction that underscored his standing in the investment community.[1] Beyond his investment career, Weitz is known for substantial philanthropic contributions, particularly to Carleton College in Northfield, Minnesota, where he and the Weitz family have contributed over $45 million in total gifts, and to the University of Nebraska, where he and his wife Barbara committed $25 million in 2023.[2][3] His career has encompassed fund management, corporate governance, and significant engagement with nonprofit institutions across the Midwest.

Education

Wally Weitz is an alumnus of Carleton College, a private liberal arts college in Northfield, Minnesota. He is a member of the Class of 1970.[4] His connection to Carleton has remained strong throughout his career, as evidenced by his extensive philanthropic engagement with the institution. In 2020, the Carleton Class of 1970 announced the largest 50th Reunion class gift in the history of the college, contributing $64.2 million, a total to which Weitz was a notable contributor.[4]

Weitz's undergraduate education at Carleton, a college known for its rigorous academic curriculum and emphasis on critical thinking, appears to have laid a foundation for the analytical approach he would later apply to investment management. His subsequent career in Omaha, Nebraska, placed him in proximity to one of the most prominent investment communities in the United States.

Career

Weitz Investment Management

Wally Weitz founded Weitz Investment Management, based in Omaha, Nebraska. He has served as the firm's co-chief investment officer.[5] The firm operates as an investment management company, managing mutual funds and investment portfolios. Weitz's investment philosophy is rooted in value investing, an approach that emphasizes the identification and purchase of securities that trade at prices below their estimated intrinsic value. This approach shares intellectual lineage with the investment philosophies of Benjamin Graham and Warren Buffett, the latter of whom is also based in Omaha.

Weitz Investment Management has operated from Omaha for decades, making it part of a notable cluster of investment firms and financial institutions headquartered in the city. The firm's presence in Omaha, alongside Berkshire Hathaway and other investment operations, has contributed to the city's reputation as a center of value-oriented investing.

Berkshire Hathaway Board Nomination

On March 11, 2022, Berkshire Hathaway Inc., the multinational conglomerate holding company led by Warren Buffett, announced that it had nominated Wally Weitz to fill an open seat on its board of directors.[1] The nomination was reported by major financial news outlets including Reuters and The Wall Street Journal.[5]

The nomination to the Berkshire Hathaway board represented a significant recognition of Weitz's standing in the investment community. Berkshire Hathaway's board has historically included individuals with deep expertise in investing, business management, and corporate governance. Weitz was identified in the announcement as the founder and co-chief investment officer of Weitz Investment Management.[1][5]

Berkshire Hathaway's selection process for board members has been closely watched by investors and financial analysts, given the company's prominence and the personal involvement of Warren Buffett in governance decisions. The nomination of Weitz, a fellow Omaha-based value investor, reflected the close-knit nature of the Omaha investment community and the shared intellectual framework that connects many of its leading figures.

Philanthropy

Carleton College

Wally Weitz and the Weitz family have been among the most significant benefactors of Carleton College. The family's total contributions to the college have exceeded $45 million.[2] This philanthropic relationship has shaped the physical campus of the college and supported a range of academic and experiential learning programs.

The Weitz Center for Creativity

The most visible expression of the Weitz family's support for Carleton College is the Weitz Center for Creativity, an academic building on the Carleton campus. The building, which formerly housed a middle school and high school, was renovated and repurposed as a center for the arts. It opened in the fall of 2011.[6]

The Weitz Center for Creativity houses a range of facilities designed to support interdisciplinary arts education. These include classrooms, the Perlman Teaching Museum, a theater, and two dance studios.[7][8] The Perlman Teaching Museum serves as an educational space where art is integrated into the broader liberal arts curriculum, allowing faculty from various disciplines to use the museum's collections and exhibitions in their teaching.

In 2017, a new addition to the Weitz Center was completed, expanding the facility to include music and performing arts spaces. The addition incorporated a performance hall, rehearsal spaces, and faculty offices, significantly broadening the scope of creative activities supported by the building.[9] The building has been certified as LEED Gold, reflecting its adherence to environmental sustainability standards in design and construction.[10]

The Weitz Center has become a central hub for the arts at Carleton, bringing together programs in visual arts, theater, dance, music, and cinema and media studies under one roof. Its design and programming reflect an emphasis on interdisciplinary collaboration, a hallmark of the liberal arts approach to education that Carleton espouses.

