University endowments show few signs of direct Israel, defense holdings

As some universities strike deals with pro-Palestinian student groups to discuss calls for school endowments to stop investing in Israel and defense stocks, an examination of available public documents by The Washington Post finds few direct holdings in either by the largest public school endowments, underscoring the difficulty in any potential attempt to ultimately satisfy protesters’ divestment demands.

The simple slogans of protest are running headlong into the intricacies of modern finance.

Subscribe to The Post Most newsletter for the most important and interesting stories from The Washington Post.

At the University of California at Los Angeles, the recent pro-Palestinian protests have echoed with a rallying cry heard at campus protests nationwide in the wake of the Israel-Gaza war: They want the university to cut financial ties with Israel. “Divest NOW” was how one sign near the protesters’ encampment this week put it.

Those demands came despite the students having little information about where U.S. college endowments actually put their money. The schools - which sit on holdings worth a staggering $850 billion combined - must disclose some of their largest public stakes in annual regulatory filings but are not required to fully disclose their holdings. They generally refuse to divulge precise details behind their investments. Even public universities’ annual reports and regulatory filings are light on specifics.

“The big endowments want to protect their secret sauce,” said Charlie Eaton, a University of California at Merced associate professor who studies the topic. They fear that competitors could learn their moneymaking strategies or that the complexity of their holdings could make full disclosure impossible.

The Post’s examination of annual reports, Securities and Exchange Commission and IRS filings, and financial databases found some signs of what student protesters have tried calling attention to, such as Michigan State’s endowment holding $480,000 in bonds for Lockheed Martin, a leader in the defense industry. The endowment for Texas schools held several millions in Israeli Shekel investments but sold them last year. It appears to still have about $750,000 in Qatari Riyal investments. Most endowment funds’ direct holdings often appeared more curious than controversial, however: Ohio State’s endowment invested in a direct-to-consumer cat food firm.

The University of California Regents System, which controls $17.7 billion in endowments for several state schools including about half of UCLA’s $7.7 billion endowment, appears to hold only a few clear divestment targets. The fund is the nation’s third-largest public school endowment and No. 10 among all universities, according to a National Association of College and University Business Officers survey.