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Fiscal 1997 was another record-breaking year financially for
Johns Hopkins. The University's net assets reached nearly $2
billion, with unrestricted net assets topping $1.2 billion.
Research grants and contracts exceeded $900 million, and at
year-end the University held another $550 million in research
awards. Hopkins continued as number one in receipt of federal
research funds, and its School of Medicine, School of Public
Health, and Applied Physics Laboratory remained number one in
their respective categories.
University net assets increased $227 million on the year, thanks
largely to appreciation on investments and new gifts, but also on
the strength of a $31 million operating surplus. Operations also
provided net cash flow of $151 million.
This performance and similar success over the past 10 years leave
the University twice as strong financially as it was a decade
ago. During that time, endowment more than doubled, revenue of
the academic divisions more than doubled, investment in plant and
equipment more than doubled, and enrollment increased to record
levels in number and quality. At the same time, the University
steadily reduced its long-term debt from a high in 1993 of $475
million to its current level of $457 million.
This strong financial performance, of course, was the result of
strong program performance. For the seventh straight year, The
Johns Hopkins Hospital--staffed by School of Medicine faculty--
was judged the best in the nation in U.S. News & World
Report, which also ranked the University 14th among 228
national universities. The School of Public Health was ranked
first, and the Whiting School of Engineering's graduate programs
moved solidly into the top tier, ranking 17th nationally.
Money magazine put Hopkins fifth in the "costly but worth
it" category.
When the University refinanced a portion of its long-term debt
this spring, Standard and Poor's and Moody's Investors Service
confirmed bond ratings of AA- and Aa2, respectively, and forecast
a stable outlook for the future. In commenting on the strength
of the University's credit, Moody's cited "the depth and high
caliber of [Hopkins] research faculty," its "track record for
garnering federal and corporate research grants," its "favorable
student demand indicators, and its program of diversifying into
continuing education."
Each of these factors is carefully nurtured and sustained by
Hopkins, as part of an integrated academic and financial
strategy. The past 10 years of strong, decentralized academic
growth--subject to tight central fiscal management--have set the
University on a course of continued excellence and financial
stability.
John J. Lordan
Vice President for Business Affairs
© 1998 The Johns Hopkins University.
Baltimore, Maryland. All rights reserved.
http://www.jhu.edu/news_info/finance97/intro.html
Last updated 16Apr98 by dgips@jhu.edu
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