A Cash-Flow Focus for Endowments and Trusts

James P. Garland
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Abstract

The primary objective of perpetual endowment funds and long-lived trust funds is to generate spendable cash. Ideally, these cash disbursements would be stable from one year to the next and would grow to keep pace with inflation.

Too-high disbursements today would lead to too-low disbursements tomorrow, and vice versa. Setting a proper spending rate is difficult. Trustees often set percentage spending rates based on the real returns they expect to earn from their investments and then link those spending rates to their funds’ market values. But linking spending to market values causes problems.

One problem is that market values of common asset classes, such as stocks and bonds, are volatile. Trustees fight this volatility by averaging market values over time, but averaging does not work very well.

Another problem is that trustees who base spending on market values often understandably come to believe that market values themselves determine spending. In other words, if market values increase (or fall) by a significant amount, then trustees feel justified in increasing (or cutting) spending by similar amounts. This belief is misguided. For equities, the predominant asset class in most endowment and trust funds, the source of returns is not market values but, rather, corporate profits.

This brief argues that, counter to common practice, trustees should turn their backs on market values and instead focus on the real cash flows that their assets can generate. For bonds, this would mean their real interest rate. For equities, this would mean their underlying profits. This focus on asset cash flows, rather than on asset market values, is a better way to go. This brief offers two spending rules based on cash flows. One looks at corporate dividends, and the other at corporate profits.

Trustees who base spending on market values usually include bonds in their funds to dampen market value swings. A 30% bond allocation is not uncommon. Yet the cash-flow spending rules described here lead to less volatile spending, even when applied to a 100% equity portfolio, than that of a 30% bond/70% equity portfolio whose spending is based on market values.

In addition, spending rules based on cash flows free trustees from fretting about market values. Diversification can still be beneficial, but no longer do trustees need to diversify primarily to dampen market downturns. When equity market values decline, as they invariably will from time to time, trustees may be able to say, “We don’t care.”

Furthermore, spending rules based on cash flows enable trustees to keep score. Trustees of perpetual endowment funds and of long-lived personal trust funds often feel obligated to be intergenerationally equitable — that is, to treat current and future beneficiaries the same. The near-universal way to evaluate intergenerational equity is to look at market values. Instead, a spending rule based on cash flows works better.

Finally, basing spending on cash flows, rather than on market values, encourages trustees to focus on something that is very important but often overlooked: the long-term health of the economies in which their funds are invested.

No spending rule is perfect. But many trustees who now base spending on market values would benefit by focusing on asset cash flows instead.
捐赠基金和信托基金的现金流焦点
永久捐赠基金和长期信托基金的主要目标是产生可支出的现金。理想情况下,这些现金支出每年都保持稳定,并随着通货膨胀而增长。今天的支出过高会导致明天的支出过低,反之亦然。设定一个适当的消费率是很困难的。受托人通常根据他们期望从投资中获得的实际回报设定百分比支出率,然后将这些支出率与基金的市场价值挂钩。但将支出与市场价值挂钩会产生问题。一个问题是,股票和债券等常见资产类别的市场价值是不稳定的。受托人通过在一段时间内平均市场价值来对抗这种波动,但平均效果并不好。另一个问题是,以市场价值为支出基础的受托人往往相信市场价值本身决定了支出,这是可以理解的。换句话说,如果市场价值大幅增加(或下降),那么受托人就会觉得合理地增加(或削减)类似数量的支出。这种信念是错误的。股票是大多数捐赠基金和信托基金的主要资产类别,对于股票来说,回报的来源不是市值,而是企业利润。这份简报认为,与一般做法相反,受托人应该抛弃市场价值,转而关注其资产能够产生的实际现金流。对于债券而言,这意味着它们的实际利率。对股票而言,这意味着它们的潜在利润。关注资产现金流,而不是资产市场价值,是一种更好的做法。这个概要提供了两个基于现金流的支出规则。一个关注公司股息,另一个关注公司利润。以市场价值为基础支出的受托人通常在基金中包括债券,以抑制市场价值的波动。30%的债券配置并不罕见。然而,与基于市场价值的30%债券/70%股票投资组合相比,这里描述的现金流支出规则导致的支出波动性较小,即使是在100%股票投资组合中也是如此。此外,基于现金流的支出规则使受托人不必担心市场价值。分散投资仍然是有益的,但受托人不再需要主要为了抑制市场低迷而分散投资。当股票市场价值下跌时,受托人可能会说,“我们不在乎。”此外,基于现金流的支出规则使受托人能够记分。永久捐赠基金和长期个人信托基金的受托人常常感到有义务在两代人之间做到公平- -即对当前和未来的受益人一视同仁。评估代际公平的近乎普遍的方法是看市场价值。相反,基于现金流的支出规则效果更好。最后,基于现金流而不是市场价值的支出,鼓励受托人关注一些非常重要但经常被忽视的东西:他们的资金投资所在经济体的长期健康状况。没有什么消费规则是完美的。但许多现在以市场价值为支出基础的受托人,如果转而关注资产现金流,将会受益。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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