Too much money entering the market is now the number one investor concern, according to the San Francisco-based placement agent. We bring you seven slides showing the rise of value-added funds.
The demand for these structures has grown globally over the past 20 years. But will their popularity ever really take off outside Australia?
The Austrian outfit has secured a first close of โฌ190m from five investors, the proceeds of which have already been invested.
CIO tells Infrastructure Investor it wants to grow its exposure to the asset class from 5% to 10% of its AUM within five years.
The UK asset manager plans more โbespoke renewables portfoliosโ in partnership with institutional investors across the globe.
The Illinois Municipal Retirement Fund is seeking a closed-end infrastructure fund manager to allocate an up to $25 million mandate, following the decision last month to not pursue a commitment with Oaktree Capital Management. Bids must come from fund managers offering investment strategies targeting at least two sectors โ including transportation, utilities, energy, renewables, waste [โฆ]
Demand remains for UK infrastructure, but has largely shifted to UK and Korean investors, says Dalmoreโs Michael Ryan.
Westbourne Capital was one of the first pure-play infrastructure-debt managers when it was founded by a trio of former Hastings executives. On its 10th anniversary, founder and managing director David Ridley talks about increasing competition, LP appetite and what the future holds.
With 2019 threatening to crack the $100bn mark, we take a look at how the market will change and what could spoil the party.
The $441m project had received debt commitments from LGIM, while the Pensions Infrastructure Platform invested in the site last year, both of which are expected to take hits.
The California Public Employeesโ Retirement System has hired Yu Ben Meng as chief investment officer, four months after Ted Eliopoulos said he would be stepping down from the $360 billion pension fund. Meng, a US citizen born in China, worked at CalPERS for seven years, his last role being that of investment director of asset [โฆ]
Voters will head to the polls in California this November to decide on a measure that once again shows how infrastructure often turns into a political football for legislators. โThereโs a political battle going on here which has nothing to do with California infrastructure,โ Kelly DePonte, managing director at San Francisco-based placement agent Probitas Partners, [โฆ]
The $9bn pension wants to invest in funds that provide more adequate liquidity protections in the event of an emergency, according to CIO Jang Dong-hun.
The infrastructure debt manager aims to complete fundraising for its $3bn vehicle by the end of 2018 with a mixture of existing and new clients from Australia and overseas on board.
With more hurdles erected for overseas money, firms need to be switched on to the Trump administration's recent legislation, write Mario Mancuso, H. Boyd Greene, & Luci Hague.













