Investors look to clean energy infrastructure

Despite clean energy public equity investments performing poorly in 2011, there are still attractive investing opportunities in the sector and strong investor interest in financing green energy infrastructure, a Deutsche Bank Climate Change Advisors report has revealed.

The report found that, while clean energy project financing boomed last year, public market investments underperformed.

Deutsche Bank’s global head of climate change investment research, Mark Fulton says 2011 third quarter clean energy project financing reached a record quarterly investment figure of $23.7 billion, driven predominately by the investments in the US and China.

In a summary of the key energy policy and market themes of 2011, the report finds that asset finance now dwarfs public market and venture capital and private equity investment.

“Clean energy projects continue to be financed and built despite uncertainty in the public markets,” the report states.

The US lead the way in the first three quarters of the year, with US investment reaching nearly $27 billion, compared to $12 billion over the first three quarters of 2010.

Sponsored Content

This was the first time that US investment in clean energy infrastructure has exceeded China since 2007.

While clean energy asset finance investment was the highlight of 2011, investors who sought exposure to the sector through public markets saw their investments underperform the broader market.

The two leading green energy indexes – the DB Nasdaq OMX Cleantech Index and the WilderHill New Energy Global Innovation Index both underperformed broader market indexes.

These two green energy indexes declined sharply by 36 per cent compared to the MSCI World Index which lost 11.5 per cent.

Fulton, in a briefing on the report 2011: The Good, the Bad and the Ugly, told investors that the reason for the poor performance were both particular to the green energy sector and to a range of underlying factors that hit this type of public equity asset class.

He noted that public market investment in clean energy companies often involved industrial and technology stocks which were cyclical and small cap stocks which also suffered in 2011 as investors shed risk.

“You can build an argument that pure clean tech investment has to take its place in those underlying equity cycles anyway, so no-one can deny that,” Fulton says.

“On top of that we would be the last to deny that investors felt that policy support was weak last year and that didn’t help the underlying story for those clean technology plays in public markets. On top of which they were going through their own internal consolidation phases at an industry level. That is a wicked brew.”

The report notes that upstream players in the clean energy value chain suffered the worst declines.

Wind turbine and solar module manufacturers were down nearly 50 per cent.

Fulton says that despite the faltering publicly listed clean energy sector, investors still had attractive opportunities in investments targeted at taking advantage of the transition stage to a clean energy production.

“It is going to be very important, particularly in equity markets, that we don’t say that the sustainable clean push is all because of what happened to pure play wind and solar companies,” he says.

“Let’s not just obsess about the pure plays, let’s look at the theme and let’s look at how that effects equity portfolios and its important. Big incumbent industries in your portfolios are important too and you need to look at whether they are responding at the margins. The good ones are.”

Fulton was bullish about opportunities in the coal seam gas sector and the development of agriculture technology to counter the effects of climate change on food production.

“As we begin 2012 we continue to believe that the global energy matrix is in a “transitional” phase right now – at the start of a long-term mega shift toward an “end-state” scenario of cleaner domestic sources of energy supply; presenting a huge range of investment opportunities,” the report concludes.

Looking back over the policy decisions that were made in 2011, Fulton says that the Durban climate talks were a positive, despite a timeframe for a binding new agreement being pushed out to 2020.

Fulton says investors should also start to factor in more extreme climate change impacts as there is a growing consensus that mitigation action may come too late to stop a two degree celsius increase in global surface temperatures.

“As we think about the difficulty of holding it [temperature increases] to two degrees the importance of thinking about food and water and adaptation in your portfolio starts to rise,” he says.

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

The benefits of US regulatory reform

US regulatory reform, such as the SEC’s plan to restore the uptick rule and the Volcker rule to restrict proprietary trading, are a step in the right direction for those advocating transparency. Amanda White explores the story with the chief executive of Principal Global Investors, Jim McCaughan, and head of research, analysis and strategy at

CalPERS considers new asset class classification

CalPERS is considering doing away with traditional asset class classifications in favour of classifying assets according to fundamental characteristics in a bid to provide a better understanding of portfolio risks and performance drivers and so move to a more effective portfolio construction and risk management framework. Amanda White reports. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Risk parity becomes bittersweet flavour of the month (2)

  “Understanding a program’s results involves attributing relative performance to active management, identifying any tactical asset allocation decisions and assessing mechanical factors such as leverage costs. “For most investors implementation of a leveraged strategy would likely require the retention of a beta overlay manager to execute and maintain the desired leveraged systematic exposures or an

Selective opportunities in private markets: Wurts

Private market investors should focus on distressed debt and to a lesser extent secondaries, according to the annual private equity outlook by consultant Wurts Associates, which contrary to other industry observers believes value can be added through top down analysis of the sector. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Strategic implications drive climate change study

The 14 institutional investors participating in the climate change strategic asset allocation study, a collaborative between Mercer, Carbon Trust and the IFC, will all receive individual portfolio scenario analysis of how physical and policy climate change-related events could affect their portfolio at an asset allocation level. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

CalPERS sharpens risk, liability tools

After watching the simultaneous declines of its market value and funded status during the financial crisis, the $204.8 billion CalPERS will conduct a full review of the methodologies underpinning its asset liability management (ALM) process. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Previous