Investment Policy and Endowment Basics
What UPMIFA requires of boards, how to build a sound Investment Policy Statement, and how Faith Foundation's fossil-free portfolios work.
Key Takeaways
- โEvery organization managing invested funds needs a written Investment Policy Statement (IPS).
- โUPMIFA requires boards to act as a reasonably prudent person, considering the organization's charitable purposes and liquidity needs.
- โAn IPS must define asset allocation targets, spending policy, screening criteria, and roles.
- โFaith Foundation's fossil-free portfolios allow your organization to align investments with mission.
Why every organization needs an IPS
An Investment Policy Statement (IPS) is a written document that governs how your organization's invested funds are managed. It protects the board by establishing clear guidelines, risk tolerance, and decision-making authority โ so individual board members are never making ad hoc investment decisions. The IPS should be reviewed annually and updated whenever your financial situation changes significantly.
Key components of an IPS
IPS components at a glance
UPMIFA: what boards must understand
Under UPMIFA, the board must act in good faith with the care of a reasonably prudent person. This means the board cannot simply maximize short-term yield โ it must balance return against risk, mission alignment, and long-term sustainability.
Faith Foundation's fossil-free investment approach
Faith Foundation Northwest offers fossil-free investment portfolios that screen out holdings in fossil fuel companies while targeting market-competitive risk-adjusted returns. This approach allows your organization to align its investments with its values โ a growing priority for faith-based and mission-driven nonprofits. Faith Foundation provides quarterly reporting, attends board meetings on request, and helps committees draft or update their IPS.
