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Yale Pulls out of Hedge Fund it Helped Found
The Wall Street Journal reports that sources familiar with the matter said officials at Yale were concerned that the $15.2 billion endowment’s position in the fund had grown too large. Yale divides its money into different pools to be invested in various ways, such as stocks, bonds, hedge funds, private-equity firms and real estate. Among hedge funds, it further divides its investments among managers with a range of strategies.
Yale credited its reliance on “nontraditional asset classes,” which include hedge funds, for a 22.3% return on the endowment’s investments in 2005, according to the WSJ. The University’s investment office has a target of putting a quarter of its assets into hedge funds and 17% into private-equity funds.
For Yale, which has the second-largest US university endowment after Harvard (See Harvard Enjoys 19.2% FY 2005 Endowment Performance), the split with TCI means it will be handed a chunk of money that needs to be reinvested. For TCI, Yale’s removal, while significant, is not expected to have a huge impact on the $7.5 billion fund. Since the fund’s inception, TCI has more than doubled its clients’ investments, and there is also increasing interest in hedge fund investments by institutional investors.
A recent study found that educational endowments achieved higher returns by increasing allocations to alternative strategies (See Ed. Endowment 2005 Returns Lower but Still Respectable ).