A couple of years ago I received a call from the University of Pennsylvania, my Alma Mater, wanted a donation to support students at Penn. Note that they always get students to call, never administrators. As it happens, just a few weeks before, I had received the alumni magazine with a pie chart showing the endowment, how much interest had been earned, and how the money was distributed. That year it was a little less than a $billion in interest, but I was astonished to see they were unable to spend all of it. (Note that in 2024 they earned $1.5billion.) I explained to the poor student on the other end of the line to explain to me why they needed money when they couldn't spend all of what they had just earned. He had no clue, but it wasn't his fault and the answer wasn't in his script.
Just a couple years later and the best president ever in the history of the world (his evaluation) decided to go after some mostly Ivy League universities for assorted policies (mostly related to support for non-white students but generally falling into the generic "woke" category -- see below) and punish them by canceling their federal funds used for assorted research, e.g. cancer research, climate, DEI etc. (Table3)
This is a table showing endowment for 2025 and reported interest for 2024 for universities targeted by Trump:
Columbia caved almost immediately, resorting to groveling mode, followed by several others with the exception of Harvard who took the administration to court and won! All this got me thinking about the role of endowments and what they are for. I realize there may be certain restrictions placed on gifts and the general idea is to help maintain the university in perpetuity, i.e. an existential purpose. This is how most universities allocate interest from endowments:
Now, using Columbia as an example, the interest available to them in 2025 to counter Trump's threat was $1.6billion. Now the $400million Trump threaten to cancel, while not peanuts, could easily have been absorbed by the interest earned that year or perhaps taken out of the principal, since it could have been considered an existential threat.
That leads us to some general considerations. The 2025 fiscal year has exposed a profound strategic paradox for the American Ivy League: a period of unprecedented endowment growth occurring alongside escalating, targeted threats to federal research funding. While institutions like Columbia, Penn, and Harvard reported "record-breaking" investment returns, they simultaneously entered a period of heightened institutional insecurity. Under the current political climate, federal support—once a neutral pillar of the research enterprise—has been transformed into a tool for "weaponized federalism." The strategic management of these FY2025 windfalls is no longer merely a fiduciary exercise in capital preservation; it is a matter of national institutional security, i.e. existential.
The massive interest surplus earned this year represents more than a financial triumph; it is a missed opportunity to construct a "fiscal shield" against federal interference. Despite the windfall, leadership remains reactive. Current institutional hesitation to mobilize this liquidity leaves the core mission of free inquiry exposed to administrative coercion. The following analysis details the financial mechanics of this windfall and the urgent necessity of deploying it to insulate these institutions from politically motivated funding volatility.
The 2025 fiscal year was an "uncanny" window of performance, characterized by a tight clustering of returns between 11% and 12.4%. For Harvard, which operates on an 8.0% long-term target (comprising a 5% payout and 3% inflation buffer), the 11.9% return represents a ~3.9% "excess alpha"—a liquid surplus that currently sits untapped for defensive purposes.
Institution | Total Asset Value (AUM) as of June 30, 2025 | FY2025 Investment Return | Trailing 10-Year Annualized Return | Budget Supported by Endowment |
Columbia | $15.9 Billion | 12.4% | 7.8% | 12% |
Penn | $24.8 Billion | 12.2% | 9.2% | 19% |
Harvard | $56.9 Billion | 11.9% | 9.6%* | Nearly 40% |
The strategic risk posed by "uncertainty in the funding environment" has transitioned from a theoretical concern to a catastrophic financial liability. We are seeing the emergence of a "liquidity trap" where massive net assets fail to prevent institutional debt increases. Universities find themselves in a trap of their own making. They have left themselves open to federal pressure and coercion by not using their funds to conduct important research but without federal bullying. Universities lust after the money because of the indirect cost overhead which is gravy for the institutions, sometimes as high as 50%.
