Bard Is Driving Toward a $1 Billion Endowment with Soros Donation

The college must match the philanthropist’s $500 million donation within five years, and it’s already halfway there.


Bard College could be the next $1 billion university endowment if it can match a $500 million grant from billionaire investor George Soros within the next five years. It has already raised $250 million toward that goal. 

Until then, a Bard spokesman said the $500 million commitment from the Hungarian-born American investor will be held in his Quantum hedge funds, governed by Soros Fund Management, his family office. It is among the largest grants ever given to a higher education institution. 

The private liberal arts college will start getting piecemeal Soros payments to its endowment July 1. The school should reach the full $1 billion level when the one-to-one grant is fully matched. This big-money pledge deepens previous Soros contributions to Bard programs.

“When this endowment drive is complete, Bard will have a $1 billion endowment, which will ensure its pioneering mission and its academic excellence for the future,” Bard College President Leon Botstein said in a statement. 

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Prior to this commitment, Bard has maintained an endowment of roughly $200 million. The school in Annandale-on-Hudson, New York, was not founded with an endowment when it was started in 1860. Historically, Bard has favored raising money to directly fund the school’s many education initiatives, rather than to support the endowment.

But if Bard is able to raise the final $250 million it needs within the next five years, it will join the cadre of higher education endowments that have crossed the $1 billion threshold. The larger pool of assets would open the school to a broader range of investment vehicles

Reaching the $1 billion milestone is also when many schools typically start thinking about hiring a chief investment officer and building out a professional investment team, though a spokesperson said the school does not have to contend with that question at the moment, given that the commitment is currently managed by Quantum Funds.

Last fall, Bryn Mawr College hired Carnegie Corporation alum Brooke Jones as its first investment chief as the school approached the $1 billion mark. Similarly, Smith College started its search for its first CIO, after the school, which has a $2 billion endowment, said it has become the “outlier” among higher education institutions that outsource their endowment management.

There are more than 100 schools in the US with endowments north of $1 billion in assets, according to data from the National Association of College and University Business Officers (NACUBO).  

Bard has a decadeslong connection with Soros. The billionaire has supported the school since 1989, and over the past decade, he has dedicated $160 million to the Hudson Valley institution. 

Last year, the school received a $100 million contribution, distributed as $10 million annually for 10 years, from Soros’ Open Society Foundations, to support its higher education network around the world. Ten years ago, Bard received a $60 million Soros commitment for its civic engagement programs.

The school says the larger endowment will strengthen its undergraduate programs and its various initiatives.

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Missouri State Retirement System Seeks New CIO

Shannon Davidson is set to resign from $9.1 billion pension fund as early as October.


Shannon Davidson, chief investment officer of the $9.1 billion Missouri State Employees’ Retirement System (MOSERS), is scheduled to retire as early as October after more than 25 years at the pension fund and fewer than two years at the helm.

His retirement was revealed in a job posting on MOSERS’ website that said the pension fund is seeking applicants for a chief investment officer.

According to the posting’s recruitment schedule, Davidson will retire sometime between October 1 and January 1, 2022. The potential starting date of the new CIO is currently slated for some time between September 1 and January 1, 2022.

Davidson served as deputy CIO from January 2015 until December 2019, when he was named interim CIO. He has served as the MOSERS CIO since February 20, 2020.

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“Shannon has utilized his many years of experience and insight to steer the MOSERS investment program,” said MOSERS Executive Director Ronda Stegmann. “His keen ability to lead and mentor has benefited all levels of MOSERS staff and the organization as a whole.”

MOSERS is seeking a new CIO for the second time in less than two years after Seth Kelly resigned in December 2019 and moved on to become CIO of the Pennsylvania State Employees’ Retirement System (SERS).

According to the job posting, the new CIO, who will manage an investment team of 14 members, will work closely with Stegmann to “increase plan funding through prudent investment practices,” complete an asset liability study, build out the fund’s private equity allocation, and build out its private real estate and private credit allocations. The deadline to apply for the CIO position is April 30, with finalist interviews scheduled for early June.

MOSERS has approximately 136,000 members, including active and retired members, beneficiaries, and inactive-vested and non-vested members. The pension fund also said that, as of February, it completed its transition to a new asset allocation that was adopted by its board in 2018. The fund said the new allocation uses a modest amount of explicit leverage at the total fund level to achieve a broadly diversified and risk-balanced policy portfolio.

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