A poster below says that Harvard’s endowment has done so well, I should reconsider my sense that Harvard’s loss of $350 million in a hedge fund was big news.

Hmmm….

Well, the Times has a piece on Harvard’s returns for the past year, and the results are impressive.

The Harvard Management Company, which oversees the endowment of Harvard University, reported yesterday that the endowment had posted a 22.4 percent gain for the fiscal year ended June 30.

..Together with other assets and related accounts, the total value at the end of June rose to $41 billion, from $33.5 billion a year ago. Its 22.4 percent total gain exceeded the Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index, which was up 20.6 percent for the same period.

The Times notes that the June 30 closing date for this report predates the troubles in the credit markets.

22.4% sounds great, but could it be better?

Several specialists involved in the endowment world said that although Harvard’s figures were very good, they were perhaps not as stellar as what Yale is expected to report next month. Though few universities have reported, last week the University of Virginia said its endowment had returned 25.2 percent.

Nonetheless, it does seem petty to quibble with 22.4%…and Harvard’s endowment is now worth $40 billion. That is astonishing.

Perhaps Yale’s returns will provide a more meaningful context.