Pension fund investment in infrastructure

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Private Market Assets Matrix: Infrastructure vs. Overall Non-Listed Private Market Assets Matrix.pdf
Private Market Assets Matrix: Infrastructure vs. Overall Non-Listed

Pension fund investment in infrastructure is the investing by pension funds directly in the non traditional asset class of infrastructure assets as part of their investment strategy. Traditionally the preserve of governments and municipal authorities, infrastructure has become an asset class in its own right in the 2010s for private-sector investors, most notably pension funds. [1]

Contents

History

Historically, pension funds have tended to invest mostly in "core assets" (such as money market instruments, government bonds, and large-cap equity) and, to a lesser extent, "alternative assets" (such as real estate, private equity and hedge funds). [2] The average allocation to infrastructure historically represented only 1% of total assets under management by pensions, excluding indirect investment through ownership of stocks of listed utility and infrastructure companies.

However, government disengagement from the costly long-term financial commitments required by large infrastructure projects in the wake of the 2008–2012 global recession, [3] combined with the realization that infrastructure could be an ideal asset class providing advantages such as long duration, facilitating cash flow matching with long-term liabilities, protection against inflation, and statistical diversification (i.e., a low correlation with "traditional" listed assets such as equities and fixed income), has prompted an increasing number of pension executives to consider investing in the infrastructure asset class. This macro-financial perspective on pension investment in infrastructure was developed by US, Canadian, and European financial economics and labor law experts, notably from Harvard Law School, the World Pensions Council, and the OECD. [4]

"At the start of the decade, the World Pensions Council (WPC) and the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) helped convene some of the first international summits focusing on the future of long-term investments in the post-Lehman era, arguing that infrastructure would soon become an asset class in its own right. At that time, we thought that the crisis would usher an era of durably low interest rates, pushing more pension and insurance investors to pursue a ‘quest for yields,’ increasing mechanically their allocation to non-traditional asset classes such as private equity, real estate and [listed and non-listed] infrastructure." [5]

Canadian, Californian, and Australian early entrants

Pension funds, including superannuation schemes, account for approximately 40% of all investors in the infrastructure asset class, excluding projects directly funded and developed by governments, municipalities, and public authorities. Large Canadian pension funds and sovereign investors have been particularly active in energy assets such as natural gas and natural gas infrastructure, where they have become major players in recent years. [6]

Until recently, apart from sophisticated jurisdictions such as Ontario, Quebec, California, and the Netherlands, most North American, European, and UK pensions wishing to gain exposure to infrastructure assets did so indirectly, through investments made in infrastructure funds managed by specialized Canadian, US, or Australian funds. [7] [8]

UK Pensions Infrastructure Platform

On November 29, 2011, the British government unveiled an unprecedented plan to encourage large-scale pension investments in roads, hospitals, airports, and the like across the UK. The plan was aimed at enticing £20 billion ($30.97 billion) of investment in domestic infrastructure projects over a next decade. On October 18, 2012, HM Treasury announced that the National Association of Pension Funds (NAPF) and the Pension Protection Fund (PPF) had succeeded in "securing a critical mass of Founding Investors needed to move to the next stage of development" and that "several major UK pension funds have signed up to the Pension Infrastructure Platform (PIP). The intention is that the Founding Investors will provide around half of the target £2 billion of investment capital for the fund, before it launches early next year". [9]

Infrastructure nationalism

Some experts have warned against the risk of "infrastructure nationalism", insisting that steady investment flows from foreign pension and sovereign funds were key to the long-term success of the infrastructure asset class, notably in large European jurisdictions such as France and the UK. [10]

Related Research Articles

A pension fund, also known as a superannuation fund in some countries, is any program, fund, or scheme which provides retirement income.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Tangible investment</span>

A tangible investment is something physical that you can touch. It is an investment in a tangible, hard or real asset or personal property. This contrasts with financial investments such as stocks, bonds, mutual funds and other financial instruments.

