staging

Infrastructure Investor Global Investor 75

Having allocated $73.3bn more than the previous year to the asset class, the 75 institutional investors that comprise the latest iteration of our Global Investor ranking demonstrate both infrastructureโ€™s lasting appeal as well as their skill of putting capital to work.

TOP 10 INSTITUTIONAL INVESTORS

Rank Institution HQ Infrastructureย allocationย ($m)
1 Abu Dhabi Investment Authority (ADIA) UAE 47,565
2 Caisse de dรฉpรดt et placement du Quรฉbec (CDPQ) Canada 44,453
3 CPP Investments Canada 37,074
4 National Pension Service of Korea (NPS) South Korea 36,584
5 APG Asset Management Netherlands 33,742
6 Mubadala Investment Company UAE 33,660
7 Ontario Teachersโ€™ Pension Plan Canada 29,992
8 AustralianSuper Australia 29,494
9 Ontario Municipal Employees Retirement System Canada 26,937
10 PSP Investments Canada 23,965

THE FULL GI 75 RANKING

QA – Author field test post6

QA - Author field test post6QA - Author field test post6QA - Author field test post6QA - Author field test post6QA - Author field...

INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTOR GI 75 | METHODOLOGY

The ranking is based on the fair value of investorsโ€™ private infrastructure investment portfolios both through third-party managed investment vehicles and direct investments. This fair value is measured at a single point in time for all investors to provide an apples-to-apples comparison. For the 2025 ranking, this is 31 December 2024. This is a ranking of capital allocators and excludes assets managed on behalf of third-party investors.

What counts?
Infrastructure: The definition of infrastructure investment, for the purposes of this ranking, is investments in man-made facilities and/or assets that play a critical role in any given economy. This can be segmented further into five broad types: transportation (railways, roads, ports, and airports), energy/renewables (generation and distribution), telecommunications (digital infrastructure, data centres), utilities (water, wastewater, waste management) and social infrastructure (schools, hospitals, and government buildings). Assets must be tangible and physical, whether existing (brownfield) or those in the development phase (greenfield) that are expected to exhibit stable, predictable cashflows
over a long-term investment horizon. Institutionsโ€™ portfolios are measured at fair value or
NAV.

Infrastructure debt vehicles: we consider equity investments into infrastructure vehicles as long as the institution includes these as part of its infrastructure portfolio.
Capital invested through the following structures is included:
โ€ข Funds and funds of funds managed by a third party (both open-end and closed-end)
โ€ข Direct investments (equity investments into infrastructure projects)
โ€ข Co-investment vehicles
โ€ข Separately managed accounts
โ€ข Joint ventures

What doesnโ€™t count?
Non-proprietary capital: this is a ranking of capital allocators and we do not include capital raised or managed on behalf of third-party investors. However, specialist asset managers with full discretionary management of public pension portfolios are considered for the purposes of this ranking.
Uncalled capital: this ranking excludes any capital that has been committed but not yet
been called by a fund manager.
Direct debt investments: we exclude any form of infrastructure debt origination for the purposes of this ranking.
Expected commitments: we do not count pending or future commitments and investments or the uncommitted portion of an institutionโ€™s target allocation.
Private equity: we distinguish between private equity energy and infrastructure energy and only consider the latter. Private equity energy includes investment into energy companies, investing in exploration and production (upstream) assets, and investments that tend to carry greater risk. Infrastructure energy includes investments in midstream and downstream assets (power generation) and renewable energy assets, such as oil and gas pipelines, oil terminals, wind farms, and solar parks.
Listed infrastructure: this is a private markets ranking, and commitments made to listed
infrastructure vehicles are not included.
Real estate: any property used for commercial/business purposes such as offices, hotels,
retail, and industrial. Also, multifamily/apartment properties and portfolios of single-family
houses assembled via an institutional platform are excluded.
Hedge funds: as these primarily target liquid securities or trading strategies.
Natural resources: investments either directly or through funds into natural resources assets (agri, timber, etc)

Infrastructure Investorโ€™s Research & Analytics team seeks to communicate directly by phone and email with investors to find out the fair value of their infrastructure portfolio as previously described. In the absence of primary data, the team gathers data from secondary sources and seeks to validate the researched figure with the investors themselves before publishing the final list. For further clarification, contact Wassyl Abdessemed โ€“ wassyl.a@pei.group

INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTOR GI RANKING | PREVIOUS YEARS

Having allocated $73.3bn more than the previous year to the asset class, the 75 institutional investors that comprise the latest iteration of our Global Investor ranking demonstrate both infrastructureโ€™s lasting appeal as well as their skill of putting capital to work.

The worldโ€™s 50 largest institutional investors allocated a total of $510 billion to the asset class, this yearโ€™s GI 50 ranking reveals, underscoring the broader trends witnessed in the infrastructure investment industry.

ii
ii

Copyright PEI Media

Not for publication, email or dissemination