Sallie Mae Profit Boosts College Endowments And Pension Funds As Students Pay More
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/05/09/sallie-mae-student-loans_n_3247979.html?icid=hp_front_top_art
University endowments and teachers pension funds are among big investors in Sallie Mae, the private lender that has been generating enormous profits thanks to soaring student debt and the climbing cost of education, a Huffington Post review of financial documents has revealed.
The previously unreported investments mean that education professionals are able to profit twice off the same student: first by hiking the cost of tuition, then through dividends and higher valuations on their holdings in Sallie Mae, the largest student lender and loan servicer in the country, which profits by charging relatively high interest rates on its loans and not refinancing high-rate loans after students graduate and get well-paying jobs.
Sallie Mae is a former government-sponsored enterprise that was fully privatized in 2004 and now trades publicly as SLM Corp.
Its a conflict of interest, said Barmak Nassirian, a longtime higher education analyst who most recently served as associate executive director of the American Association of Collegiate Registrars & Admissions Officers. There is something inherently problematic about benefitting from the financing of the tuition you charge through investments in any lender.
(More at the link.)