Feature: SHRM at a Crossroads

SHRM’s Reserves: Typical or Towering?
Depending on how you look at its financial reserves, the Society for Human Resource Management is either a fortress of fiscal strength or just a typical, well-run nonprofit.
By Ed Frauenheim
epending on how you look at its financial reserves, the Society for Human Resource Management is either a fortress of fiscal strength or just a typical, well-run nonprofit.

    There is no law or industry standard governing what level of financial reserves a nonprofit association like SHRM needs to weather economic trouble or fund new initiatives. There isn’t even a fixed definition for calculating reserve levels. Tallying up the value of long-term investments is one approach, while another is to focus on net assets.

    SHRM defines reserves as unrestricted net assets, meaning resources that aren’t earmarked for a specific purpose. At the end of 2006, SHRM had $138.3 million in such assets. Reserves are generally compared against annual operations. For 2006, SHRM took in revenue of $95.5 million and had expenses, including income tax expense, of $89.1 million. SHRM sees its level of reserves as typical of well-run not-for-profit organizations. That view is backed by placing the organization’s reserves in the context of a report on not-for-profits by financial ratings firm Moody’s Investors Service, says Hank Jackson, SHRM’s chief financial officer.

    SHRM’s 2006 ratio of net assets to operating budget was 1.55, Jackson says. That figure, he says, corresponds to Moody’s data on the ratio of "expendable financial resources-to-operations" for not-for-profits.

    Moody’s found that the 2005 median ratio for "Baa"-rated not-for-profits was 1.09, while the median ratio for "A"-rated not-for-profits was 1.72 and the median ratio for "Aa"-rated organizations was 2.91. A median is the midpoint in a sample. Moody’s ratings reflect the financial soundness of an organization, with an "Aa" rating exceeding a "Baa" rating.

    "We seem sort of in the middle," Jackson says.

    SHRM does not have a rating from Moody’s. It would typically obtain one if it were to sell debt to finance a major transaction.

    SHRM may look normal among nonprofits rated by Moody’s, but it seems to possess unusual monetary muscle when compared against other large not-for-profits in its IRS category—501(c)(6) business leagues. Even taking into account different definitions of reserves, SHRM stands out, says Andrew Lang, a certified public accountant with expertise on 501(c)(6) organizations.

    Lang looked at SHRM’s 2006/2007 annual report in the context of data on the reserves of 501(c)(6) groups published by the American Society of Association Executives. The association serves as a resource for trade and professional associations.

    "They have reserves well in excess of the industry average, no matter how you calculate it," says Lang, who has taught seminars on financial matters for ASAE.

    ASAE does not prescribe a particular definition of reserves, but asks 501(c)(6) organizations about their year-end reserves as a percentage of their annual operating budget. According to ASAE’s "Operating Ratio Report" from 2003—its most recent published data—501(c)(6) organizations with annual revenue of more than $10 million had average reserves of 56 percent of their annual operating budget. The median in the sample of 41 associations was 45 percent.

    Given SHRM’s definitions of reserves and operating budget, its comparable figure for 2006 was 155 percent. Anecdotes from other 501(c)(6) groups fill out the picture. While SHRM’s net assets for 2006 were well above its expenses for the year, other 501(c)(6) groups report net assets well below their expenses. The American Academy of Family Physicians had total expenses for the year ended May 2005 of $70.7 million and net assets of $54.7 million. The American Bankers Association had total expenses for the year ended August 2005 of $72.4 million and net assets of $48.4 million.

    SHRM’s Jackson argues that it is not very meaningful to compare SHRM with 501(c)(6) groups of just $15 million or $20 million in annual revenue, given that SHRM’s revenue for 2006 was $95.5 million.

    He also says the American Bankers Association is a poor reference point, since it has an easier time renewing its members, which are banks. "You don’t need the level of reserves you need" with an organization that relies on individuals as members, Jackson says.

2006 FINANCIAL SNAPSHOT:
TOTAL ASSETS $179.6 MILLION
RESERVES $138.3 MILLION
ANTICIPATED 2007 RESERVES
(unrestricted net assets predicted by organization)
$160 MILLION
LONG-TERM INVESTMENTS $122.4 MILLION
REVENUE $95.5 MILLION
EXPENSES $89.1 MILLION

"[SHRM has] reserves well in excess of the industry average, no matter how you calculate it."

—Andrew Lang,
CPA with expertise on 501(c)(6) organizations

    Whether or not SHRM is rich in reserves, there’s no question those reserves have been growing. In 2003, the organization had reserves, or unrestricted net assets, of $86.3 million. The books haven’t closed yet for 2007, but SHRM expects its reserves to hit nearly $160 million for the year.

    Although outgoing SHRM chief executive Susan Meisinger oversaw a major increase in reserves over the past several years, the roots of SHRM’s financial strength may lie with Mike Losey, who served as CEO of the association in the 1990s. During his 10-year tenure, SHRM’s net assets rose from about $5 million to more than $70 million.

    Losey, a former vice president at technology company Sperry, made no bones about running SHRM as a business.

    Even when board members occasionally cringed at annual surpluses of $10 million or more, Losey did not flinch at beefing up SHRM’s coffers. "Sometimes board members would say, ‘My God, we made how much?’ " Losey says. "I wrote it off as ‘They’re HR people. They’re not business people.’ "

    Now an advisor to other nonprofits and an instructor for SHRM, Losey applauds SHRM for its current reserves. He says the value of long-term assets can fluctuate wildly with the stock market. And, he says, all the hard work it takes to build up reserves can be reversed quickly in troubled times. "The air goes out of the balloon a lot faster than it goes in," he says.

    At some point, though, it becomes an issue whether an association flush with cash should tap its reserves to provide more services or cut fees, says Bruce Hopkins, a Kansas City, Missouri-based attorney who specializes in representing nonprofits. "Somebody could argue that the dues are too high, or the conference fees are too high," says Hopkins, who is part of the law firm Polsinelli Shalton Flanigan Suelthaus.

    Jackson says that in practice, SHRM aims to keep its reserves between 50 percent and 200 percent of its operating budget. Much of the expansion in recent years has come from a strong stock market, Jackson says. SHRM had $122.4 million in long-term investments in 2006, up from $65.6 million in 2003.

    The growing value of investments has triggered some spending of reserves in the past few years, Jackson says. Last year, for example, SHRM spent about $7 million of its reserves on items including the promotion of HR education at the university level.

    In 2006, SHRM was recognized by ASAE in its book 7 Measures of Success: What Remarkable Associations Do That Others Don’t. Among ASAE’s criteria for success are two tied to finances: data-driven strategies and organizational adaptability.

    Bob Skelton, chief administrative officer for ASAE and a SHRM member, has no qualms with SHRM’s reserves or its level of service. He finds e-mail bulletins from SHRM helpful, and may sign up for a new SHRM mentoring program. SHRM’s reserve level might be a problem, Skelton argues, if it were raising dues dramatically.

    SHRM has kept its annual dues constant for more than a decade, at $160.

    SHRM is "very well run," Skelton says. "I get value for my annual dues in excess of what I pay."

Workforce Management, February 4, 2008, p. 21 -- Subscribe Now!


Ed Frauenheim is a Workforce Management staff writer based in San Francisco. E-mail editors@workforce.com to comment.







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