G20 Foundation Publications Turkey 2015 | Page 32

32 TRADE & FINANCE INFRASTRUCTURE: A GLOBAL ASSET CLASS “For life insurers, long-term investment strategies, such as infrastructure project investing, are vital to our liability-driven portfolio management process.” Scott Sleyster, Senior Vice President & Chief Investment Officer, Pramerica Financial, Inc. The world faces a substantial and growing need for infrastructure – and therefore for infrastructure investment and financing. Traditional public infrastructure funding sources are under pressure resulting in an estimated funding gap of $500 billion per year globally.1 Private sector funding sources are needed if we are going to close this gap. Prudential Financial, Inc., (NYSE: PRU), which does business in Europe as Pramerica Financial, Inc., has been a significant provider of long-term capital to a range of infrastructure programs for many years. Our private lending business, Pramerica Capital Group, which operates as Pricoa Capital Group in Europe and the U.K., manages an infrastructure portfolio of more than $10.5 billion (as of June 30, 2015). In addition, we hold substantial infrastructure related public debt and equity in our public bond and alternative assets portfolios. For life insurers, long-term investment strategies, such as infrastructure project investing, are vital to our liability-driven portfolio management process. Well underwritten infrastructure investments offer attractive risk, return and diversification characteristics, which can contribute to better asset/liability management, and in turn, stronger companies. Is infrastructure an asset class? No single definition of “infrastructure” exists within the investment community. Infrastructure assets can range from “greenfield” public works projects to public corporate bonds in telecom or energy sectors. In general, infrastructure investments are categorised within a range of traditional industry sectors and disciplines (e.g., energy, power, transportation, telecommunications, ports, social housing) instead of being distinguished by several principal characteristics. First and foremost, investors tend to think of infrastructure as a long duration asset class, and as such it suits investors with long-term investment needs. Other characteristics beyond the nature of the asset/project, include: illiquidity, often manifested in long investment/ draw periods, or, if debt, a lack of rating; complexity, requiring specialised skills to analyse; and uniqueness, having few closely comparable investments in terms of structure, assumptions, or returns. Taken together, these characteristics – along with the types of investors they tend to attract – might warrant categorisation as a standalone “asset class.” Why infrastructure assets have a place in long-term investors’ portfolios Infrastructure investment may provide unique benefits to long-term investors’ portfolios with diversification and investment stability. The supply of long-term assets (other than sovereign bonds) is relatively constrained and in high demand. Infrastructure debt from new issuers, whether governmental, quasi governmental or private, represents a new source of investme