Nonprofits Paying Price for Gamble on Finances
September 23, 2009: The New York Times, by Stephanie Strom
Homeowners and businesses were not alone in taking on piles of debt over the last decade. Nonprofits of all sizes did the same, and now they, too, are paying the price.
Far from being conservative stewards of their assets, many nonprofits engaged in what some experts call risky financial behavior. “They did auction-rate securities, interest-rate arbitrage, complex swaps — which backfired on them the same way it would backfire on any hedge fund or asset manager,” said Clara Miller, chief executive of the Nonprofit Finance Fund, which has experienced a huge increase in organizations turning to it for assistance with soured bonds. “Organizations got to be all fancy-pants with their financial management.”
Those struggling now include the full range of nonprofits, including museums, colleges, orchestras and small local social service providers.
For example, Brandeis University, with $208 million in tax-exempt bonds outstanding, plans to close its art museum and sell off the collection to raise money. The Orange County Performing Arts Center, with $265 million in bonds, has laid off staff members. Copia, a culinary center in Napa, Calif., went bankrupt in December with $78 million in bond-related debt that its lawyer blames for its failure.
Even Harvard, with some $2.5 billion in tax-exempt bonds at the end of fiscal 2007, and Yale, with $1.6 billion, are cutting jobs, freezing salaries and delaying dormitory and lab construction.
While debt is the not primary reason for these institutions’ woes, the need to service it eats into their dwindling financial resources, forcing near Faustian choices. “Debt is the fourth horseman of the nonprofit apocalypse,” Ms. Miller said. “Add it to the failure of governments to fulfill contracts, declining donated revenues and a surge in demand for nonprofit services, and suddenly a lot of nonprofits are faced with some very hard choices.”
Much of the nonprofits’ debt is in the form of tax-exempt bonds. The number of charities issuing such bonds more than doubled from 1993 to 2006, according to figures compiled by the Internal Revenue Service, and the amount of debt linked to those bonds rose to $311 billion from $98 billion (adjusted for inflation to 2006 dollars).
In many cases, charities used the money from bonds to buy real estate and build facilities. Prep schools added golf courses, pools and observatories. Colleges bought entire neighborhoods and put up labs and sports facilities. Museums erected new wings, and symphonies added thousands of seats to their concert halls.
These nonprofits gambled that income from donations and investments would more than cover their debt service. But the recession turned that logic inside out.
Norman I. Silber, a law professor at Hofstra University who has done extensive research on the problem, calls the rising debt of nonprofits a “calamity.”
“If my analysis is correct,” said Professor Silber, who is also a member of several nonprofit boards, “over the next several years nonprofits across the country will have to renegotiate bond covenants, reduce services, cut staff or actually default and face foreclosures, repossessions, and in some cases, even bankruptcy.”
Before 1986, only nonprofit hospitals were allowed to float tax-exempt bonds, which they used to build new facilities. Then Congress amended the tax code to allow all charities access to the credit markets, and now even the tiny Family Service of Greater Boston has tax-exempt bond liabilities.
To be sure, the assets at nonprofits grew faster than bond-related debt. In the dozen years that ended in 2006, the value of assets held by nonprofits grew to $1.37 trillion from $347 billion (adjusted for inflation to 2006 dollars), thanks to more large gifts, increased property values, rising stock prices — and the explosion of tax-exempt debt.
“I think one could make a good argument that the greatest contributor to the enormous growth in university endowments and other endowments is not some wealthy person or persons,” said Robert L. Culver, chief executive of MassDevelopment, a state agency that supports nonprofits’ floating bonds, “but the federal government making available low-cost, tax-exempt debt that allowed endowments to remain invested and earn rates in the market as high as 25 percent.”
Traditionally, projected income determined how much debt an organization could handle, but Professor Silber suspects that as assets grew, lenders began extending credit based on how much money a nonprofit had in its endowment.
“Now, those assets have dropped in value by 20, 30 percent, but the amount of debt hasn’t changed,” he said.
Consider the case of New York Law School, which floated $135 million in auction-rate securities in 2006 in a deal that won an award for the creative use of structured finance.
The school had sold its library, on prime Manhattan real estate, for $136.5 million, but instead of building a library, it added the money from the sale to its endowment and borrowed for construction. Interest on the securities was just under 4 percent, the dean, Richard A. Matasar, said, compared with the 5.5 percent the school would have paid using ordinary fixed-rate bonds.