An institutional investor is an entity that pools money to purchase securities, real property, and other investment assets or originate loans. Institutional investors include commercial banks, central banks, credit unions, government-linked companies, insurers, pension funds, sovereign wealth funds, charities, hedge funds, real estate investment trusts, investment advisors, endowments, and mutual funds. Operating companies which invest excess capital in these types of assets may also be included in the term. Activist institutional investors may also influence corporate governance by exercising voting rights in their investments. In 2019, the world's top 500 asset managers collectively managed $104.4 trillion in Assets under Management (AuM).

<span class="mw-page-title-main">GIC (sovereign wealth fund)</span> Singaporean sovereign wealth fund

GIC Private Limited is a Singaporean sovereign wealth fund that manages the country's foreign reserves. Established by the Government of Singapore in 1981 as the Government of Singapore Investment Corporation, of which "GIC" is derived from as an acronym, its mission is to preserve and enhance the international purchasing power of the reserves, with the aim to achieve good long-term returns above global inflation over the investment time horizon of 20 years.

In finance, an asset class is a group of financial instruments that have similar financial characteristics and behave similarly in the marketplace. We can often break these instruments into those having to do with real assets and those having to do with financial assets. Often, assets within the same asset class are subject to the same laws and regulations; however, this is not always true. For instance, futures on an asset are often considered part of the same asset class as the underlying instrument but are subject to different regulations than the underlying instrument.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Sovereign wealth fund</span> State-owned investment fund

A sovereign wealth fund (SWF), sovereign investment fund, or social wealth fund is a state-owned investment fund that invests in real and financial assets such as stocks, bonds, real estate, precious metals, or in alternative investments such as private equity fund or hedge funds. Sovereign wealth funds invest globally. Most SWFs are funded by revenues from commodity exports or from foreign-exchange reserves held by the central bank.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Alternative investment</span> Investments other than stocks, bonds and cash

An alternative investment, also known as an alternative asset or alternative investment fund (AIF), is an investment in any asset class excluding capital stocks, bonds, and cash. The term is a relatively loose one and includes tangible assets such as precious metals, collectibles and some financial assets such as real estate, commodities, private equity, distressed securities, hedge funds, exchange funds, carbon credits, venture capital, film production, financial derivatives, cryptocurrencies, non-fungible tokens, and Tax Receivable Agreements. Investments in real estate, forestry and shipping are also often termed "alternative" despite the ancient use of such real assets to enhance and preserve wealth. Alternative investments are to be contrasted with traditional investments.

The Canada Pension Plan Investment Board, operating as CPP Investments, is a Canadian Crown corporation established by way of the 1997 Canada Pension Plan Investment Board Act to oversee and invest the funds contributed to and held by the Canada Pension Plan (CPP).

Global assets under management consists of assets held by asset management firms, pension funds, sovereign wealth funds, hedge funds, and private equity funds.

Impact investing refers to investments "made into companies, organizations, and funds with the intention to generate a measurable, beneficial social or environmental impact alongside a financial return". At its core, impact investing is about an alignment of an investor's beliefs and values with the allocation of capital to address social and/or environmental issues.

The Independent Commission on Banking was a United Kingdom government inquiry looking at structural and related non-structural reforms to the UK banking sector to promote financial stability and competition in the wake of the financial crisis of 2007–08. It was established in June 2010 and produced its final report and recommendations in September 2011.

The World Pensions Forum, also called World Pensions & Investments Forum, is a research and policy oriented conference organised by M. Nicolas Firzli, founder of the World Pensions Council (WPC), in partnership with regional and supranational organisations, large public and private institutional investors from G10 countries, the emerging nations of Eastern Europe, Latin America, Asia and the MENA area.

Country attractiveness is a multidisciplinary concept at the crossroads of development economics, financial economics, comparative law and political science: it aims at tracking and contrasting the relative appeal of different territories and jurisdictions competing for “scarce” investment inflows, by scoring them quantitatively and qualitatively across ad hoc series of variables such as GDP growth, tax rates, capital repatriation … etc.

Infrastructure-based economic development, also called infrastructure-driven development, combines key policy characteristics inherited from the Rooseveltian progressive tradition and neo-Keynesian economics in the United States, France's Gaullist and neo-Colbertist centralized economic planning, Scandinavian social democracy as well as Singaporean and Chinese state capitalism: it holds that a substantial proportion of a nation’s resources must be systematically directed towards long term assets such as transportation, energy and social infrastructure in the name of long term economic efficiency and social equity.

