Changing priorities for infrastructure investors

Investors discuss how technological change and the new green economy is re-pricing assets in infrastructure, as well as the trend to substitute fixed income with infrastructure debt. But investors should not to lose sight of traditional infrastructure characteristics in their quest to tap new trends. Predictable cashflows and downside protection remain central. 

Speaking at FIS Digital 2021 in an expert panel on infrastructure investment, US firm Cohen & Steers’ head of global infrastructure Ben Morton explained how the firm focuses on investing in companies that “collect fees.” He added that the firm buys listed infrastructure assets which have an economic sensitivity that suits active management.

“Investments have a link to GDP or have pricing mechanisms that link revenues to inflation, providing inflation protection through the cycle,” he told delegates.

Commenting on President Biden’s plans for sweeping infrastructure investment, he said that unlike previous administration pledges, this fiscal stimulus could benefit listed infrastructure. He said Biden’s plans are different and could have important investor consequences around, for example, tax cuts and renewables. Extending tax credits for solar and wind makes these projects more profitable, he said. Elsewhere, driving 5G development will enable greater penetration for tower companies, and putting trillions into the economy is a good thing for economically sensitive businesses like freight railway.

Windfall opportunity

Investors can find infrastructure opportunities in long-term, fixed rate, secured assets and pick up a yield premium over corporate bonds, said fellow panellist Dominic Swan, global CIO of private debt at HSBC Asset Management. Higher yields can be found in non-investment grade allocations, however he cautioned that this shouldn’t be viewed as a long-term strategy.

Sponsored Content

“You don’t want to sign up to a 25-year exposure to a high yield asset,” he said. Swan also noted that while inflation doesn’t increase cash flows it pushes up an asset’s market value so that in periods of high inflation, infrastructure credit risk falls. He added that this is priced into how debt products are valued in the market, providing a windfall opportunity.

Infrastructure in, fixed income out

HSBC’s Swan also noted trends among investors substituting fixed income with infrastructure debt.

“We find people selling government bonds and replacing the allocation with investment grade infrastructure,” he said, noting a pick-up of 70-100 basis points in the investment grade space.

But investing in infrastructure in the current climate holds challenges. At Canada’s Alberta Investment Management Corporation, Ben Hawkins, senior vice president, infrastructure, said investor demand for infrastructure as a substitute for fixed income has pushed up demand but there is not much new supply.

His areas of focus include renewables, telecoms and digital infrastructure given new trends in remote working. That said, not all opportunities fit within a traditional infrastructure mandate, and he warned that this means risks and uncertainties preside.

Other trends include data increasingly helping resolve intermittency challenges in renewables and the reduced capacity issues currently faced by utilities.

“We are looking at the digital sphere to optimise delivery of services,” he said, referencing the need to future proof traditional assets.

Technological disruption

This led the conversation to the danger of infrastructure assets becoming obsolete in the new green economy. The number of stranded assets could spike in traditional energy infrastructure as well as assets subject to technological change, said Hawkins.

However, he argued that traditional gas pipeline infrastructure is less likely to be stranded in the transition. Gas will continue to be an important part of the fuel mix, he said.

Elsewhere technological disruption is growing in the satellite space. Over-the-top technologies provided by high-speed internet like Netflix on-demand are disrupting traditional services from cable and satellite providers.

“We need to be on top of this change,” he said.

However, he warned investors not to lose sight of traditional infrastructure characteristics in their quest to tap new trends. Predictable cashflows and downside protection remain central. Incremental investment dollars are going into new themes, but we are not going to start investing in new businesses that don’t have infrastructure-like characteristics, he said.

At HSBC, strategy is centred on drilling down to the fundamentals, namely stability of cashflows. In this aspect, renewables and digital infrastructure differ with renewables often linked to quasi-guaranteed cashflows comprising long term contracts with lower volatility.

In contrast, digital assets are typically subject to huge change as the revolution continues. Hence the need to adopt a shorter time frame when investing in digital assets.

“Given that we are exposed to change, and change is not a friend of debt holders we expect to be paid for the risk of technological obsolescence,” he said.

In response to questions around competition for assets, Hawkins noted how investors were moving up the risk spectrum and said that renewables were increasingly priced to perfection.

Strategy at AIMCo has taken a platform approach whereby the investor bypasses the competition by acquiring operational assets with a particular focus on the skills of the team on the ground, leveraging their operational and sector specific knowledge for advantage. It amounts to a less crowded trade, he concluded.

Asset Owner:AIMCo

Leave a Comment

Why NYC pensions CIO hasn’t drunk the ‘TPA Kool-Aid’

Why NYC pensions CIO hasn’t drunk the ‘TPA Kool-Aid’

Three decades of investing have given Monte Tarbox sharp eyes for recognising risk and opportunities, and he’s putting it to use as the new permanent chief investment officer of the $306 billion NYC Bureau of Asset Management. In an interview with Top1000funds.com, Tarbox outlines his vision for the fund, why he’s bullish on infrastructure but “nervous” on PE, and why he hasn’t drunk the TPA “Kool-Aid”.

Sort content by

Shift to positive stock-bond correlation could increase risk, reduce return

Investors may have to fundamentally rethink their return and risk expectations with experts arguing there are signs that stock and bond return correlations could turn positive and stay that way for years or even decades.

As inflation batters, TRS eyes natural gas

Inflation woes dominated at a recent TRS board meeting. However the Texas-based fund, one of the few remaining investors in fossil fuels, has benefited from its allocation to energy and is currently eyeing opportunities in natural gas infrastructure as US producers gear up to supply global demand in Russia's absence.

Real assets a haven in likely stagflationary environment

An overweight position in real assets and private equity, and an underweight to equities and bonds positioned the Ohio School Employees Retirement System for success in the last year but CIO Farouki Majeed is now even more convinced a stagflationary environment is likely and is positioning the fund accordingly.

New Jersey flags hedge fund benefits in volatile times

New Jersey Investment Division has found shelter in its hedge funds allocation during recent market turmoil. But the investment division's challenges are underscored by a recent report placing it in the bottom 10 state-wide plans for funded ratio - and holding onto a higher than average ARR.

AP1: In these markets, fortune favours the bold

Formulating strong views and daring to act on them have been critical success factors for Sweden's buffer fund AP1. And they will remain so going forward says CEO Kristin Magnusson Bernard.

The benefits of external investments: UK’s pooled fund backs outsourcing

Other LGPS pools in the UK have appointed CIOs, risk officers and internal teams but the £56 billion ACCESS pool has outsourced all aspects of investments and will remain externally managed. It's now looking for managers as it  pools illiquid assets in private equity, private debt, infrastructure and real estate.

Previous