A survey of 290 private, independent and community charitable foundations by Commonfund Institute, Wilton, Conn., says the typical fund lost more than a quarter of every endowment dollar last year, after losing another dime in 2007.
No wonder charitable giving is down, when the foundations waste so much of it trying to turn lead into gold.
Last year's 26 percent loss is a result of foundations pouring donors' money into U.S. stocks (down 36 percent), foreign stocks (down 41 percent), private equity (down 8 percent, but who really knows, given the "reporting lags" in those assets' results), hedge funds (down 16 percent, but we're not completely sure of that, either), commodities (down 23 percent) and junk bonds (down 14 percent).
"As markets fell sharply in the last months of 2008, it became very difficult for foundations to rebalance their portfolios," said John Griswold, executive director of Commonfund Institute, whose affiliates manage $24 billion for small colleges and nonprofits.
The foundations in the survey lost a combined $44 billion, leaving them with $131 billion.
Why don't they just put it in government bonds and insured CDs?
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