Search

Site map

Sections:
Home Page

Gifts & Grants

Fund Raising

Managing Nonprofit Groups

Technology

Philanthropy Today

Jobs

Features:
Guide to Grants

The Nonprofit Handbook

Facts & Figures

Events

Deadlines

The Chronicle in Print:
Current Issue

Back Issues

Sponsored Information
Products & Services:
Directory of Services

Guide to Managing Nonprofits

Continuing-Education Guide

Fund-Raising Services Guide

Technology Guide

Customer Service:
About The Chronicle

How to Contact Us

How to Subscribe

How to Register

Manage Your Account

How to Advertise

Press Inquiries

Feedback

Privacy Policy

User Agreement

Help



April 08, 2008

The Slumping Stock Market Cuts Into Giving

The stock market’s slide has begun to affect a fast-growing type of giving.

Fidelity Charitable Gift Fund — which raises more than all but three other charities in the country according to The Chronicle’s Philanthropy 400 rankings — says contributions dipped by 8 percent in the first quarter of 2008 compared with the first quarter of 2007.

Fidelity, like numerous other financial institutions and community foundations, offers donor-advised funds — a sort of charity checking account that many donors set up with stock gifts.

And that’s why it’s not surprising, says Sarah Libbey, interim president of Fidelity’s Gift Fund, that her organization’s decline in giving mirrors the first-quarter stock-market declines of 7.6 percent on the Dow Jones and 9.9 percent for the Standard & Poor’s 500.

The Schwab Fund for Charitable Giving says giving dropped 10 percent, to $77-million, in the first three months of 2008, compared with the same quarter last year.

“After the fourth quarter of 2007, things came to a screeching halt,” says Susan Heldman, Schwab’s controller.

Still, a few financial institutions say their funds have not yet felt the effects of the stock-market turmoil.

At the Vanguard Charitable Endowment Program, gifts during the first quarter increased by 9 percent, to $131-million, over the same period last year. Benjamin Pierce, the fund’s executive director says that the growth has come mainly from donors giving from $1-million to $5-million, who are presumably more insulated than others from a softening economy.

—Holly Hall

Comments

  1. do you know how do our 1st quarter contributions compare? who should I talk to about this?

    — sheila dolinger    Apr 10, 11:43 AM    #

  2. Hi Sheila: I am happy to talk to you about what I have learned. Can you give me your phone number? I will be out of the office, starting tomorrow until April 17.

    — Holly Hall    Apr 10, 12:47 PM    #

Commenting is closed for this article.




Copyright © 2009 The Chronicle of Philanthropy