NEPC’s Kristin Reynolds was quoted in a recent Boston Globe article to discuss how Harvard’s endowment shrunk by $2.3 billion to $50.9 billion during a down time for financial markets. View the article on The Boston Globe’s site here.
Humility is not the first word Harvard University brings to mind.
But last year, when the storied school’s endowment soared in value along with just about every kind of investment on the planet, administration officials wisely tempered their enthusiasm – and expectations for the future. Their message to students, staff, alumni, and the often envious outside world: Markets give and markets take away.
Sure enough, their caveat got a call-back on Thursday as Harvard reported that the value of its endowment – including investments and donations – slumped by $2.3 billion to $50.9 billion in the year ended June 30, amid an ugly selloff in financial markets.
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“My impression is the worst is yet to come,” said Kristin Reynolds, a partner at investment consultant NEPC in Boston and the team leader of its endowments and foundations group. “However, I would say that private markets performance had been so strong the year prior, that it is still helping portfolios relative to public markets.”
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