The Tax Code bars nonprofits from taking money raised with tax-exempt bonds and investing it in higher-yielding investments, a form of arbitrage. But it does not prohibit the strategy used by New York Law School, which many tax experts regard as a major flaw in the law.
“Congress’s intent in allowing charities to use bonds is to help them achieve their missions — build a health care center or a preschool,” said Dean Zerbe, former tax counsel to the Senate Finance Committee, “not to engage in fast and loose financial games.”
Mr. Matasar said the school did not engage in arbitrage. “The fact that we were fortunate enough to be able to sell a building to raise additional funds was a separate and distinct transaction,” he said.
When the credit market began souring last year, interest rates climbed sharply, hitting 12 percent in one week as buyers failed to show up for auctions of the school’s securities.
In December, New York Law School refinanced its debt, converting its securities into variable-rate notes secured by a letter of credit, Mr. Matasar said. Its endowment had fallen 20 percent to $186 million.
The Culinary Institute of America ramped up its use of tax-exempt bonds to finance construction of facilities. By the end of 2007, it had $104 million in debt, about 70 percent of which was auction-rate. Charlie O’Mara, the institute’s chief financial officer, figured it saved about $750,000 in financing costs that way. “It would have been a great strategy,” he said, “if our credit markets did not blow up.”
Like New York Law School, the institute saw its cheap financing evaporate when its bond insurer was downgraded and the auction market vanished. The institute was able to refinance its debt. But experts predict that many charities, particularly cultural organizations that are seeing declining revenues, will have a harder time.
Soliciting donors to pay off debt “would be like me going to my husband and saying, ‘Give me money because I spent too much at Saks Fifth Avenue,’ ” said Naomi Levine, a former star fund-raiser for New York University who now teaches at the university’s Heyman Center for Philanthropy. “It would be very, very difficult.”
© Copyright 2009 The New York Times.
See Also:
- $1.8 Million MassDevelopment Bond to Help Chelmsford Housing Authority Build 37 Affordable Senior Housing Units
- $10.17 Million MassDevelopment Bond Preserves 65 Affordable Housing Units and Funds Upgrades at Tammy Brook Apartments
- $11.5 Million MassDevelopment Financing Package Supports New Ambulatory Care Facility at Lynn Community Health
- $19 Million in MassDevelopment Financing Supports Six Massachusetts Manufacturing Expansions
- $2.5 Million MassDevelopment Bond to Help Support Completion of Academic Building at Hadleys Hartsbrook School
- $30 Million Tax-Exempt MassDevelopment Bond to Help Finance Perkins Lower School Construction, Renovation
- $38 Million MassDevelopment Bond Supports Campus Improvement Projects at Philips Academy Andover
- $5 Million MassDevelopment Bond Supports Melrose YMCA’s Purchase, Renovation of Childcare Space
- $6.25 Million MassDevelopment Bond Supports Planned Parenthood League of Massachusetts, Inc. Expansion in Worcester
- 10th Anniversary Open House Illuminates Fort Devens Memories
- A Study In Evolution
- American Meteorological Society to Expand in Boston’s Beacon Hill with Help From $5.5 Million MassDevelopment Bond
- American Superconductor Buys Stake in U.K. Company
- Anna Maria College to Build Residence Hall, Lease Energy-Efficient Equipment Thanks to MassDevelopment Tax-Exempt Bonds and Lease
- Athol’s Organic Renaissance to Distribute Locally Grown Food Across New England with Help From MassDevelopment Loan
- Bay States Low-Income Programs Get Boost
- Belchertown Selectmen Want the Town and MassDevelopment to Help Develop Former Belchertown State School Land
- Biopharmaceutical Industry Is Banking on Boston
- Biotech Firm Moving Its Base to Billerica
- BMS Wraps Up Construction On Devens Plant
- Bob Culver Testifies
- Brien Center to Use $3 Million MassDevelopment Bond to Renovate Former Church for Programs, Offices
- Brighton Community Center Begins to Take Shape
