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Dollars & Sense: How Harvard Lost $11 Billion

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marmar Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Apr-13-09 08:09 PM
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Dollars & Sense: How Harvard Lost $11 Billion
How Harvard Lost $11 Billion
by Dollars and Sense


Forbes has an interesting breakdown of how the financial wizards running Harvard University's endowment lost an estimated $11 billion (or about 30%) of their money since last November. To put that into perspective, that's roughly the annual GDP (PPP) of Trinidad and Tobago, site of the upcoming Summit of the Americas.

Sure, everybody has seen their investments plummet, but it turns out that outlandishly compensated Harvard money managers didn't have the usual stock portfolio (as we reported on this blog way back in December). It was heavy on commodities, hedge funds, forests, credit default swaps, and private equity partnerships. Every penny and then some was leveraged, so when the markets started melting down, it got ugly real fast.

Since so much of the endowment is tied up in private equity partnerships and other deals that can't be accurately priced until they sell, it's quite likely that the fund has fallen more than most insiders are willing to acknowledge.

Besides the obvious question of why managers of a nonprofit educational institution were making hundreds of millions of dollars, perhaps it's time to ask if this is a rational way to actually fund higher education.

From Forbes:

The superstars at Harvard defied markets for years-- until now. Here's the inside story of how they finally tripped up.

Stocks were tumbling last fall as the new school year began, but at Harvard University it was as if the boom had never ended. Workers were digging across the river from Harvard's Cambridge, Mass. home, the start of a grand expansion that was to eventually almost double the size of the university. Budgets were plump, and students from middle-class families were getting big tuition breaks under an ambitious new financial aid program. The lavish spending was made possible by the earnings from Harvard's $36.9 billion endowment, the world's largest. That pot was supposed to be good for $1.4 billion in annual earnings.

Behind the scenes, though, a different story was unfolding. In a glassed-walled conference room overlooking downtown Boston, traders at Harvard Management Co., the subsidiary that invests the school's money, were fielding questions from their new boss, Jane Mendillo, about exotic financial instruments that were suddenly backfiring. Harvard had derivatives that gave it exposure to $7.2 billion in commodities and foreign stocks. With prices of both crashing, the university was getting margin calls--demands from counterparties (among them, jpmorgan Chase and Goldman Sachs for more collateral. Another bunch of derivatives burdened Harvard with a multibillion-dollar bet on interest rates that went against it.

It would have been nice to have cash on hand to meet margin calls, but Harvard had next to none. That was because these supremely self-confident money managers were more than fully invested. As of June 30 they had, thanks to the fancy derivatives, a 105% long position in risky assets. The effect is akin to putting every last dollar of your portfolio to work and then borrowing another 5% to buy more stocks.

Desperate for cash, Harvard Management went to outside money managers begging for a return of money it had expected to keep parked away for a long time. It tried to sell off illiquid stakes in private equity partnerships but couldn't get a decent price. It unloaded two-thirds of a $2.9 billion stock portfolio into a falling market. And now, in the last phase of the cash-raising panic, the university is borrowing money, much like a homeowner who takes out a second mortgage in order to pay off credit card bills. Since December Harvard has raised $2.5 billion by selling IOUs in the bond market. Roughly a third of these Harvard bonds are tax exempt and carry interest rates of 3.2% to 5.8%. The rest are taxable, with rates of 5% to 6.5%.

It doesn't feel good to be borrowing at 6% while holding assets with negative returns. Harvard has oversize positions in emerging market stocks and private equity partnerships, both disaster areas in the past eight months. The one category that has done well since last June is conventional Treasury bonds, and Harvard appears to have owned little of these. As of its last public disclosure on this score, it had a modest 16% allocation to fixed income, consisting of 7% in inflation-indexed bonds, 4% in corporates and the rest in high-yield and foreign debt.

For a long while Harvard's daring investment style was the envy of the endowment world. It made light bets in plain old stocks and bonds and went hell-for-leather into exotic and illiquid holdings: commodities, timberland, hedge funds, emerging market equities and private equity partnerships. The risky strategy paid off with market-beating results as long as the market was going up. But risk brings pain in a market crash. Although the full extent of the damage won't be known until Harvard releases the endowment numbers for June 30, 2009, the university is already working on the assumption that the portfolio will be down 30%, or $11 billion.

Rest of the article here.




http://www.dollarsandsense.org/blog/2009/04/how-harvard-lost-11-billion.html



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GoesTo11 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Apr-13-09 08:15 PM
Response to Original message
1. Misses the real story of Harvard's insider trading and sweetheart deals
When the market is up 10% Harvard is up 20% when the market is flat, harvard is up 10% and when the market is down 40% Harvard is down 30%. They lost money, but in good times and bad, they beat the market by 10%. That shouldn't be possible. If they have more risk in order to get the return in good times, they should lose more than the market in bad times. Why does Harvard beat the market no matter what? Is financial theory all wrong? ... Think about it.
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Demeter Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Apr-13-09 08:19 PM
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2. Let's See If I Can Work Up a Tear Here
The place that canned Larry Summers--because the faculty revolted---nope, sorry. Can't do it.

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