The Weitz Fellowship

The Weitz family's philanthropy at Carleton College extends beyond physical infrastructure to include experiential learning programs. The Weitz Fellowship is a program that provides graduating Carleton seniors with one-year, paid, full-time positions within the nonprofit sector in Nebraska.[11]

The fellowship program connects Carleton graduates with nonprofit organizations in Omaha and elsewhere in Nebraska, providing participants with professional experience while supporting the work of community-based organizations. In 2025, eight Carleton seniors were awarded the fellowship.[11] The program has operated for multiple years, with fellows reporting on their experiences working in Nebraska's nonprofit sector.[12]

Each cohort of Weitz Fellows travels to Nebraska for an introduction to their fellowship year, meeting with current and former fellows, the Weitz family, and members of the Career Center staff at Carleton.[13] The program reflects the Weitz family's commitment to both Carleton College and the state of Nebraska, serving as a bridge between the educational institution and the communities where the family has deep roots.

Class of 1970 Reunion Gift

In 2020, the Carleton Class of 1970—Weitz's graduating class—set a new record for 50th reunion giving, contributing a total of $64.2 million to the college. This was announced as the largest 50th Reunion class gift in Carleton's history.[4] While the gift represented the collective contributions of the entire class, Weitz's status as the class's most prominent philanthropist and his established pattern of major giving to Carleton indicate his role as a significant contributor to this total.

University of Nebraska

In 2023, Barbara and Wally Weitz committed $25 million to the University of Nebraska. The gift was intended to create an endowed institute at the university.[3] Barbara Weitz has served as a regent of the University of Nebraska, further connecting the couple to the institution.[3] The gift represented one of the larger individual commitments to the University of Nebraska system and underscored the Weitz family's philanthropic focus on educational institutions in their home state.

Nebraska Journalism and Nonprofit Support

The Weitz family's philanthropic interests in Nebraska extend beyond higher education. The Nebraska Journalism Trust, which operates the Flatwater Free Press, a nonprofit news organization covering Nebraska, has been part of the broader ecosystem of nonprofit engagement in the state. In 2024, the Flatwater Free Press announced expansions to its board and staff, reflecting the growth of nonprofit journalism in the region where the Weitz family has been active philanthropically.[14]

Personal Life

Wally Weitz is married to Barbara Weitz. The couple resides in Omaha, Nebraska, where Wally has based his investment management firm. Barbara Weitz has been involved in public service, serving as a regent of the University of Nebraska.[3] Together, the couple has engaged in philanthropic activities focused on education, the arts, and the nonprofit sector, with particular emphasis on institutions in Nebraska and Minnesota.

The Weitz family's philanthropic activities have been a collaborative endeavor, with Barbara and Wally jointly committing significant resources to institutions including Carleton College and the University of Nebraska.[2][3] Their giving has reflected a consistent set of priorities: supporting liberal arts education, fostering creativity and the arts, and strengthening the nonprofit sector in Nebraska.

Recognition

Wally Weitz's career in investment management and his philanthropic activities have brought him recognition in both the financial and educational communities.

His nomination to the Berkshire Hathaway board of directors in 2022 represented one of the most prominent acknowledgments of his stature as an investor. Berkshire Hathaway, with a market capitalization among the largest of any publicly traded company, selects its board members with care, and the nomination was covered by Reuters, The Wall Street Journal, and other major financial publications.[1][5]

At Carleton College, the naming of the Weitz Center for Creativity in honor of the Weitz family serves as a lasting recognition of the family's contributions to the institution. The building's LEED Gold certification and its role as a central arts facility on campus have made it one of the most prominent structures at the college.[10] The Weitz Fellowship program further carries the family name, connecting it to the professional development of Carleton graduates working in Nebraska's nonprofit sector.[11]

The $25 million commitment to the University of Nebraska in 2023 also brought public recognition to the Weitz family's philanthropic efforts, with the gift announced through major philanthropy news outlets.[3]

Legacy

Wally Weitz's legacy encompasses his contributions to value investing and his philanthropic impact on educational and cultural institutions. As the founder of Weitz Investment Management, he built an investment firm in Omaha that has operated for decades, managing capital according to the principles of value investing. His nomination to the Berkshire Hathaway board placed him in the governance structure of one of the most prominent companies in the world, further cementing his position within the Omaha investment community.