Pension investment in private equity refers to an important component of pension fund investing known as the Endowment Model.

The European Commission’s Investment Plan for Europe known as the “Juncker Plan” or the “EU Infrastructure Investment Plan” is an ambitious infrastructure investment programme first announced by European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker in November 2014: it aims at unlocking public and private investments in the “real economy” of at least € 315 billion over a three years fiscal period.

Soft infrastructure is all the services which are required to maintain the economic, health, and cultural and social standards of a population, as opposed to the hard infrastructure which is the physical infrastructure of roads, bridges etc. It includes both physical assets such as highly specialised buildings and equipment, as well as non-physical assets, such as communication, the body of rules and regulations governing the various systems, the financing of these systems, the systems and organisations by which professionals are trained, advance in their careers by acquiring experience, and are disciplined if required by professional associations. It includes institutions such as the financial and economic systems, the education system, the health care system, the system of government, and law enforcement, and emergency services.

Infrastructure is a platform for governance, commerce, and economic growth and is "a lifeline for modern societies". It is the hallmark of economic development.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">National Investment Corporation of National Bank of Kazakhstan</span>

National Investment Corporation of the National Bank of Kazakhstan (NIC) was established in October 2012 to preserve and enhance the long-term purchasing power of Kazakhstan’s foreign exchange reserves and of the National Fund through investments in less liquid high yielding asset classes. NIC manages assets entrusted by the National Bank of Kazakhstan. NIC invests in private equity, hedge funds, real estate and infrastructure through external managers and has signed up to the Santiago Principles on best practice in managing sovereign wealth funds.

Private market assets refer to investments in equity (shares) and debt issued by privately owned companies – as opposed to ‘public’ (listed) corporations. These markets include private equity (PE) and venture capital (VC); real estate (property); infrastructure; farmland and forestry.

References

  1. "ABOUT US - Infrastructure Investor". 2011-07-02. Archived from the original on 2 July 2011. Retrieved 2022-05-17.
  2. George Inderst (Jan 2009). "Pension Fund Investment in Infrastructure" (PDF). OECD Working Paper on Insurance and Private Pensions, volume 32. Retrieved Nov 17, 2012.
  3. M. Nicolas Firzli (October 2011). "Infrastructure Investments in an Age of Austerity : The Pension and Sovereign Funds Perspective". Revue Analyse Financière, volume 41, pp. 34-37. Retrieved 1 October 2011.
  4. WPC Conference Committee (9 February 2012). "Infrastructure As A New Asset Class for Pensions and SWFs" (PDF). 2nd Annual World Pensions Forum, Roundtable led by Arbejdsmarkedets TillægsPension (ATP), Denmark’s National Supplementary Pension. Retrieved 17 August 2017.
  5. Firzli, M. Nicolas J. (24 May 2016). "Pension Investment in infrastructure Debt: A New Source of Capital for Project Finance". World Bank (Infrastructure and PPPs Blog). Washington, DC. Retrieved 9 August 2017.
  6. M. Nicolas Firzli & Vincent Bazi (July 2012). "The Drivers of Pension & SWF Investment in Energy- Focusing on Natural Gas" (PDF). Revue Analyse Financière, volume 44, pp. 41-43. Archived from the original (PDF) on 17 January 2013. Retrieved 1 July 2012.
  7. Mark Cobley (20 February 2012). "Infrastructure Funds Fail to Bridge the Gap" (PDF). Dow Jones Financial News. Archived from the original (PDF) on 25 May 2013. Retrieved 17 November 2012.
  8. Sinead Cruise and Myles Neligan (November 28, 2011). "British Infrastructure Finance Plan No Silver Bullet". Reuters. . Retrieved 28 November 2011.
  9. HM Treasury Newsroom and Speeches (18 Oct 2012). "Government welcomes first injection into Pensions Infrastructure Platform". HM Treasury Newsroom and Speeches. Retrieved Nov 17, 2012.
  10. Mark Cobley (7 Nov 2013). "Investors Warn against 'Infrastructure Nationalism'". Financial News. Retrieved Dec 12, 2013.