The HBCU Endowment Feature – Bennett College

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School Name: Bennett College

Median Cost of Attendance: $25 653

Undergraduate Population: 736

Endowment Needed: $377 612 160

Analysis: Bennett College needs approximately $378 million to allow all of its undergraduates to attend the college debt free annually at its current population and cost of attendance. Often thought of as the “other” women’s college, Bennett College is actually 8 years older than its sister college in Atlanta. Comparisons between the two are natural but should not be made beyond their student body gender makeup. The school’s atmosphere is still intensely intimate with less than 800 students. Its need for growth goes without saying as it needs to double in size in order for more alumni in the field. At the same time it has an opportunity to develop extremely nurtured relationships with students and their families so that personalizing the donation relationship would not be complicated. The fields that it has shown to be strong in are very good growth and need areas for African America’s infrastructure. Bennett College faces some difficulties in terms of recruitment being in the middle of such an HBCU hotbed. Being such an extraordinarily small school can often time  leave it overlooked by potential students and donors. That being said it reports one of the healthiest if not the healthiest endowment amongst the small HBCUs. The coming decade for the endowment and its growth potential will be determined substantially as the board of trustees determines who the new leadership of the college will be and what their vision requires. With a strong willed leader this institution could see its endowment easily triple over the next decade. They are small but the ladies of Bennett College pack a mighty punch.

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 – The Man in the High Castle

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“The single most resonant and carefully imagined book of Dick’s career.” – New York Times

It’s America in 1962. Slavery is legal once again. The few Jews who still survive hide under assumed names. In San Francisco, the I Ching is as common as the Yellow Pages. All because some twenty years earlier the United States lost a war—and is now occupied by Nazi Germany and Japan.

This harrowing, Hugo Award-winning novel is the work that established Philip K. Dick as an innovator in science fiction while breaking the barrier between science fiction and the serious novel of ideas. In it Dick offers a haunting vision of history as a nightmare from which it may just be possible to wake.

Winner of the Hugo Award

HBCU Money™ Dozen Links 3/11 – 3/15

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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

(video) POTUS visits the Argonne National Research Lab to talk about American energy security l White House http://at.wh.gov/j1cQt

Guard/Reserve Veteran Unemployment Rate Decreases l Military Community & Family Policy http://1.usa.gov/YxcJWD

SBA is here to help women-owned businesses succeed in selling to the government l SBA http://ow.ly/j0Hei

Ski with a Ranger: A Breathtaking Adventure l USDA http://ow.ly/j0IB1

Government needs are redefining what goes into a tablet l Government Computer News http://ow.ly/j0fSC

DOJ Announces $2 Million in Grants to Strengthen Legal Services for the Poor l Department of Justice http://go.usa.gov/2RwH

Federal Reserve, Central Banks, & Financial Departments

Register for Indiana event on creating and using children’s savings accounts l St. Louis Fed http://bit.ly/12WkvSx

Chart: Consumer Price Index rose 0.7% in February, the largest monthly increase since June 2009 l St. Louis Fed http://bit.ly/WsY2qZ

SE manufacturing had a bumpy ride after the recession. Has the sector turned a corner? l Atlanta Fed http://goo.gl/ARBJl

Farm loan demand weakened further during the third quarter of 2012 l Richmond Fed http://bit.ly/Yz8XiS

Research paper looks at what allowed some community banks to remain successful during the crisis l St. Louis Fed http://bit.ly/Z6jDFB

Examine the trends in debt flows within the developing world l World Bank http://ow.ly/j1rVi

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 /\ March 15, 2013

NAME TICKER PRICE (GAIN/LOSS %)

African American Publicly Traded Companies

Citizens Bancshares Georgia (CZBS) $5.93 (0.00% UNCH)

Radio One (ROIA) $1.78 (6.03% DN)

African Stock Exchanges

Bourse Regionale des Valeurs Mobilieres (BRVM)  190.09 (0.26% DN)

Botswana Stock Exchange (BSE)  8 127.50 (0.61% UP)

Ghana Stock Exchange (GSE)  1 641.03 (36.78% UP)*

Nairobi Stock Exchange (NSE)  113.23 (N/A)

Johannesburg Stock Exchange (JSE) 40 757.94 (0.37% DN)

International Stock Exchanges

New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) 9 107.68 (0.22% DN)

London Stock Exchange (LSE)  3 422.11 (0.48% DN)

Tokyo Stock Exchange (TOPIX)  1 051.65 (1.30% UP)

Commodities

Gold 1 591.20 (0.03% UP)

Oil 93.59 (0.60% UP)

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

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

If Cash is King, Then Apple is God – But Is David Einhorn The Devil?

