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Endowment Acceptance and Financial Management policy

This policy covers the establishment or management of new endowed funds.


Policy


Owner
Advancement Office/Finance and Procurement
Version
Information not provided
Approval date
09 Sep 2024
Approved by
Information not provided
Date of last review
24 Feb 2024
Date of next review
24 Feb 2027

Section 1: Purpose of Policy

This policy discloses our Endowment Acceptance and Financial Management policy so that the process through which new funds are established and existing funds are managed is clear and transparent, both internally and for donors who may be considering establishing such funds.

An endowment is a capital fund that is invested for the long-term, although not necessarily in perpetuity, with the aim of the return on the capital providing a regular income stream to support our objectives. These funds will mostly be established following the receipt of philanthropic gifts from private individuals, corporations, foundations, associations, and other organisations. We would like to increase the size of the philanthropically-funded endowment fund that supports its aims and objectives.

Endowed funds may be designated to benefit academic or non-academic posts, students, programmes, physical space (buildings, facilities, grounds or portions thereof), or specific academic or non-academic departments, centres. They are typically named after the donor or a person the donor wishes to recognise. Endowed funds may be established by a one-time gift, a series of gifts, wills, trusts, gifts of assets, or by a combination of these. Gifts can be accepted to build on established endowed funds (subject to the timings specified in Section 8). All endowments should be evidenced by a signed gift agreement.

Please note that this policy covers the establishment or management of new endowed funds i.e. those that will be invested in our endowment investment pool.

Section 2: Scope of Policy

The main implications of our Endowment Acceptance and Financial Management Policy are as follows:

  • to ensure that a Gift Agreement is always drawn up between the University and the donor so that both parties fully understand the expectations of the other and have the assurance and trust of a written record for reference. The gift agreement should explicitly state that the donation is being endowed
  • to provide a clear framework for the Finance & Procurement Office (F&PO) and the Advancement Office to work within, which clarifies those responsible for approving the establishment of new endowed funds and decision-making in cases where conditions attached to gifts may prove unacceptable to us
  • to allow the creation of pooled endowed funds. These funds will enable and encourage smaller gifts to be made to our endowment. There will be a central expendable unrestricted endowment to pool gifts for purposes such as providing scholarships

Section 3: Definitions of Endowment

Summary of Endowment and Donation Classifications (FE/HE SORP 2019)

Under the 2019 FE/HE Statement of Recommended Practice (SORP), aligned with FRS 102, donations and endowments are classified based on donor restrictions and institutional discretion.

Endowment Funds

Endowments are charitable trusts held for the institution’s benefit, split into capital and income. They fall into two main types:

  • Permanent Endowments: Capital must be preserved indefinitely. Income may be restricted or unrestricted depending on donor instructions.
  • Expendable Endowments: Capital can be spent at the institution’s discretion.

SORP Endowment Categories

  • Restricted Expendable Endowment
    • Capital: Can be spent
    • Income: Restricted to donor-specified purposes
  • Unrestricted Expendable Endowments
    • Capital: Can be spent
    • Income: Can be used freely
  • Permanent Endowment with Unrestricted Income
    • Capital: Must be preserved
    • Income: Can be used freely
  • Permanent Endowment with Restricted Income
    • Capital: Must be preserved
    • Income: Restricted to donor-specified purposes

Designated Funds

Not classified as endowments. These are internal allocations of reserves for specific purposes. At the University of Bath, they earn interest via the cash return method and are not invested in the endowment pool.

Other Donations

Expendable donations with no or minimal restrictions are not endowments. They may be designated and optionally invested in the pooled fund for long-term support.

Section 4: Requirement for Gift Agreements

A Gift Agreement should be prepared for all endowed funds established with philanthropic gifts. This should define the objectives of the fund, the nature of the activity it is intended to support, address naming issues (where appropriate and in line with the Naming Policy, available on request from the Advancement Office) and set out the fund’s operating terms. It is important that the donor is clear about the terms under which the fund is established to avoid any potential disputes over the purpose of the fund in future years.

For gifts with a restricted purpose, we will seek to include an alternative use clause within the Gift Agreement enabling us to use the endowed fund to support other activities should changing circumstances prevent the use of the income as the donor originally intended.

It is our intention to minimise the risk of having to refer to the Charity Commission for any repurposing of gifts received.

Section 5: Creation of pooled endowed funds

To encourage new gifts, the University may create generic or pooled endowed funds. These pooled funds operate like other endowed funds, with donors receiving an annual report on the entire fund, not on their individual contribution. Individual gifts within the pool are not reported separately.

Section 6: Rate of return available from investment funds

For permanent endowments, a total return approach to investment will be applied to the endowed fund, in line with The Charity Commission’s Charities (Total Return) Regulations 2013 (as amended 2018 and 2023). The University’s Finance Committee will set the target rate of return, and the target rate will be made available to donors on request.

Section 7: Timing of transfer of funds into the University endowment

All monies used to establish endowed funds (including Gift Aid or any matched funding that may be eligible) will be invested in our pooled investment units. Income from the endowment can only be spent once income has accrued, meaning there will not be spend against an endowment for at least the first 12 months.

