G20 Foundation Publications Turkey 2015 | Page 33

TRADE & FINANCE 33 stabilise over time as the project goes into production. Infrastructure projects tend to have stable cash flows and more limited exposure to competitive forces due to regulated revenue models which help to support the credit over time. Obstacles and challenges to infrastructure investing From the investor’s perspective, the features that characterise infrastructure – its long-term nature, illiquidity, complexity uniqueness – tend to make it challenging to analyse. A variety of efforts could be made to make infrastructure assets more attractive to investors, including standardisation of documentation, improved access to information and analytics about investment performance, and creating structures in which investors of varying risk appetites can find suitable investments across the risk spectrum. Perhaps more importantly, investors often cite the lack of investment opportunities as a reason for not being more invested in infrastructure. Greater assurance of a “pipeline” of opportunities from project sponsors would also attract investors to the asset class. The further development of Public/Private Partnerships globally may prove to be a powerful vehicle for creating that pipeline. The ability to extract value from existing infrastructure assets to be redeployed towards seeding new projects has the potential to be a powerful catalyst for growth. It enables us to recycle the value of existing societal assets into new productive assets. Finally, regulatory frameworks around the world must acknowledge the long-term investment needs of their regulated entities and the appropriateness of good quality infrastructure investments to meet those needs. Efforts to define a global insurance capital regime must consider the long-term nature of the life insurance business. Reflecting appropriate economics of life insurance in a global capital framework is crucial to ensure that private funding is available and stable over time. Solvency II and other frameworks must incentivize investment in long-term assets to allow insurers to match their long-term liabilities. To date, emerging regulatory frameworks for banks and insurers are creating disincentives to long-term investing favoring shorter-duration, more liquid assets and penalising the very types of assets that could improve portfolio diversification, better hedge liability exposures and offer a lower risk profile relative to corporate credit over the long-term. In summary We believe that infrastructure investment is not only important to society, but also strategically important for long-term investors. Pramerica has had a long-standing commitment to infrastructure as a result of this dynamic. Indeed, we welcome the opportunity to help develop infrastructure into a recognised asset class among long term investors through better access to information, a more assured supply of infrastructure investment opportunities, and greater understanding among regulators of its importance in long term investors’ portfolios. Q 1Standard & Poors 2 Moody’s Investor Service Scott Sleyster is the global chief investment officer of Prudential Financial Inc. (NYSE: PRU), a financial services company headquartered in the U.S. The company is not affiliated in any manner with Prudential Plc. of the U.K. This article represents Sleyster’s opinion as of October, 2015. Pricoa Capital Group actively invests in infrastructure projects, focusing on investment grade debt in energy, transport, social and water sectors. Shown above is a recent solar farm project financed by Pricoa Capital Group in 2014, which is planned to provide 80 megawatts of clean energy to the local utility as an alternative source of power to consumers.