Saturday, April 20th, 2024
 
 
 
Updates automatically
Twitter Link
CHN iOS App
 
NCAA
1967 1970

ECAC
1967 1968 1969 1970 1973 1980 1986 1996 1997 2003 2005 2010

IVY
1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1977 1978 1983 1984 1985 1996 1997 2002 2003 2004 2005 2012 2014

Cleary Spittoon
2002 2003 2005

Ned Harkness Cup
2003 2005 2008 2013
 
Brendon
Iles
Pokulok
Schafer
Syphilis

Harvard and Yale losers

Posted by marty 
Harvard and Yale losers
Posted by: marty (---.nycap.res.rr.com)
Date: September 13, 2009 08:22PM

Harvard, Yale Are Big Losers in 'The Game' of Investing

(excerpt from Wall Street Journal)

By JOHN HECHINGER

It's a tie in the Harvard-Yale investment game. Both schools were thrown for colossal losses.

The universities on Thursday said their endowments, higher education's two largest, each lost 30% of their value in the year ended June 30. Combined, the pair of investment pools shrank by a staggering $17.8 billion.

Declines in the endowments have forced the two schools to cut budgets and delay plans to expand facilities and hire staff, as even the country's top colleges are being forced by the financial crisis to retrench. The pain is being felt widely across higher education. While many private colleges are getting less help from their endowments, public universities are suffering because of state budget cuts.

Harvard University and Yale University, such fierce rivals that their fall football contest is known to both sides simply as "The Game," badly trailed the results of the typical college in the latest year. The dismal returns have exposed weaknesses in their exotic approach to investing, which after turning in chart-topping performance for years has proved to be highly risky.
[Withered Ivy]

The schools were hurt by investments in assets that can't readily be sold, such as private-equity partnerships, which were pummeled in the past year after stellar results over the previous decade. In the category Harvard calls "real assets," including timber, commodities and real estate, annual losses neared 40%.

Harvard was already budgeting for a 30% decline, but hadn't released a final tally. On Thursday, it said its endowment shrank to $26 billion on June 30 from $36.9 billion a year before. The decline also reflects spending from the endowment and donations. The Cambridge, Mass., university's investment loss itself was 27%, dwarfing the 18% drop in the median return for large endowments calculated by Wilshire Associates, an investment consulting firm.

Yale said its endowment fell to $16 billion on June 30 from $22.9 billion a year before. The New Haven, Conn., university didn't break out its investment results. Yale had projected a drop of only 25% and Thursday warned of further budget cuts. In a letter to Yale faculty and staff, Richard Levin, the school's president, and Peter Salovey, its provost, said it now projects an annual deficit of $150 million each year from 2010-11 through 2013-14.
 
Re: Harvard and Yale losers
Posted by: Robb (---.bnc.ox.ac.uk)
Date: September 14, 2009 04:17AM

Seems like as good of a place as any to share this.


And asked if too many justices came from elite schools, he said no.

"Some went to Yale," said Roberts, who earned undergraduate and law degrees at Harvard.

How's that expression go, again? "Never Graduate."
Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 09/14/2009 04:17AM by Robb.
 

Sorry, only registered users may post in this forum.

Click here to login