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CAMPAIGN
NEWS
Duke's Endowment
Posts Negative Return
Oct. 5, 2001
The Duke Management Co. reports
that the largest pool of university investments lost 4.6 percent of its
value for the fiscal year that ended June 30.
The decline in the endowment/long-term investment pool follows a decade of
robust growth that included six consecutive years of double-digit returns and
the previous year's record-setting 58.8 percent performance. The university's
total endowment stood at $2.50 billion at the end of the fiscal year, down
from $2.66 billion at the end of fiscal 2000.
"This past year has been a tough environment for financial markets," said
Thruston Morton, president of DUMAC. "U.S. stocks were down 15 percent,
world stocks down 20 percent, with a high degree of volatility along the way.
While we don't like negative returns, we are going to participate in the general
direction of the markets."
Even with this year's negative return, DUMAC's five- and 10-year returns continue
to exceed the endowment's basic goal as well as other key benchmarks, according
to Morton. Duke's Board of Trustees has established a basic goal of a 10-year
real return of inflation plus 5.5 percent. Over the past 10 years, while inflation
averaged 3.9 percent, Duke's investments returned 18.5 percent per annum, surpassing
the real return benchmark number by more than 10 percentage points.
"Our goal last fiscal year was to mitigate the downside, after the extraordinarily
high returns we had the year before," Morton said. "We accomplished
that goal, having less negative returns than our market benchmarks. More importantly,
though, as an endowment we are properly focused on generating strong results
over the long term and we generally don't look at annual returns in isolation."
To achieve its goals, Morton said DUMAC emphasizes investments that generate
equity-like returns, "but we diversify those investments across different
asset groups, such as domestic stocks, international stocks, private capital
and hedged strategies."
While some of the funds are tied up in long-term investments that can't be
maneuvered in the short term, DUMAC has some flexibility with other parts of
its portfolio. Even before the markets started turning downward, DUMAC had
begun to move funds out of pure equity strategies, shifting exposure into hedge
funds, real estate and fixed-income assets, Morton said.
Income from the university's endowment contributed $78 million to the university's
current academic year budget to support operations of academic departments,
financial aid to students, libraries, Duke Hospital, Duke Chapel and other
units.
DUMAC was established in 1990 by the Duke University Board of Trustees to oversee
investments of the university endowment and other university funds. The DUMAC
board, which sets investment policies for the company, consists of university
trustees and leading financial professionals.
The company is responsible for investing about $4.5 billion in university investment
assets, which range from the university endowment to smaller short-term funds
for individual university departments to money for the retirement plan for
biweekly employees..
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