Top news | Sports | Local news
Business Updates
Harvard releases 2010 pay for endowment chief, president

May 25, 2012 06:12 PM

By Beth Healy Globe Staff

Harvard University’s endowment chief, Jane Mendillo, earned $3.5 million in 2010, down from $4.8 million in total compensation in 2009, according to Harvard, which released its latest tax filing Friday.

The highest paid manager of the endowment in 2010 was Andy Wiltshire, who earned $5.5 million, Harvard said, for overseeing the outside firms that manage money for the nation’s largest endowment. Harvard’s top investment managers are highly compensated, routinely earning more than anyone else at the university if they beat their investment goals.

Harvard University’s president, Drew Gilpin Faust earned $875,331 in 2010, up slightly from $874,559 the prior year. For 2010, $120,901 of Faust’s compensation is for the personal use of the president’s house in Cambridge.

Harvard’s tax filing was for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2011, but the compensation figures disclosed are for the prior calendar year.

Mendillo’s pay was lower compared to 2009, which included deferred compensation that was part of her employment agreement. Mendillo rejoined Harvard in 2008 from Wellesley College where she managed the endowment.

Mendillo has been working to improve the performance of the Harvard endowment after double-digit declines in the financial crisis of 2008 and 2009. She oversaw a 21.4 percent return on the $32 billion endowment in the 12 months ended in June 2011, slightly better than the 20.1 percent average gain among all endowments larger than $1 billion that year.

The high pay of Harvard’s investment managers has long been a source of debate on campus and among some alumni. Proponents of the pay structure say this is how the endowment can attract the top investment managers.



More Business Updates news  »
Air Force radar-system contract could mean up to $260m for Raytheon
ATM firm agrees to change its disclosure practices following state investigation
PCA design wins awards for $8m renovation of UConn dining hall
Mass. gas prices up a penny a gallon to $3.49, AAA Southern New England says
Cheeseboy gears up for Downtown Crossing debut
insights INSIGHTS ON LOCAL BUSINESSES »
Text size A A A