Author Archives: hbcumoney

The HBCU Money™ Weekly Market Watch

Our Money Matters /\ January 4, 2013

NAME TICKER PRICE (GAIN/LOSS %)

African American Publicly Traded Companies

Citizens Bancshares Georgia (CZBS) $4.12 (UNCH)

Carver Bank New York (CARV) $4.15 (3.75% UP)

Radio One (ROIA) $0.88 (14.29% UP)

African Stock Exchanges

Bourse Regionale des Valeurs Mobilieres (BRVM)  167.12 (0.4% UP)

Botswana Stock Exchange (BSE)  7 510.24 (UNCH)

Ghana Stock Exchange (GSE)  1 199.32 (0.03% DN)*

Nairobi Stock Exchange (NSE)  97.30 (N/A)

Johannesburg Stock Exchange (JSE) 40 274.79 (0.07% UP)

International Stock Exchanges

New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) 8 649.99 (0.49% UP)

London Stock Exchange (LSE)  3 191.10 (0.66% UP)

Tokyo Stock Exchange (TOPIX)  888.51 (3.34% UP)

Commodities

Gold 1 651.70 (1.37% DN)

Oil 92.89 (0.03% DN)

*Ghana Stock Exchange shows current year to date movement. All others daily.

All quotes reported as of 2:00 PM Eastern Time Zone

The HBCU Endowment Feature – Howard University

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School Name: Howard University

Median Cost of Attendance: $41 483

Undergraduate Population: 7 164

Endowment Needed: $5 943 684 160

Analysis: Howard University needs approximately $6 billion for all of its students to attend debt free annually. Howard University is in pole position to become the first HBCU to reach the billion dollar mark. The school has historically had a very dedicated alumni base that has translated into consistent giving which for compound interest reasons can be more important than inconsistently larger donations. The only full service HBCU with both a law and medical school, it has at its disposal a higher income bracket of graduate school alumni than all other HBCUs. This provides a significant advantage in its fundraising. It does not hurt that the school is located in the nation’s capital where many federal funding decisions are made. Washington D.C. also being the home of one of the strongest African American populations in terms of social, economic, and political capital. One mistake that could be made by its alumni and university however is being content. Spelman and Hampton are closing the gap rapidly and on the more macro scale Harvard is widening the institutional gap between African America and European America’s top universities. Resting on its laurels could be fatal especially as Howard continues to be one of the most expensive colleges, HBCU or not, in the country. Howard, not becoming dependent on the tuition revenue that its higher cost of attendance brings is vital to keep in the forefront of the development office. Making families and communities feel good about the investment they are making and reducing the burden should be at the forefront of their alumni so the school can continue to recruit the cream of the crop in academic talent which translates into wealthier alumni on average. Ultimately, it is hard not to see Howard University becoming the first HBCU to achieve a billion dollar endowment with its healthy dose of donations and consistently high investment returns. It appears inevitable with the only thing that can get in its away is itself, but the competition to a billion will be fierce make no mistake about it.

As always it should be noted that endowments provide a myriad of subsidies to the university for everything from scholarship, faculty & administration salaries, research, and much more.

HBCU Money™ Business Book Feature – Inherently Unequal: The Betrayal of Equal Rights by the Supreme Court, 1865-1903

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A potent and original examination of how the Supreme Court subverted justice and empowered the Jim Crow era.

In the years following the Civil War, the 13th Amendment abolished slavery; the 14th conferred citizenship and equal protection under the law to white and black; and the 15th gave black American males the right to vote. In 1875, the most comprehensive civil rights legislation in the nation’s history granted all Americans “the full and equal enjoyment” of public accommodations. Just eight years later, the Supreme Court, by an 8-1 vote, overturned the Civil Rights Act as unconstitutional and, in the process, disemboweled the equal protection provisions of the 14th Amendment. Using court records and accounts of the period, Lawrence Goldstone chronicles how “by the dawn of the 20th century the U.S. had become the nation of Jim Crow laws, quasi-slavery, and precisely the same two-tiered system of justice that had existed in the slave era.”

The very human story of how and why this happened make Inherently Unequal as important as it is provocative. Examining both celebrated decisions like Plessy v. Ferguson and those often overlooked, Goldstone demonstrates how the Supreme Court turned a blind eye to the obvious reality of racism, defending instead the business establishment and status quo–thereby legalizing the brutal prejudice that came to define the Jim Crow era.

HBCU Money™ Dozen Links 12/24 – 12/29

Did you miss HBCU Money™ Dozen via Twitter? No worry. We are now putting them on the site for you to visit at your leisure.

Government Departments

$60B in Sandy aid clears Senate l Senate News http://bit.ly/TLm9lC

Coming in 2014: Death by Internet l GCN http://bit.ly/VUCiQd

Study reveals religion plays key role in preserving Vietnamese American ethnic identity l NSF http://ow.ly/gpZMQ

House Dems Will Seek to Ban High-Capacity Magazines on Jan. 3 l House News http://bit.ly/VcoqlH

Learn more about the work of Phil Colarusso EPA diver and marine biologist l US EPA http://1.usa.gov/12pykWw

Pres. Carter signs Clean Water Act of 1977, amends Water Pollution Control Act of 1972 l EPA http://go.usa.gov/gFvd

Federal Reserve, Central Banks, & Financial Departments

Leveraging Resources for Small Businesses in #Detroit l Chicago Fed http://ow.ly/gpZQD

Sales of new single-family homes rose in November l Cleveland Fed http://ow.ly/gpZRh

By 2050, 80% of world’s older people will live in developing and emerging economies Infographic l World Bank.http://bit.ly/WN1R8v

Are China’s fast-rising housing prices the reason for its high household savings rate? l St. Louis Fed http://bit.ly/RcQEfp

How easy is it to start a business where you live? #DoingBiz l World Bank http://ow.ly/gpZUc

Chart: Average interest rate on a 15-year fixed-rate #mortgage remains at 2.65% l St. Louis Fed http://bit.ly/V7gl1N

Thank you as always for joining us on Saturday for HBCU Money™ Dozen. The 12 most important government and central bank articles of the week.

 

The HBCU Money™ Weekly Market Watch

Our Money Matters /\ December 28, 2012

NAME TICKER PRICE (GAIN/LOSS %)

African American Publicly Traded Companies

Citizens Bancshares Georgia (CZBS) $4.50 (UNCH)

Carver Bank New York (CARV) $4.06 (2.17% DN)

Radio One (ROIA) $0.75 (UNCH)

African Stock Exchanges

Bourse Regionale des Valeurs Mobilieres (BRVM)  165.14 (1.03% UP)

Botswana Stock Exchange (BSE)  7 510.24 (UNCH)

Ghana Stock Exchange (GSE)  1 188.28 (22.63% UP)*

Nairobi Stock Exchange (NSE)  94.78 (N/A)

Johannesburg Stock Exchange (JSE) 39 385.04 (0.11% DN)

International Stock Exchanges

New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) 8 338.45 (0.74% DN)

London Stock Exchange (LSE)  3 105.01 (0.45% DN)

Tokyo Stock Exchange (TOPIX)  859.80 (0.67% UP)

Commodities

Gold 1 654.50 (0.551% DN)

Oil 90.91 (0.04% UP)

*Ghana Stock Exchange shows current year to date movement. All others daily.

All quotes reported as of 3:00 PM Eastern Time Zone