The University, still adjusting to the financial crisis, incurs a $130-million deficit and pursues both savings and new revenues.
12.16.11
The University’s senior governing board, expanded, creates its committees.
11.4.11
Expenses outpace revenue growth as the University continues to adapt financially.
11.2.11
The endowment was valued at $32 billion as of June 30, 2011, up $4.4 billion (16 percent) from $27.6 billion a year earlier.
10.19.11
Schools continue to report favorable results—but those with capital campaigns can grow faster.
10.11.11
Endowments at Yale, MIT, Duke, and Cornell rebound in the latest fiscal year.
9.28.11
A “strong” investment performance in a year of robust markets—but with warnings about current conditions
9.22.11
The annual disclosure of compensation at Harvard Management Company
5.20.11
A year after declining $11 billion, investment returns on Harvard’s endowment turn positive.
10.19.10
The Tigers top the Crimson (not to mention the Elis and the Cardinal).
10.15.10
A rate of return and endowment growth much higher than Harvard’s and Yale’s
9.28.10
The New Haven Ivy’s results reflect an investment strategy heavily weighted toward real assets and private equity.
9.24.10
The New York Ivy’s endowment strategy yields a stronger result than Harvard’s.
9.16.10
Harvard Management Company reports positive results, following the sharp decline in fiscal year 2009.
9.9.10
Short takes on recent Harvard news
7.1.10