Penn is a good example. Despite possessing $33.9 billion in total net assets and reporting a "strong operating performance," Penn was forced into a $463 million debt increase. A primary driver was a $175 million federal funding pause initiated by the Trump administration, specifically targeting the University’s policies on transgender athletes. This $175 million withdrawal illustrates the fragility of the research enterprise; Penn remains reliant on federal grants even as its balance sheet swells.
This vulnerability is systemic. Columbia University identifies government grants and contracts as one of its three largest revenue streams. Traditional spending models have proved structurally ill-equipped for weaponized federalism, as they offer no mechanism to instantly pivot endowment liquidity to replace withdrawn federal support. Without a dedicated "fiscal shield," these multi-billion-dollar institutions remain susceptible to being coerced through their research budgets.
Institutional leaders frequently cite "intergenerational duty" and the "Endowment Spending Rule" as barriers to rapid fiscal mobilization. They argue that the 5% payout vs. 3% inflation balance is a legal and ethical mandate that prevents the repurposing of endowment principal.
However, the "principal cannot be repurposed" dogma is increasingly contradicted by market data. Harvard and Columbia point to donor restrictions—legal requirements to follow specific gift instructions—and the rising Federal Endowment Tax as primary inhibitors to liquidity. Yet, the 2025 TIFF/NACUBO reports reveal a significant shift: larger endowments are increasingly utilizing "Special Appropriations." In FY2025, the majority of these specially appropriated funds were directed toward operating budgets. This proves that when institutional survival is at stake, the barrier to mobilization is a matter of governance and political will, not just donor law. The current "passive stewardship" model uses intergenerational duty as a shield for institutional paralysis. And fore-thinking administrators can always encourage donors not to attach any restrictions or requirements to their gifts.
To mitigate the risk of politically motivated interference, administrators must consider academic freedom as an existential requirement. Why not allocate a percentage of interest in high interest yielding years to a fund that would also grow, that could be used to prevent federal intervention? It might include monies for legal defense, contingency research funding, and promotional campaigns to build support for the university's mission and independence. Such resources would signal to policymakers that the institution has the liquidity to maintain autonomy regardless of federal withdrawals.
Ivy League leadership must shift from "passive stewardship" to "active defense." The record returns of fiscal year 2025 are a hollow victory if they are merely reinvested while the university's core mission is eroded by political volatility. If these multi-billion-dollar windfalls are not utilized to insulate the mission of free inquiry now, the long-term "purchasing power" of the endowment will support only a compromised, hollowed-out academic environment. A $56.9 billion endowment is a hollow monument if the research it funds is dictated by the whims of a federal administration. If your mission is important defend it; if not, don't do it.
The university’s autonomy is its most valuable asset; it is time to prove that it is not for sale.
Eric Welch, GFS, '65; Penn,'69
Resources used, all tables are mine as are any errors.
Columbia Finance. "IMC CEO Statement on FY25 Endowment Returns." Columbia University. October 23, 2025.
Columbia University. "Financial Overview | Columbia University in the City of New York.".
Hamlin, Jessica. "Ivy League endowments' uncanny year." PitchBook. November 4, 2025. https://pitchbook.com/news/articles/ivy-league-endowments-uncanny-year
Narvekar, N.P. “Narv.” "Harvard Management Company: Message from the Chief Executive Officer." Harvard Management Company. October 2025.
Penn Office of Investments. "About Us | Penn Office of Investments." University of Pennsylvania. https://www.thedp.com/article/2025/09/penn-board-of-trustees-meeting-sept-25
Shaughnessy, Aidan. "Penn Board of Trustees reviews faculty appointments, budget resolutions to end fiscal year 2025." The Daily Pennsylvanian. September 26, 2025.
TIFF Investment Management. "FY2025 NACUBO Results Show Strong Returns but Rising Pressures on Institutions’ Budgets." February 17, 2026.
Yardley, Jonathan. "Comparing Ivy League Endowment Returns." Chief Investment Officer (CIO). November 11, 2025