The elite halls of Harvard and Yale aren’t just producing future billionaires, they’re also offloading the investment assets that made them rich in the first place. As seen in Millionaire MNL, both Ivy League endowments are quietly liquidating chunks of their private equity holdings, giving hedge funds, family offices, and specialist investors a rare chance to capitalize. And the returns? Potentially up to 1000%, if you know the trick.
While private equity secondaries have historically flown under the radar, a niche technique known as “NAV lending arbitrage” is now turning heads. “It makes your brain melt when it works,” said one investor familiar with the play. “The gains feel too good to be legal, and yet they’re fully compliant.”
Why Ivy Endowments Are Selling Now
Harvard and Yale, with over $100 billion in combined endowment funds, were early backers of private equity giants like KKR, Blackstone, and Sequoia. But recent volatility, liquidity pressures, and shifting portfolio strategies have led them to quietly list some of their PE stakes on the secondary market.
In plain terms: they want faster access to cash. And that opens the door for buyers to swoop in at a discount.
“These assets were built for 10-year horizons,” said one secondary market expert. “But now institutions want out in year six. That’s where the opportunity is.”
The Trick: Net Asset Value (NAV) Lending
Here’s where it gets interesting. Savvy buyers are leveraging a financial tactic called NAV lending, borrowing against the estimated value of the private equity asset they just acquired, often using the asset itself as collateral.
Let’s say a fund buys $10 million worth of PE stakes from Harvard at a 40% discount. Within weeks, they can borrow $6 million against it, using that capital to fund more discounted purchases. In a rising valuation environment, this snowballs, producing triple-digit IRRs that traditional investing simply can’t match.
“It’s not without risk,” said an investor involved in similar transactions. “But when you’re getting top-tier PE exposure at a steep markdown, the upside is insane.”
The Quiet Gold Rush in Secondaries
The private equity secondary market is exploding, quietly becoming one of the fastest-growing corners of finance. According to data from PitchBook, secondaries volume topped $100 billion last year, and that’s expected to grow as more institutions look to rebalance.
What makes the Harvard and Yale portfolios especially attractive is their vintage quality. “These aren’t just any funds,” one buyer told Millionaire MNL. “They’re the best of the best-early bets in names like Stripe, Databricks, and SpaceX. You’re essentially buying a time machine.”
Will This Become the Next Billionaire Strategy?
Some believe this model could become a core strategy for elite investors in the AI era. The ability to use smart leverage, deep diligence, and institutional-quality assets to generate exponential returns is already turning heads across Silicon Valley and Wall Street.
But it’s not for everyone. “You need capital, guts, and access,” said a former endowment manager. “And when it works, it works fast.”
As Harvard and Yale quietly offload decades of elite investing decisions, a new generation of investors is stepping up to claim the upside. In the words of one dealmaker: “They built the portfolio. We’re just here to harvest it.”