By William A. Foster, IV

Yesterday is a cancelled check. Today is cash on the line. Tomorrow is a promissory note. – Hank Stram

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My entrepreneurship teacher in b-school was a man who grew up in the depression, was stubbornly frugal, and had LBO’d, run, and sold two companies before taking up teaching. He talked about how the depression impacted him personally (he still drove a late 80′s Acura and bought a used sailboat despite having a net worth near nine figures) and his approach to business. In class he seemed to start off every single class and every case study with the same message on the board. Cash is king. He even went so far as to say that cash was oxygen and the moment a business did not have it, that business was dead. He abhored companies (or students) who suggested that companies should pay down debt ahead of schedule unless there were obscenely excessive cash reserves. Paying ahead on debt for a company and draining its cash reserves to do so was not only foolish but dangerous. As he said you do not get any brownie points from creditors for being ahead but you do endanger your business if an emergency arose or opportunity for that matter. But what about a company that has no debt and sits on the Mount Rushmore of cash? Enter Apple.

Apple, Inc. has no debt and currently sits on $137 billion in cash and cash equivalents and they are being criticized for it. David Einhorn, an “activist” investor in Apple, who is cogently trying to convince Apple that it needs to release its mountain pile of cash back to investors. He has gone so far as to say that Apple is behaving with a depression-like mentality. Apparently, Mr. Einhorn has short-term memory loss. It was not even five years ago when companies were begging for life lines to cash. I am sure the former Lehman Brothers and Bear Stearns had wished they were sitting on a fraction of the cash Apple is currently  holding. Let me not just pick on the banks as we saw Circuit City and 70 year old iconic retailer Mervyn’s go out of business in 2008. It just so happened that the only company willing to lend any cash was Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway which is not even a bank. In fact, Berkshire Hathaway lent money to two notable banks in Bank of America and Goldman “Teflon” Sachs. In return, Berkshire has received handsome returns in a current investing environment where others are better off standing on the side of the road panhandling to get returns on investments. Berkshire Hathaway’s cash pile was not only able to provide shelter to its stable of companies but Berkshire’s cash infusion into a troubled market was able to bring some level of calm to the global markets that was quickly deteriorating into pure chaos as liquidity had dried up faster than the Sahara desert on Mercury. Yes, it was that bad. Mr. Einhorn says that the money needs to be returned to shareholders because it is shareholders who can put that cash to better use.

Now Mr. Einhorn, exactly where are investors going to go with this cash other than back into Apple? We are in a negative interest rate environment currently and from all impressions of Federal Reserve Chairman Bernanke posturing – not leaving it anytime soon. One has to wonder if Bernanke could find a missile to push real rates even lower he will. A look at the graph below shows just how futile it could be chasing new investments. We know fixed income is dead but over the past five years since the Great Recession the S&P 500 (even with Apple in it) overall has returned almost a 0 percent return while Apple is closing in on 300 percent over the same period. The argument that they do not need “that much” cash is almost as fun of a ponderance as asking someone “how much money is too much?” and expecting any consensus to occur in a group of more than one.

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That is just the investment side of it. There is another real reality of this. Apple needs to be transforming itself into more than a company that makes the IPhone because like all things eventually it too will fade and then what? The television? The watch? This company has the ability to do something truly transformative with the cash that Mr. Einhorn so abhors. Apple can take a cue from an old rival IBM and become a technology and consulting company thereby adding and creating a diversified revenue stream to reduce the angst around so much of Apple’s revenue being based solely on one or two products. What Apple chooses to consult in should be an assessment of its managers of where the company has strengths and competitive advantages.  Or it can hope the IPhone/IPad 40 will still be popular in a decade even though we know how that turned out for IBM. Yes, at one point IBM “Big Blue” made personal computers too. The company also went from one of the most profitable in the world in 1990 with $6 billion in profits to the brink of bankruptcy in 1993. Why? Because Microsoft, Dell, and others were changing the industry underneath its behemoth feet as young, energetic, and nimble companies something IBM was unable to respond to with its size, age, and bureaucracy that comes with a maturing company.  It is now considered a multinational technology and consulting company and this ultimately will be the route Apple will have to take. A transition like this will take time and cash. Lots of it. There is no reason for Apple to have the same fate unless pushed by shareholders who want to join Mr. Einhorn’s short term amnesia of 2008 or forget the lessons of IBM’s near collapse taught us 20 years ago.

It appears Mr. Einhorn and much of the investment community today who are seeking yield in such an onerous investing climate have already forgotten the lessons of yesteryear. Not to mention an American political climate where Democrats and Republicans are acting as if they at best are engaged in a remnant of the Cold War and possibly moving closer to that of the Vietnam conflict as the country tries to get its financial house in order. The herd mentality that so often plagues the investment community’s inability to dare to be contrarian.  Unfortunately, few managers of public companies today have the sense to not succumb to the perils of the 90 day cycle also known as quarterly earnings and instead focus on managing a company with the vision of tomorrow’s tomorrow in mind. Apple should do what it does best and what allowed it to come from the brink of irrelevance to one of the world’s most valuable company – “Think Different”. Yes, cash is king and Apple is indeed currently God – but as mythology taught us even gods can be killed.

Disclaimer: There is no ownership of any of the companies mentioned in this article by myself, my business, or my family as of this article’s publishing.