- Bristol-Myers Sets Sites on Devens Approval
- Brockton Human Service Agency to Upgrade IT Systems with $163,000 MassDevelopment Loan
- Cambridge Housing Authority to Renovate Affordable Housing With Help From $30 Million MassDevelopment Bond
- Cathedral High School to Convert Buildings, Add 7th and 8th Grades Thanks to $12 Million MassDevelopment Bond
- Celldex Re-ups, Expands in Fall River
- Chelmsford Gets Money for Katrina Road Cleanup
- Chicopee Firm Plans Upgrade
- Chicopee Gets $100,000 to Begin Cleanup Process of Former Uniroyal Tire Industrial Complex
- Chicopee Officials Predict New Commercial, Industrial Development in Coming Year
- CHOICE Housing Complex Breaks Ground
- CMARC, Inc. Refinances With MassDevelopment
- Colleges Find New Ways To Do Bond Deals
- Deep Bench MassDevelopment Becomes a Key Role Player in the State and Region
- Delivering the Goods
- Designs on Future
- Developer Gets Low-Interest Loan for Renovation
- Developers and Real Estate Professionals from Greater Boston Saw Much to Like on Franklin County Tour with Local Officials
- Developers to Tour County
- Developers Tour Local Sites
- Development Agencys Troubled Loans Swell
- Development Bill is More Than a Tax Holiday
- Development Opportunities Enormous
- Devens Gets $500,000 for Dispatch Hub
- Devens Library Checks Out Nicely for Laddawn
- Devens Planner Peter Lowitt Gets Top Honor
- Devens: A Base Redevelopment Formula that Works
- Doing Business in Northampton
- Dominion Energy Will Use $50 Million MassDevelopment Bond for Pollution Control Equipment
- Draft Mill Site Report Finished
- East Main Street Wharf in Gloucester Gets Facelift with Help From $100,000 MassDevelopment Loan
- Edgartowns F.A.R.M. Institute to Use $60,000 MassDevelopment Loan for Municipal Water Tie-In Project, Irrigation, Farming Equipment
- EDIC News
- Event Formally Recognizes Purchase of Mount Carmel
- Family Lands State Loan to Revitalize 136-Year-Old Gloucester Wharf
- Financing Lined Up for WPI Athletic Center
- Firm Makes It a Red Letter Day at Village Hill
- Forget Airport – Let Devens Keep Up the Good Work
- Former Gardner Furniture Manufacturing Facility to Become Assisted Living Apartments With Help From $600,000 MassDevelopment Bond
- Foxborough Charter’s $26.6 Million Addition Due in 2012
- Foxborough Regional Charter School to Add Classrooms, Gym, Science Labs with Help From $26.6 Million MassDevelopment Bond
- Fueling Optimism
- Governor Patrick Announces 100 New Jobs for Sutton Facility Expansion
- Governor Patrick Launches Manufacturing Initiative
- Green Basil Farms Lands First Loan Under New Statewide Small Farm Loan Program
- Green Building Contest in Devens
- Growing Market Spurs Innovation by Pioneer Valley Agricultural Start-Ups
- Have Real Estate, Will Travel
- Hawthorn Services to Purchase Adult Day Health Center with $925,000 MassDevelopment Bond
- Home Green Home
- Home Recycler True to Name
- Homisco, Inc. of Melrose to Meet European Demand For Its Call Management Systems and Create Seven Jobs Thanks to MassDevelopment Export Loan Guarantee
- Horn Packaging Corporation to Purchase, Renovate Building For Manufacturing With Help From $7.04 Million MassDevelopment Bond
- How A Springfield Renovation Project Is Revitalizing The City
- Introducing Village Hill Northampton: Community, Commerce and Culture
- Iredale Breaks Ground
- John R. Lyman Company to Buy and Upgrade Chicopee Facility with $2.2 Million MassDevelopment Bond
- Kayem Foods, Maker of Fenway Franks, to Purchase New Equipment and Create 20 Jobs with $6.5 Million Recovery Zone Bond
- Kollmorgen HQ Project at Village Hill Approved
- Kollmorgen Plans Move Ahead
- Laddawn, Inc. Chooses Devens for Companys New Headquarters
- Lawrences Class, Inc. to Buy Building Thanks to $3.15 Million MassDevelopment Bond
- Leaders Celebrate $750,000 Economic Stimulus to Metrowest Creative Sector
- Lilliputian Systems to Expand Wilmington Manufacturing With $5 Million Loan From MassDevelopment, Massachusetts Clean Energy Center
- Loans Aim to Help Struggling Farmers
- Loans Help Farmers Rebound From 2009
