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Harvard’s endowment ballooned from $29.2 billion to $34.9 billion in
the most recent fiscal year, marking one of the most successful years
of investment since 1974, the University announced Tuesday.
The endowment's 23-percent gain was fueled largely by rapid growth in
emerging markets, private equity, and real estate, according to Mohamed
A. El-Erian, the president and CEO of Harvard Management Company, the
University’s investment arm.
"The strong returns reflected both favorable markets and the
expertise of our portfolio managers," El-Erian said in a telephone
interview.
El-Erian, in his second year as HMC chief, came to Harvard
after the departure of former CEO Jack R. Meyer, who took nearly
one-third of HMC's employees with him to start a new hedge fund.
El-Erian said that he has worked to rebuild the
internal portfolio management team so that it now covers five distinct
areas. HMC has hired managers from the industry to head these teams,
restructured its group of external managers, and improved its
risk-analysis capability, El-Erian said.
El-Erian said that the changes he has enacted appear to have been
effective in establishing stability for the largest university
endowment in the world.
"It's not just what expertise you have but what opportunities
the market gives you," he said. "We had a couple of years when we had
lost a lot of talent, and now we're back to an equilibrium. The
transition is complete."
Distributions from the endowment to the University's operating budget hit a record-setting
$1 billion in the 2007 fiscal year, according to a University press release.
Last month, the University lost $350 million when Sowood Capital, a
hedge fund started in 2004 by former HMC manager Jeffrey B. Larson,
reported huge losses. Harvard had initially invested at least $500
million with the fund, but the most recent figures do not factor in
some of the downfalls.
The loss represented a 1 percent decrease
for the endowment, based on Tuesday's figures. But even with a downturn
in the market in July, when the Standard & Poor's 500 index fell by
3.1 percent, El-Erian said that the endowment showed a monthly gain of
.4 percent largely because of the new risk management strategies in
place.
In addition to improving risk strategies to counter
market uncertainties, HMC will launch a Web site next month and publish
an annual report beginning next year, unprecedented moves for the
historically secretive group.
Given continued worries in the credit market, El-Erian warned in
his annual letter to Harvard affiliates that the high returns from the
past year should be viewed as including some "windfall gain" as opposed
to indicating a future trend of equal performance.
"It's one thing to have a good year, but it's also important to build
the foundation for continued long-term institutional excellence," El-Erian said. "Most
of the work here is not something that outsiders see, but at the end it
really matters for maintaining Harvard’s critical role in education."
—Staff writer Nathan C. Strauss can be reached at strauss@fas.harvard.edu.
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