Oxford bond debut success shows UK universities another course
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At a time of anxiety over Brexit-related funding shortfalls and calls to scrap student tuition fees, the success of Oxford University's one billion US dollar bond - the first in its 1,000-year history - is good news for Britain's top academic institutions.
The 100-year bond, launched on December 1 with a 2.5 percent coupon, has taken the market for UK universities and colleges to a new level, putting them on a par with such big US names as Harvard and Yale.
Technically, the bond was the biggest from any university in the world. Buying interest equaled two billion US dollars, or double its face value.
According to Trax, a subsidiary of debt trading platform MarketAxess, the day after its launch, it was among the top 20 trades in the whole of Europe.
Picture of Oxford University /Reuters Photo
Picture of Oxford University /Reuters Photo
That is cause for celebration for peers contemplating bond sales, even if their credit scores are less impressive than Oxford's gold-plated triple-A rating. The oldest university in the English-speaking world, Oxford topped a global ranking by the Times newspaper for the first time last year.
However, it's an uncertain time for Britain's academic institutions.
The cost of student tuition fees, which make up almost half of UK universities' revenues, has been catapulted to the top of the political agenda by young voters who deserted Britain's ruling Conservative party in a snap election in June.
Universities expect these fees - currently 9,250 pounds (12,424 US dollars) per year - to be reviewed in 2018, meaning they are unlikely to rise further and could even be cut.
"I think the whole higher education sector is worried about the debate around tuition fees," Oxford's Pro-Vice-Chancellor for planning and resources David Prout told Reuters after the bond sale earlier this month.
Graduates leave the Sheldonian Theatre after a graduation ceremony at Oxford University, in Oxford, Britain July 15, 2017. /Reuters Photo
Graduates leave the Sheldonian Theatre after a graduation ceremony at Oxford University, in Oxford, Britain July 15, 2017. /Reuters Photo
Britain's plan to leave the European Union in March 2019 is also weighing heavily.
UK universities are already finding it harder to attract and retain EU-born students and staff, with official figures showing undergraduate course applications from EU students fell seven percent this year.
Other countries in the EU send around 58,000 students, or 8 percent of undergraduates and 15 percent of postgraduate students, to the 'Russell Group' comprising of 24 top tier universities in the United Kingdom. Around 25,000 of their staff come from other EU countries, too.
Once Britain leaves, these institutions could also lose their places on EU-funded research projects after 2020.
A big worry is how Brexit will affect the UK's ability to borrow from the European Investment Bank (EIB), UK universities' biggest source of lending.
The bank, the European Union's main development lender, stopped support in March after London triggered the Article 50 clause to formally start the EU withdrawal process.