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COOKEVILLE, Tenn. (Feb. 14, 2005) Over the past 10 years, Tennessee
Tech University posted a higher return rate on investments than the country’s
top 25 universities with the largest endowments, a group that includes
Harvard, Stanford and Princeton.
Tennessee Tech’s endowment appreciated 16.6 percent over the past
decade, surpassing the average of 12.8 percent at the nation’s top
schools. Over that same time period, Tennessee Tech’s investment
returns also frequently bested S&P 500 averages.
“While we’ve been conservative and consistent over the past
decade with our investments, that philosophy has led us to a return rate
that rivals the top universities in the nation,” said Paul Isbell,
TTU’s vice president for University Advancement.
For the 2004 calendar year, TTU’s return came in at 16.4 percent,
well above the S&P 500’s 10.8 percent. The previous year, the
university achieved a more than 40 percent return compared to the S&P
500’s 26.38 percent.
Bruce Silver of New York City’s Silver Capital Management manages
the portfolio that includes stocks and bonds. Silver is the university’s
first and only money manager outside the institution. Many universities
hire administrators to manage endowments, rewarding them with a portion
of the profits, but no administrator gains financially at TTU, a public
institution.
“We are consistent, disciplined and focused with the university’s
investments,” said Silver. “Our investing is done with significantly
less risk than the overall market experiences.”
“We buy stocks at attractive valuations,” he explained. “Many
come with low expectations and few friends, but the reward speaks for
itself.”
Isbell credits Silver with listening to the needs and concerns of a public
institution and staying true to its conservative investment philosophy.
“Every penny our donors contribute to endowments is professionally
managed,” said Isbell. “Because we’ve picked a management
company whose strength is in low-risk investments, we tend to suffer less
when times are bad and stay well situated to take advantage when times
are good.”
Of the almost $40 million in total endowments held by the university,
Silver manages $33.8 million. The remainder is divided among TTU’s
Chairs of Excellence investments with the state and in the local government
investment pool.
University endowments are created to ensure money is perpetually available
for the scholarships they support. When a principal sum of money —
for example, $10,000 — is donated for an endowment that money is
invested and only a portion of the return is actually spent on the scholarship.
The $10,000, plus a portion of the earnings, remains untouched to make
sure there is money available to weather the market’s ups and downs.
--Karen Lykins
This information posted 14 February 2005
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