Foundations and Endowments Soften Reluctance Against Alternative Investments

September 28, 2006 (PLANSPONSOR.com) - Endowments and foundations plan to increase the amount of assets placed in alternative investments, according to a recent survey, but about two-thirds of executives surveyed said they still find it difficult to measure the risk of such investments.

Endowments and foundations have been slow to funnel their assets into alternative investments – hedge funds, private equity, venture capital, and other asset classes such as commodities and active currency – for fear the risk was too great.

However, the survey findings by Pyramis Global Advisors, a Fidelity Investments subsidiary, show the driver behind a change in attitude by these institutions appears to be higher return expectations of 10% for private equity and equity, and returns of 7.4% for hedge funds, with an expectation of low volatility. 

According to the findings, endowments and foundations, on average, have allocations of 20% to alternatives, which is high when compared to other sophisticated institutional investment pools like pension plans, which typically have less than 6%. However, larger endowments have even more exposure to alternative investments, at 35% – a percentage they plan to increase as they move out of traditional US equity holdings.


The survey identified three top obstacles to effective risk management for endowments and foundations: 

  • Lack of transparency;
  • Self-admitted lack of internal expertise; and
  • Data too dated to be useful.

The survey responses were from 77 of the largest foundations and endowments in the US.

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