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Harvard near bankruptcy

Uncategorized — By Dmitry Podolsky on June 4, 2009 at 9:38 pm
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Dmitry Podolsky has got his PhD from Landau Institute for Theoretical Physics. He currently works as postdoc at Case Western Reserve University. He is also one of the editors of NEQNET.

Just wanted to finally end my day and go to sleep (way too much work today), but heard some news and cannot help sharing it with you.

According to Boston Magazine Harvard University is to face some very serious problems. The University currently spends about 1.5 billion USD/year, it has lost several billion during crisis – including 500 million thanks to Larry Summers, super feminist fighter (essentially, he presented those 500 million as a gift for GS). If only Dr. Summers spent more time thinking about what he was supposed to think about… but he is clearly not the person to blame as they want him to be.

11 billion of Harvard’s money are currently to be repaid to private investors as capital commitments in the next 10 years, Harvard currently has 13 billion in various assets – and what if the crisis did not reach its bottom yet? What if Harvard is to expect more endowment losses? And all this does not include construction of the new campus in Allston which will be surely put on hold.

Sad, saaad news.

7 Comments

  1. Lubos Motl says:
    June 5, 2009 at 6:28 am

    What you write is complete nonsense.

    First, Summers has been a stellar president, and when it comes to finances, the biggest sin he did was to throw USD 50 million into the toilet of the whining f*-up (or, in the more serious cases, those non-f*-up) dishonest feminist losers. Financially and by all meritocratic criteria, the university went up immensely under Summers, and if his stable successor suggests otherwise, then she is a dishonest bitch. If he were able to follow the same policies as Obama’s economist, the U.S. wouldn’t be on the verge of bankruptcy itself.

    Second, the title “near bankruptcy” is absurd. The endowment is USD 29 billion right now which, with your figure and assuming no other inflows, guarantees 15 years of life. That’s simply not “near” and it’s actually the lower bound. The endowment exists exactly to protect the school in possible hard times, and protect it even against such catastrophes as a new president elected because of her reproductive system.

    Moreover, unless the current managers did something really stupid recently, which would be a return from the irrationally depressed “risky” assets to the U.S. dollar whose collapse may be looming due to the skyrocketing debt piled up by the current irresponsible socialist U.S. government, the Harvard portfolio is mostly stored in “now” safe assets of international equities and similar assets that have likely bottomed already.

    Reply
    • Dmitry says:
      June 5, 2009 at 10:47 am

      By the way,

      The endowment is USD 29 billion right now

      where is your info from?

      Reply
  2. Dmitry says:
    June 5, 2009 at 10:18 am

    Dear Lubos,

    I generally agree with Summers’ characteristics of yours, but 500 million of Harvard’s money he lost playing with interest rate swaps – it’s a lot of money. I think, if the man is considered financial guru, he does not really have right to make mistakes like that… Thhough, this is really nothing compared to how much current administration lost.

    Second, the title “near bankruptcy” is absurd. The endowment is USD 29 billion right now which, with your figure and assuming no other inflows, guarantees 15 years of life. That’s simply not “near” and it?s actually the lower bound. The endowment exists exactly to protect the school in possible hard times, and protect it even against such catastrophes as a new president elected because of her reproductive system.

    Not really. Among those 29 billion 11 billion are to be repaid as capital commitments in the next 10 years. So, Harvard really has money for 7 years, not 15 years.

    What I am saying is that if the crisis did not yet reach its bottom (and optimistic S&P estimation is that the bottom is to be reached around mid 2010), they are probably to expect serious endowment losses for the rest of the year as well as for 2010. If so, they are in real troubles (take a look how much did they loose for 2008-09 period), and I really hope that they did as you suggested – rethought their investing strategy.

    Cheers,
    Dmitry.

    Reply
  3. Lubos Motl says:
    June 5, 2009 at 3:20 pm

    Dear Dmitry, for the size of the current endowment, see e.g. the window on the right side of Wikipedia’s entry about the school,

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harvard_University

    Or hundreds of other places. Seven years is still very far from being “near” bankruptcy, and it is absurd to imagine that there will be no inflow of money for those 7 years.

    The swaps, like any contracts that are based on uncertainty and hedging, inevitably make one side win and the other side lose. It is impossible to “win” all transactions in the world – and only the “sum” determines whether managers of Harvard or something else are doing a good job. In this case, either Harvard or the superbig financial experts in Goldman Sachs must be losing money from this contract at every given point of time: for Goldman Sachs, it would be even more painful.

    But 500 million is simply a relatively small amount of money – if you compare it with the drop of the price of the assets in the same period of time. I think that in the long run, the contract Summers made is sensible, and if it will last, it will return to the black numbers for Harvard simply because the interest rates will be raised heavily in a year or so, to fight the significant inflation that is likely to be initiated by the irresponsible printing of the dollars.

    Reply
    • Dmitry says:
      June 5, 2009 at 3:56 pm

      Dear Lubos,

      for the size of the current endowment, see e.g. the window on the right side of Wikipedia?s entry about the school,

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harvard_University

      Or hundreds of other places. Seven years is still very far from being “near” bankruptcy, and it is absurd to imagine that there will be no inflow of money for those 7 years

      Yes, that’s what I thought, this is data from Dec 2008, at least quarter of those money is already gone.

      Reply
  4. mesterhd says:
    June 5, 2009 at 4:41 pm

    Currently you are citing Boston Magazine.

    Reply
    • Dmitry says:
      June 5, 2009 at 8:11 pm

      Hi David,

      Yes, I am (I actually wrote incorrectly in the post that I am citing Boston Globe), while the source of Lubos’ data is Boston Globe report made in the beginning of Dec 2008.

      Reply

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