Sequoia was founded by
Don Valentine in 1972 in Menlo Park, California, at a time when the state's venture capital industry was just beginning to develop. Sequoia formed its first venture capital fund in 1974, and was an early investor in
Atari the next year. In 1978, Sequoia became one of the first investors in
Apple. Partners
Doug Leone and
Michael Moritz assumed leadership of the firm in 1996. In 1999, Sequoia established a dedicated investment fund for Israeli startups. later followed by Sequoia Capital India. In 2012, Moritz took a step back from the day-to-day operations of the firm. Leone became Global Managing Partner.
Jim Goetz led Sequoia's U.S. business from 2012 until 2017, when he was succeeded by
Roelof Botha. In 2016, Sequoia hired
Jess Lee, making her the first female investing partner in the United States in the firm's history. In 2019, it was the most active
VC fund company in India. In March 2020, Sequoia announced it would hire Luciana Lixandru as its first partner based in Europe. In October 2021, Sequoia announced it would implement a new fund structure for its U.S. and European business that would allow it to remain involved with companies after their public market debuts. In March 2022,
The Information reported that Sequoia Capital China was raising an $8 billion fund to invest in Chinese tech companies. Following the
collapse of Silicon Valley Bank in March 2023, the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation had backstopped Sequoia's $1billion in deposits in the bank. In June 2023, Sequoia announced plans to break up into three entities citing complications running a decentralized global investment business in the middle of geopolitical tensions. Following the separation, expected to complete by March 2024, the Chinese business led by
Neil Shen would be called
HongShan ("sequoia" in Mandarin) and the Indian and Southeast Asia arm would be named Peak XV Partners led by Shailendra Singh, GV Ravishankar, Mohit Bhatnagar, and Rajan Anandan. The U.S. and Europe unit would retain the Sequoia name. In July 2023, Sequoia announced to cut one-third of its talent staff as part of an organizational restructuring. In October 2023, the
U.S. House Committee on U.S.–China Competition announced a probe into Sequoia Capital's investments in China. As of at least 2024, Sequoia is the largest investor in
China's consumer internet sector. It has often used a strategy of investing in several competitors in the same sector and then later pushing for their consolidation. That statement was widely denounced as bigoted and Islamophobic. In response, 600 founders of tech startups signed an open letter to Sequoia, asking Sequoia to adopt "a
zero-tolerance policy on
hate speech and
religious bigotry." In November 2025, Botha was succeeded by
Alfred Lin and Pat Grady as joint managing partners of the firm. The pair became known as "stewards," in line with the firm's stewardship model created by Don Valentine. ==Investments==