More Asian investors eyeing infrastructure projects: AMP

Ms Kerry Ching, AMP Capital Investors managing director for Asia, said direct and listed real estate investments, including commercial properties in Australia, are increasingly popular among Asian investors thirsty for yield.
Ms Kerry Ching, AMP Capital Investors managing director for Asia, said direct and listed real estate investments, including commercial properties in Australia, are increasingly popular among Asian investors thirsty for yield. PHOTO: REUTERS

SYDNEY • Record low yields and negative interest rates are pushing investors from Japan to China into funding infrastructure projects across the globe to bolster ailing income, according to Australia's biggest listed wealth manager AMP.

Asian pension funds and insurers are ramping up investments in infrastructure debt around the world, as they seek to combat waning returns from traditional fixed income assets, said Ms Kerry Ching, managing director for Asia of the firm's investment arm, AMP Capital Investors.

The number of Asian investors in AMP's infrastructure debt strategies has more than tripled since 2012.

"Because insurance and pension funds have a large chunk of their portfolio in marketable securities and fixed interest, which has been extremely volatile for the last couple of years, they're looking for stability," said Ms Ching. "Global infrastructure debt was a very successful strategy and there's stability in the capital value."

Infrastructure spending plans are drawing greater scrutiny worldwide, including a US$1 trillion (S$1.4 trillion) splurge pledged by President Donald Trump to improve roads, airports and bridges across the United States.

Investors pumped a record US$413 billion into infrastructure investments globally last year, according to data provider Preqin. Managers such as Global Infrastructure Partners and Brookfield Asset Management raised unprecedented amounts of funding for their infrastructure strategies last year.

AMP has invested more than US$3 billion in 56 infrastructure debt assets and raised about US$1 billion from investors so far for its third fund in the asset class.

The company is "on track" to meet the US$2 billion fund-raising targets for its latest infrastructure debt strategy, an AMP spokesman said in a March 31 e-mail.

Such debt funds at the firm target a 10 per cent yield on investments, according to the e-mail.

The A$165 billion (S$175 billion) manager is seeing increasing interest from Taiwanese and South Korean investors, Ms Ching said. Direct and listed real estate investments, including commercial properties in Australia, are also increasingly popular among Asian investors thirsty for yield, she added.

"Australian economic conditions have held up relatively well compared with Europe," she said. "Australian property offers slightly better yield than some of our properties in Hong Kong or Singapore."

As fund flows increase from Asia, AMP Capital is looking to add to its distribution team in the region, Ms Ching said. "In Hong Kong, we will be hiring a few people this year."

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A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Straits Times on April 06, 2017, with the headline More Asian investors eyeing infrastructure projects: AMP. Subscribe