Harvard Management Company (HMC), a wholly-owned subsidiary established in 1974, manages Harvard University’s $56.9 billion endowment (as of FY2025). HMC invests over 14,000 individual funds as a single entity to support university operations, research, and financial aid, providing over one-third of the annual operating budget.
Key Aspects of Management:
Leadership:N.P. "Narv" Narvekar has served as CEO since December 2016, overseeing investment strategy.
Investment Strategy: HMC utilizes a generalist model, breaking down silos to seek the best risk-adjusted returns across the global portfolio, moving away from strict asset class silos to focus on total portfolio risk and alpha/beta exposure.
Endowment Purpose: The funds provide financial aid, fund professorships, and support research. In 2025, the endowment distributed significant funds to support a $414 million financial aid record.
Distribution Policy: The university dictates an annual distribution from the endowment to the operating budget designed to be stable, predictable, and maintain the long-term value of assets against inflation.
Recent Developments (2025):
Financial Context: For FY2025, Harvard reported an operating deficit of $113 million on $6.7 billion in revenue, with net assets growing to $68.7 billion.
Federal Funding Challenges: In 2025, Harvard faced a, at times, frozen status of over $2 billion in federal funding/grants amid disputes with the Trump administration regarding campus anti-semitism, prompting lawsuits from the university.
Heightened Scrutiny: The U.S. Department of Education placed Harvard on "heightened cash monitoring" in Sept 2025, requiring the university to use its own funds to pay student aid before seeking reimbursement.