Due to the administration involved in recalculating the values of the portfolio of endowed funds each time additional funds are added or withdrawn, the following timeframes will be applied;

Value of endowment Timeframe to invest in investment pool
Gift £100k+ or top ups to existing endowed funds The beginning of the quarter following receipt of the gift
Drawdown (expenditure) and gifts of less than £100k being invested in pooled endowment In October following the year end

Section 8: Lifespan of endowed funds

The current expectation is that the long-term targeted return on our pooled investments will enable endowed funds to keep their value in real terms to use over generations.

Further, our expectation is that all endowed funds will be established to operate in the very long term, provided that the purpose of the fund remains valid and the value of the fund does not fall below a minimum, prior determined, threshold. The only exception to this will be if the fund has been specifically established as expendable, to operate for a specific time period, in which case this should be stated in the Gift Agreement.

Under the total return approach adopted, FE/HE SORP/Charity law allows any permanent endowments more flexibility in how they allocate capital gains. All investment returns are designated as unapplied total return until the trustees decide how it is to be used. Trustees may allocate some of the unapplied total return as income to be spent on our purposes and any residual amount reinvested. This policy may impact the lifespan of any endowed funds and cause the capital value of the fund to fall.

If the capital value of an endowed fund falls to the point where it can no longer support the level of activity the fund was established to support then:

  • if the fund is providing an award or scholarship, the size or frequency of the award will decrease for a period of time so that the fund can rebuild its core capital value to a sustainable level; or,
  • if the fund is supporting an academic post, at the next available opportunity when the post becomes vacant, a new holder will not be appointed until the fund has rebuilt its core capital value to a sustainable level

In either of these cases we may decide to supplement the income from the fund to enable the award and/or post to continue. Alternatively, for expendable endowments, we may use capital to supplement the income of the fund, and this will form part of the annual review of funds to ensure that it can continue to be used over generations given the level of investment return received over the previous years.

If the value of the endowed fund continues to decline to the extent that its capital is below £25,000, then in line with Charity Commission guidance (which states that Charity Commission authority is not required to spend under £25,000 from an endowed fund) and in discussion and agreement with the donor where possible, the endowed fund will be closed and the remaining fund used to support the relevant area of activity.

If the purpose for which an endowed fund was established becomes no longer valid, and there has been no alternative use agreed with the donor, then we will seek the permission of the original donor to reclassify the endowed fund as expendable and use the remaining fund to support the relevant area of activity or transfer the remaining funds to the most appropriate existing fund.

If all reasonable attempts to trace the original donor fail then the fund would have to remain as permanent, unless permission to change classification could be obtained from the Charity Commission or the fund value is below £25,000 and Charity Commission authority to spend is not required. If the original donor was a body corporate then this body, in its current legal entity would need to provide such permission to reclassify.

Section 9: Accepting donor-specified criteria for endowed funds

Donors will be encouraged to be as non-specific as possible when making a gift to establish a new endowed fund. However, unless there are legal, ethical or practical reasons to the contrary, we will accept a donor’s specific preferences for the area of activity supported. For example, funds may be established to support scholarships with a preference for recipients from lower income backgrounds or from a certain country.

Donations will be refused if they require us to undertake illegal acts, bring us into disrepute, are contrary to our charitable aims, operate outside of our ethical framework or are likely to incur costs in excess of the value of the gift i.e. it can be proven that accepting the donation would not be in our best interests.

Section 10: Approval of new endowed funds

Before a gift is accepted to create a new endowed fund, the new fund must have the approval of the Treasurer, the President & Vice-Chancellor and the Director of Finance. The creation of new endowments, and receipt of gifts to existing endowment funds, will be reported to both Finance Committee and Council as part of the annual Advancement Office Report.

Section 11: Annual reports on the status of the endowed funds

Donors will receive an impact report on the use of the income from their fund (e.g. names of new scholarship recipients, update reports from academic posts funded). Performance of endowed funds will be noted in the annual report prepared for the Advancement Office by the F&PO by the end of the calendar year in which the financial year ended.

Where there has been an underspend on the use of income from a fund, it will be at the discretion of the Endowments Fundraising and Expenditure Management Standing Group as to whether the underspend can be rolled over to the next financial year, or whether it is re-invested in the endowment capital.

Section 12: Roles and Responsibilities

This policy is owned by the Director of Advancement and should be submitted triennially to Finance Committee for review/approval. Any changes will be agreed with the Endowments Fundraising and Expenditure Management Standing Group before submission to the Finance Committee.

The Standing group meets quarterly to ensure appropriate application of this policy and maintain oversight of existing endowments and related expenditure. It comprises the following members from F&PO and the Advancement Office:

  • Director of Financial Operations
  • Head of Financial Operations
  • Assistant Accountant
  • Finance Officer (AO)
  • Director of Advancement
  • Associate Director, Advancement Services

Section 13: Related Policies

All donations will be subject to the Advancement Office procedure on due diligence and the Ethical Fundraising Policy.

Enquiries

If you have any questions, please contact us.


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