Infrastructure Financing Asian infrastructure: Institutional investors as financiers of Asian infrastructure Institutional investment in infrastructure has become a much discussed topic in recent years, also in terms of public policy. Governments frequently call for a higher engagement of asset owners in the financing of infrastructure projects. Many investors have become interested in infrastructure as an “asset class” for their own reasons. In an environment of low interest rates in major markets, they are looking for alternative sources of income and better diversification.
Infrastructure Q2 infrastructure securities: quiet before the storm A relatively quiet quarter ended in volatile fashion following the June 23 U.K. referendum in which voters elected to leave the European Union. Global equities drifted higher in April and May but fell sharply immediately following the vote, before recouping some losses in the last week of trading.
Infrastructure Riding the wave: Infrastructure continues its up and down pattern When visualizing infrastructure fundraising over the years, a mountain range comes more to mind than a flat sandy beach. Everything about infrastructure — amount of capital raised, number of mega-funds closed, time for funds to close — seems to go up one year and then down the next.
Infrastructure Research review: A guide to recent infrastructure research reports and papers The following report reviews four infrastructure reports and papers by Allen & Overy, the OECD, the U.K. Infrastructure and Projects Authority and McKinsey & Co.
Infrastructure Ensuring European infrastructure: Big European insurers have been making increasingly large allocations to infrastructure investment for several years. But will recent changes to capital charge rules see the wider market ramp up their allocations? Europe’s insurers have been grabbing the headlines when it comes to investing in infrastructure. In the United Kingdom alone, Pension Insurance Corp. has committed £100 million to the debt financing of the Thames Tideway Tunnel, a £4.2 billion new “super sewer” being built below London and due for completion in 2023. Life insurer Prudential, meanwhile, through its investment arm M&G is preparing to inject up to £100 million ($132 million) in the £1 billion ($1.3 billion) Swansea Bale Tidal Lagoon project in Wales.
Infrastructure Capital improvements: The U.S. presidential candidates are touting infrastructure investment on the campaign trail, and the country may finally get the infrastructure investment it needs It’s an election year in the United States and that means candidates are on the road traveling from town to town and region to region bringing voters across the country a message they want to hear — jobs are coming, taxes will be cut, the status quo will change.