Trends in infrastructure: An evolving asset class
Our new report, in collaboration with Infralogic, analyses the infrastructure sector, capturing its latest trends and investment strategies. To compile the report, we surveyed senior executives who invested in the infrastructure sector in the past 24 months. The report aims to provide a global pulse check and roadmap for navigating this dynamic asset class. It offers a 10-point guide to the current landscape, its key opportunities and emerging risks.
Key insights from the report include:
- Fundraising and investment intentions: Almost three-quarters (70%) of respondents expect their level of infrastructure fundraising to increase over the next 24 months, with 30% anticipating a substantial increase.
- Energy transition is a primary driver: The global push towards decarbonisation is one of the most significant drivers of infrastructure investment. Nearly 54% of survey respondents identify the energy transition as a main catalyst for investment, with renewables and energy efficiency projects leading the charge.
- The unstoppable rise of digital infrastructure: Digital infrastructure is rapidly becoming a focal point for investors, with 36% of respondents citing digitalisation as a primary investment driver. The expansion of data centres, cloud computing and AI is driving significant capital flows, particularly in developed markets such as Europe and North America.
- Healthcare and social infrastructure deficit: The COVID-19 pandemic highlighted significant deficits in healthcare and social infrastructure. In response, 35% of total respondents expect increased investment in these sectors in Asia Pacific (APAC) over the next 24 months.
- Risk mitigation strategies: At least two-thirds of respondents across all regions rely on proactive asset monitoring and management and independent experts to inform their decision-making and protect their investments from downside risks.
Infrastructure: A resilient asset class
The road to energy transition
The decarbonisation journey continues apace and is seen as a major catalyst for future investment in the infrastructure space. The global energy mix is undergoing a rapid transformation. The International Energy Agency (IEA) has urged governments to support several pillars for action, including tripling renewable energy capacity by 2030. At present, this capacity looks set to reach 7,300 GW by 2030, with an implied run rate of 2.5 times current levels being achieved by then. Even if countries under their current policies do fall short of reaching the IEA’s goal, it’s clear that this is a market in a pronounced growth phase.
Which of the following factors will be key drivers of infrastructure investments over the next 12-24 months? (Select top two)
Which of the following sectors offer the greatest opportunities for infrastructure investment globally over the next 24 months? (Select one)
Digitalisation: A strong catalyst for infrastructure investment growth
Digital infrastructure covers a gamut of asset types, ranging from data centres and telecoms towers to submarine cables and fibre to the premises, all of which enable digitalisation.
Scanning the horizon for investment opportunities, 18% of survey participants globally see digital-related projects presenting the greatest potential in the next 24 months. It follows then that expectations are high that capital will flow in this direction.
Opportunities in healthcare, education and social care
Deeply entrenched demographic pressures have overstretched healthcare systems around the world for decades. The COVID-19 pandemic further exposed this major deficit, which is being compounded by advances in medicine. Novel treatments for chronic diseases, including gene and cell therapies, often require specialised infrastructure and outpatient care facilities to meet needs that existing infrastructure is often ill-equipped to address. Many governments have faced significant challenges in delivering on their mandate, highlighting the need for urgent investment. It comes as little surprise then that within the healthcare, education, and social (HES) infrastructure sub-sector, 78% of respondents expect healthcare specifically to attract the most investment over the next 24 months.
Within the healthcare and social sector, which of the following will attract the most investment globally over the next 24 months? (Select top two)
Download the report