Jordan Stutts
Trump, PABs, water and Canada were on the minds of investors at our conference last week.
The US-based fund manager has invested in Crosslake Fibre, a company building a cable system connecting Toronto and Buffalo, New York.
After resigning from the Build America Bureau in October, Martin Klepper speaks to Infrastructure Investor about President Trump’s infrastructure plan.
Our world will effectively be rebuilt over the next two decades, and transformative change is required in how cities are constructed, energy is generated and consumed, goods and people are transported, and how the expanding urban footprint is sustainably managed, argues Gregory J. Smith, chief executive of InstarAGF
A steady stream of deals – including a record-breaking renewables transaction – all point to the emergence of Asia as a serious investment destination. Nia Tam investigates the region’s rise to prominence
No cybersecurity programme can be totally foolproof, but there are key ways to reinforce any effort and mitigate the biggest cyber-risks, writes Rob Kotecki, from sister publication Private Funds Management
In Europe and the US, the growth of renewables, buoyed by public opinion, has shifted the energy equation. Dean Kennedy, Deutsche Bank’s London-based Global Transaction Banking product manager, and Brent Canada, the bank’s New York-based head of infrastructure and energy debt origination, share their views from both sides of the pond.
Across the infrastructure sector, technological advances are changing the way managers approach their assets. Duncan Symonds, European director of asset management for IFM Investors, believes adjusting to this landscape is essential if you want to thrive and not only survive in the sector in the years to come
Big data has enabled investors to learn more about how infrastructure assets work than ever before – and they’re taking advantage of this insight in different ways, writes Jordan Stutts
Big data has enabled investors to learn more about how infrastructure assets work than ever before – and they’re taking advantage of this insight in different ways, writes Jordan Stutts