Infrastructure prices don’t show bubble

Infrastructure equity prices do not exist in a vacuum. Analysing hundreds of transactions over the last 15 years, we found that they are driven by systematic risk factors, which can be found across asset classes. In other words, markets did process information rationally and average prices did reflect buyers’ and sellers’ views and preferences for taking risk.

These risk factors (size, leverage, profit, term spread or value) are commonplace for sharemarket investors. After all, unlisted infrastructure equity is still equity. As a result, unlisted infrastructure prices have been partly correlated with public markets over the last 15 years.

The price formation process happened almost in slow-motion, however, because of the illiquid nature of the unlisted infrastructure market.

The raw data shows unlisted infrastructure companies such as ports, airports and merchant power, experienced a sharp drop in revenue in 2009. But unlike stocks, the effect on valuations was not immediate because few transactions took place at the time. This shock to revenues and earnings impacted transaction prices only later on.

Then, in 2011, despite revenue growth being either stable or still declining, average infrastructure valuations began rising rapidly. This continued until 2016. Not all sectors peaked at the same time. For instance, the power sector started a new price decline in 2015. In contrast, airports had their highest average valuations increase in that period. By 2017, despite the return of revenue growth, average prices had plateaued, mostly due to the impact of the leverage factor (an increase in the price of credit risk) and of rising interest rates.

This decade of price increases can be considered a normal process of price discovery. Prices increased rapidly as more investors entered the market and buyers and sellers discovered how much they were willing to pay for infrastructure assets. During this period, the risk preferences of the average buyer of private infrastructure companies also evolved, leading to lower required returns for infrastructure investments.

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Today, a price consensus may have been reached; ‘peak infra’ may even have occurred two years ago, as valuations followed a steadier path.

Of course, there are always exceptions to price increases. Vinci’s recent acquisition of a majority stake in Gatwick airport valued the London property at eight times revenues, while the data suggests that an average airport should sell for 2.5-3 times revenues. But the price Vinci paid for Gatwick may not be considered fair value by everyone.

We are on the cusp of a new era for infrastructure valuations. These businesses are expected to deliver steady and predictable cash flows and, to the extent that this is the case, they should be expensive. Prices will continue to evolve more rationally as more informed buyers and sellers engage in a steady stream of transactions in the most active markets.

This is good news for investors who have been looking to infrastructure for stable, long-term investments. Unlisted infrastructure may be driven by common equity factors, but it remains partly decorrelated from public markets and has a visible track record of steady and significant dividend pay-outs. The infrastructure investment narrative still holds.

With the period of easy returns driven by ever-increasing valuations coming to an end, a new era of risk management can begin for infrastructure investors, one that requires better measures of risk and of the contributions infrastructure assets make to the total portfolio.

 

Frederic Blanc-Brude is director of the EDHEC Infrastructure Institute. Sarah Tame is chief communications officer at EDHECinfra.

 

This paper is drawn from the EDHEC/LTIIA Research Chair

http://edhec.infrastructure.institute/wp-content/uploads/publications/blanc-brude_and_tran_2019.pdf

 

 

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