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by solaxun
2135 days ago
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Not a lawyer, but I doubt it's a case. Endowments have much longer investment horizons and typically lower risk appetite that wouldn't typically have an investment policy tilted towards 100% equities. They likely have a fair amount of investment in fixed income, which is always going to under-perform equities in the long run. That said, ~5.5% below the market every year is a pretty shitty result, at least worth putting someone's feet to the fire over. |
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That does make some sense, but actually endowments typically invest quite a bit in in riskier asset classes. From https://caia.org/aiar/access/article-1160:
> The average US endowment fund held roughly 70 per cent in traditional asset classes (public and private equity, bonds and cash) with the remaining 30 per cent invested in alternative assets.
Alternative asset classes basically means "anything other than stocks and bonds", and includes stuff like derivitives, commodities, PE deals, venture capital, etc. And CU's investment in alternative asset classes is called out explicitly in the complaint.
So I don't read this as a complaint that CU is playing too safe, it's that they made too many risky bets, and lost.
I'm not sure that makes the law suit any more viable, but "the endowment gambled away my donation" is a much more sympathetic complaint than "the endowment sunk my donation into bonds instead of gambling it like I'd hoped"!