Every cloud has a silver lining for infrastructure

Fiscal constraints around the world, but especially in Europe, are leading to a surge in investment opportunities in various asset classes. Greg Bright reports on one.

Record issuance of government bonds is changing many markets, and privatisations and public-private partnerships are expected to mushroom.

Against this backdrop, one of the largest international infrastructure managers, Deutsche Asset Management subsidiary RREEF Infrastructure, said that business models used by commercial managers are also changing.

John McCarthy (pictured), managing director and head of RREEF Infrastructure based in London, said the focus for his group is currently on Europe because it is probably the most fiscally constrained of the major markets.

“That’s where the greatest opportunities are,” he said. “The fiscal crisis represents a massive opportunity.”

Sponsored Content

He estimated that there is a pipeline in Europe of infrastructure projects requiring about 26 billion ($31.8 billion) in equity.

The US market, on the other hand, remains a slow developer, particularly in transport infrastructure, largely because of the problems related to state ownership and various political and macro problems.

RREEF, which operates on a regional basis around the world, has made 31 acquisitions since inception in 1994. It currently has 15 assets valued at $8.6 billion.

McCarthy said good infrastructure managers were changing their business models to suit the new post-financial crisis environment.

Initially infrastructure funds were all based on the private equity model, typically charging “two and twenty” fees (2 per cent base and 20 per cent performance above a hurdle) and with 10-year closed-end vehicles.

Many infrastructure funds were promoted by investment banks with “reasonably loose investment strategies”, he said. These funds were now having issues with their performance.

“We have actually seen the leverage (in the investments) at the fund level bringing down the managers,” he said.

Most infrastructure managers are bringing down their fees now to an average of about 1 per cent base plus a performance fee, which is being restructured by managers to align better the interests of investor and manager.

Leave a Comment

Nest favours institutional-first managers as retail exodus pressures private credit

Nest favours institutional-first managers as retail exodus pressures private credit

Nest, the largest workplace pension in the UK, says that private credit managers who prioritise institutional clients will be more favourably viewed. The £61 billion ($82 billion) fund has awarded a £450 million ($605 million) US direct lending mandate to Crescent Capital this month, citing the manager's institutional-client-first approach as a key attraction.

Sort content by

Utah Retirement to pick PE managers

Utah Retirement Systems considers its strong balance sheet, history of long-term relationships with managers and nimble governance advantages as its search for GPs in private equity begins.

Alternative PE vehicles underperform

Alternative private equity vehicles underperform the associated main fund, new research from Harvard's Josh Lerner and MIT's Antoinette Schoar has shown for the first time - but skilled limited partners flip the script.

CalPERS manages outsized equity risk

The $335 billion California Public Employees' Retirement System warned this week that it is greatly exposed to a downturn in global equity markets, as it prepares to monitor active risk closely.

Is low-volatility equity for real?

Low-volatility equity approaches have delivered for 10 years. As their popularity rises, Mercer looks at potential uses, causes for concern, and whether it's time to move in another direction.

N. Mexico PERA adopts Wisconsin model

Public Employees Retirement Association of New Mexico CIO Dominic Garcia is headed down the path less travelled, employing a risk-parity and alpha strategy he learned with the State of Wisconsin.

HOOPP ponders re-allocating risk

Canada's Healthcare of Ontario Pension Plan is considering adding to its celebrated strategy with moves into reinsurance and infrastructure, based on forecasts of rapid growth in its assets.

Previous