staging

Investors

The news provides a fillip to William Partners, six months after the limited partnershipโ€™s parent group went through a management reshuffle following a failed merger.
Analysis by a UK non-profit expects a โ€˜cliff-edgeโ€™ between 2017 and 2020 due to a shrinking pipeline of projects.
Sealing deals with local firm Ballast Nedam, the UK fund has invested in the Netherlandsโ€™ A9 motorway and bought the remaining share it did not own of a prison.
The insurance giant has made its first move into offshore wind with a โ‚ฌ30m investment in a German plant.
The stateโ€™s Labor party says it will axe the โ€˜deeply flawedโ€™ Perth Freight Link scheme and reallocate the funds to other road projects if it wins the March election.
Chinaโ€™s third-largest city has launched a pilot PPP aimed at scaling up facilities designed to meet the needs of its rapidly growing elderly population.
Azienda Solare Italiana, formerly owned by Antin, has issued new project bonds to refinance part of its 85MW solar portfolio in Italy.
The UK-based Pension Insurance Corporation has supplied ยฃ87m of debt to the project alongside the PGGM-owned University Partnerships Programme, wrapped by Assured Guaranty.
BNDES, along with Banco Santander and Bradesco in Brazil, has agreed to plug $31m into the Ventos do Araipe 3 wind project.
Since the beginning of last year, the London-based private equity firm has promoted two senior staff to partners and hired two vice-presidents.
The AIIB ended its inaugural year with the approval of its largest loan ever, a commitment to back a $8.6bn gas pipeline project in Azerbaijan.
It took 43 years for sponsors to take the Umbulan scheme through its early development stage, a milestone now achieved despite recent legislation deemed adverse to PPPs by insiders.
Investors from Japan, Korea and China are climbing up the learning curve, and they are doing it fast. Where are we likely to find Asiaโ€™s rising stars in 2017?
Abu Dhabiโ€™s Ghantoot Group will reap $147m from selling part of Utico to ASMA Capital, a manager backed by the IDB and two Saudi institutions.
Political risk is a perennial infrastructure talking point, but this yearโ€™s stunning electoral upsets served as a reminder of just how disruptive voters can be.
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