- Low-Cost Financing From MassDevelopment Helps Harborlight Make Homes for Working Families, Elders, and Disabled
- Lowell Charter School for At-Risk Students to Purchase Building with Help from $2.61 Million in MassDevelopment Bonds
- Lyman Company to Stay Thanks to MassDevelopment
- Malden Realty Corporation to Upgrade Facility, Retain Jobs With Help From $475K MassDevelopment Loan
- MassDevelopment and City of Chicopee Announce Additional $100,000 for Uniroyal/Facemate Clean-Up
- MassDevelopment and Wright Builders Break Ground on Eastview Homes at Village Hill Northampton
- MassDevelopment Announces New Executive Vice President of Devens Operations
- MassDevelopment Approved as Lender for U.S. Department of Agriculture Loan Guarantee Program
- MassDevelopment Board Chair Announces Robert Culver to End Seven-Year Run as President
- MassDevelopment Bond Helps Dorchester Charter School Buy Building, Add Grades
- MassDevelopment Bond Helps Natick’s Mary Ann Morse Healthcare Add Rooms, Expand Common Areas for Seniors
- MassDevelopment Bond Supports Cardinal Spellman Fitness Center Construction, Academic Building Renovations
- MassDevelopment CEO Culver and Mayor Bissonnette Announce $100,000 for Uniroyal/Facemate Clean-Up
- MassDevelopment Chooses Four Baystate Teams to Vie for Right to Build Model Green Housing in Devens
- MassDevelopment Directors Meet Locals on Devens
- MassDevelopment Expands “Green Loan” Program to All Businesses, Nonprofits in Massachusetts
- MassDevelopment Gives Cathedral High $12 Million in Bonds
- MassDevelopment Helps Marlborough’s Employment Options Install New Mechanical Systems With Low-Cost $120,000 Loan
- MassDevelopment Issues $1.25 Million Tax-Exempt Bond to Support the Merger of Nantucket New School and Strong Wings
- MassDevelopment Issues $1.44 Million in Bonds for United Cerebral Palsy Association to Renovate Headquarters, Build Handicap-Accessible Group Home
- MassDevelopment Issues $1.915 Million Tax-exempt Bond to Support Cooperative Production, Inc. in Taunton
- MassDevelopment Issues $1.97 Million in Bonds to Help Attleboro Enterprises Expand, Renovate Building
- MassDevelopment Issues $134,545,000 in Bonds on Behalf of Emerson College to Support Paramount Center, Colonial Building Improvements
- MassDevelopment Issues $20.5 Million Bond to Help D`Youville Senior Care Build Transitional Care Unit, Create 51 Jobs
- MassDevelopment Issues $3.3 Million in Bonds, Guarantees Loan for Hill View Montessori Foundation
- MassDevelopment Issues $3.5 Million in Bonds to Support Merrimack Valley Hospice In-Patient Care
- MassDevelopment Issues $3.7 Million in Bonds to Support Sturbridge Day Habilitation Facility at Rehabilitative Resources
- MassDevelopment Issues $43 Million in Bonds to Enable Western New England College to Build Academic Building
- MassDevelopment Issues $6.5 Million Bond to Help the Winchendon School, Inc. Complete Ice Arena and Build New Dorm
- MassDevelopment Lends $1 Million to Complete Renovations to Downtown Leominster Building
- MassDevelopment Loans to Help Remediate Everett Brownfields Site, Renovate Building for “Green” Fuel Company
- MassDevelopment Makes $2.8 Million New Markets Loan to Renovate Historic Plummer Building in Downtown Worcester
- MassDevelopment Offers Developers a Wider Range of Incentives than Tri-Town
- MassDevelopment Offers to Purchase 1550 Main St. in Springfield
- MassDevelopment Provides $3 Million in Bonds to Expand Facility at Hospice of the North Shore
- MassDevelopment Provides $630,000 Low-Interest Loan to Help Buzzard Bays KC Enterprises Buy Building
- MassDevelopment Secures $55 Million in Federal Tax Credits to Encourage Private Investment in Distressed Communities
- MassDevelopment to Offer $100,000 in Low-Cost Loans to Gloucester Seafood Businesses Affected by Summer Water Crisis
- MassDevelopment, MassBio and UMass Hold BioReady Gateway Cities Developer Conference
- MassDevelopment, Strolling of the Heifers, and the Carrot Project Launch Loan Program to Help Massachusetts Farmers
- Masy Systems of Pepperell Constructs Biopharma Storage Facility with MassDevelopment Equipment Loan
- May Institute Buys Randolph Building Thanks to $16 Million Bond Issued by MassDevelopment