His philanthropic legacy is anchored by the Weitz Center for Creativity at Carleton College, a facility that has transformed the arts experience at the college. The center's interdisciplinary design, housing visual arts, theater, dance, music, and cinema under one roof, reflects an approach to arts education that emphasizes collaboration across traditional disciplinary boundaries. The 2017 expansion of the center to include music and performing arts spaces extended this vision further.[9]

The Weitz Fellowship program represents another dimension of his legacy, creating a pipeline between Carleton College and Nebraska's nonprofit sector. By funding paid, full-time positions for recent graduates in nonprofit organizations, the program has supported both the professional development of young people and the capacity of Nebraska's nonprofit institutions.[11][12]

Together with Barbara Weitz, Wally has directed substantial resources toward strengthening educational institutions in both Minnesota and Nebraska, with total giving to Carleton College exceeding $45 million and a $25 million commitment to the University of Nebraska.[2][3] This pattern of giving has positioned the Weitz family as one of the most significant philanthropic forces in the Midwestern educational landscape.

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 "Berkshire Hathaway nominates Wally Weitz to fill open board seat".Reuters.2022-03-11.https://www.reuters.com/business/berkshire-hathaway-nominates-wally-weitz-fill-open-board-seat-2022-03-11/.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 "The Weitz Family".Carleton College.https://apps.carleton.edu/weitz/about/weitz_family/.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 3.6 "Barbara and Wally Weitz commit $25 million to University of Nebraska".Philanthropy News Digest.2023-06-14.https://philanthropynewsdigest.org/news/barbara-and-wally-weitz-commit-25-million-to-university-of-nebraska.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 "Carleton Class of 1970 sets new record for 50th reunion giving".Carleton College.2020-06-22.https://www.carleton.edu/news/stories/carleton-class-of-1970-sets-new-record-for-50th-reunion-giving/.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 "Berkshire Hathaway Nominates Wally Weitz to Fill Board Vacancy".The Wall Street Journal.2022-03-11.https://www.wsj.com/finance/investing/berkshire-hathaway-nominates-wally-weitz-to-fill-board-vacancy-11647038290.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  6. "History".Carleton College.http://apps.carleton.edu/weitz/about/history/.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  7. "Teaching Museum".Carleton College.http://apps.carleton.edu/weitz/tour/teaching_museum/.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  8. "Theater and Dance".Carleton College.http://apps.carleton.edu/weitz/tour/theater_and_dance/.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  9. 9.0 9.1 "Weitz Center Music and Performing Arts Addition".Carleton College.https://apps.carleton.edu/arts/blog/?story_id=1681944.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  10. 10.0 10.1 "Facility".Carleton College.https://apps.carleton.edu/weitz/about/facility/.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  11. 11.0 11.1 11.2 11.3 "Carleton announces Class of 2025 Weitz Fellows".Carleton College.2025-06-05.https://www.carleton.edu/news/stories/class-2025-weitz-fellows/.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  12. 12.0 12.1 "Updates from Omaha: The 2025–26 Weitz Fellows share their work so far".Carleton College.2026-01-22.https://www.carleton.edu/news/stories/updates-from-omaha-weitz-fellows/.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  13. "2023-24 Weitz fellows travel to Nebraska for introduction to fellowship year".Carleton College.2023-05-16.https://www.carleton.edu/news/stories/2023-24-weitz-fellows-travel-to-nebraska-for-introduction-to-fellowship-year/.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  14. "New at the Nebraska Journalism Trust: More directors, hires and Silicon Prairie Startup Week".Flatwater Free Press.2024-03-07.https://flatwaterfreepress.org/new-at-the-nebraska-journalism-trust-more-directors-hires-and-silicon-prairie-startup-week/.Retrieved 2026-02-24.