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The top 100 infrastructure fund managers

TOP 10 LARGEST INFRASTRUCTURE FUND MANAGERS

Rank Fund Manager Headquarters Capital raised ($m)
1 Global Infrastructure Partners, a part of BlackRock New York 113,796
2 Brookfield Asset Management Toronto 99,147
3 KKR New York 82,589
4 Macquarie Asset Management London 80,430
5 EQT Stockholm 58,709
6 DigitalBridge Boca Raton 50,072
7 Stonepeak New York 47,809
8 Blackstone New York 44,333
9 Antin Infrastructure Partners Paris 27,228
10 Copenhagen Infrastructure Partners Copenhagen 24,900

INSIDE THE II 100

II 100: GIP, a part of BlackRock, is the world’s largest...

Macquarie, which has topped our ranking since inception, has now dropped to fourth place, as the II 100 reaches $1.1trn.

INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTOR 100 | METHODOLOGY

The 2024 II 100 ranking is based on the amount of infrastructure direct investment capital raised by firms between 1 January 2019 and 31 August 2024.

Infrastructure

The definition of infrastructure investing, for the purposes of the Infrastructure Investor 100, means committing equity capital toward tangible, physical assets, whether existing (brownfield) or development-phase (greenfield) that are expected to exhibit stable, predictable cashflows over a long-term investment horizon.

The investors need not seek to own the assets in perpetuity and may exit them, realising a capital gain and generating an internal rate of return for themselves or their end-investors. However, they must primarily dedicate their investment programmes towards the pursuit of assets and projects that exhibit cashflow stability and predictability, and cannot be counted if they have made large one-off investments in the asset class on an opportunistic basis.

There will certainly be grey areas with regard to these parameters, but Infrastructure Investor will take pains to ensure that the capital counted for the purposes of the ranking will fall within our definition of infrastructure to the furthest extent possible.

Capital raised

This means capital definitively committed to an infrastructure direct investment programme. In the case of a fundraising, it means the fund has had a final or official interim close after 1 January 2019. The full amount of a fund counts if it has a close after this date. The full amount of an interim close (a real one, not a ‘soft-circle’) that has occurred recently, even if no official announcement has been made, also counts. We also count capital raised through co-investment vehicles. We only count vehicles for which the manager has full discretion over investment decisions; all capital must be committed by institutional investors.

Structures:
• Limited partnerships
• Open-end vehicles (capital must be raised within the specified dates)
• Co-investment funds
• Separate accounts
• Capital raised by infrastructure managers that happen to be publicly traded
• Seed capital and GP commitment

Strategies:
• Core
• Core-plus
• Value-add
• Opportunistic
• Existing assets (brownfield), development-phase assets (greenfield) or a mix of both

• Expected capital commitments
• Contributions from sponsoring entities
• Capital raised for funds of funds

INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTOR 100 | RANKING ARCHIVE

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OTHER RANKINGS

In addition to the Infrastructure Investor 100, Infrastructure Investor compiles other infrastructure investing rankings.

What’s more, our affiliate titles also produce their own industry rankings covering private equity, private debt, and private real estate.

To view the latest rankings from Infrastructure Investor, plus those from Private Debt Investor, Private Equity International and PERE, simply navigate through the sections below:

SEEN OUR DATABASE

Infrastructure Investor’s comprehensive database is full of intelligence relating to funds being raised worldwide, with key information on target sizes and strategies used.

Track investment appetite and access contact details of over 4,000 fund managers and investors, helping to bring together investors and managers with matching interests.

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