- Meredith-Springfield Moves Into PET Market with Two Aoki Systems
- More Than 30 Real Estate Experts Attend Berkshire County Tour
- Muffin Town to Create 60 Jobs in Lawrence, Renovate Building With $6.5 Million MassDevelopment Bond
- Murray: $1.5 Million in Grants for ‘Green’ Communities
- Mystic Valley Gets $8M Bond for Athletic Complex
- MYSTIC VALLEY REGIONAL CHARTER SCHOOL TO BUILD ATHLETICS FACILITY, FIELDS WITH HELP FROM $8 MILLION MASSDEVELOPMENT BOND
- New Bedford Breaks Ground at Riverside Landing
- New Bedford well-positioned for economic growth
- New School, Strong Wings Merger Finalized by $1.25 Million State Bond
- Off the Beat: Village Hill Picks Up Steam, Despite Economy
- Old Colony Montessori School to Expand with Help From $1.04 Million MassDevelopment Bond
- Patrick-Murray Administration in Partnership with MassDevelopment Announces Community Service 501(c)(3) Loan Fund
- Patrick-Murray Administration Releases $7.96 Million for Public Safety, Highlights Municipal Regionalization Efforts
- Penikese Island School to Buy Administrative Building Thanks to MassDevelopment Loan Guarantee
- Perkins School to Expand
- Pizza Chain Owner Wins Amesbury Project Money
- Progress Visible at Hospital Site
- Prospect Hill Academy Charter School to Renovate Buildings Thanks to $6.5 Million Bond from MassDevelopment
- Public To Weigh In On Village Hill
- Public-Private Partnership Plus $80,000 in MassDevelopment Brownfields Funds to Lay Groundwork for Handicap-Accessible YMCA Parking Lot in Downtown Athol
- Reconstruction of Former Federal Building in Springfield Nearly Complete
- Rehoboth’s Souza Family Farm Receives $15,000 From MassDevelopment / Strolling of the Heifers Loan Program
- Representative Neal, Mayor Sarno, Secretary Bialecki, and MassDevelopment CEO Culver Announce Partnership to Revitalize Main Street Corridor
- Restaurant Newcomer Helps Medford Move Forward with Parking Garage
- Saving Our State Farms
- School HQ Good Fit for Downtown Springfield
- Seafood Firms are Offered Loans
- Site Preparation Work Begins for Kollmorgen Facility at Village Hill Northampton
- Slow, Sustainable Investing
- Springfield Mayor Firm On Move
- Springfield School Department Settles Into New Headquarters Downtown
- Springfield Tries to Showcase River
- Springfield’s Thorn Industries Purchases Building With Help From $450,000 MassDevelopment Loan
- State Loan Boosts Farm
- State to Invest $177,375 in Cultural Facilities
- State, Springfield Officials See 1550 Main as a Catalyst for Further Growth
- State, Town to Work on Defunct School
- State-Aided Projects Win Praise
- Statement of MassDevelopment President & CEO Bob Culver on Economic Development Bill Signing
- Suffolk University to Erect Academic Building with Support from $66 Million in MassDevelopment Bonds
- Tammy Brook Dwellers in Weymouth Have New Owner
- The Groves in Lincoln to Build New Independent Living Homes for Elders with $117 Million MassDevelopment Bond
- The Kennedy Donovan Center Moves to Kingston
- The Learning Center for the Deaf to Build Early Childhood Center with Help from $3.6 Million MassDevelopment Bond
- Theres A Lot to Like About Lowell: 100 Developers And Real Estate Professionals Tour Key Sites During City/MassDevelopment-Sponsored Conference
- To Foster Green Energy, State Needs to Make Bets
- Townsend Developer to Build Devens Houses That Generate Virtually No Energy Costs
- Transformations of Townsend to Build Model Green Housing in Devens
- Transitions at Devens Bring Help, Hope
- Transitions at Devens Opens New Emergency Shelter For Homeless Women And Children
- Transitions at Devens Provides Housing for Families Needing Help
- Two Proposals May Turn Tide in Downtown
- Uniroyal Site Demolition Starts
- Uniroyal Site Plan Under Way
- Using Different Tools to Help Small Businesses Survive
- Village Hill Development Moves Forward
- Walpole, State Sends Message to Local Business
- Weymouth Apartment Complex Sold; 65 Units to Stay Affordable
- Worcester Polytechnic Institute to Build Sports and Recreation Center with Proceeds from $56 Million MassDevelopment Bond