GPIF, APG Launch Infrastructure Joint Investment Partnership

The funds plan to invest in developed markets.



The Government Pension and Investment Fund of Japan and APG Asset Management, on behalf of Dutch pension fund ABP, have announced a joint investment program to make investments in developed markets infrastructure.

APG Asset Management will invest in the partnership on behalf of Dutch pension fund ABP, which is the majority stakeholder in APG. APG is a subsidiary of ABP and invests on behalf of a number of Dutch pension funds. APG managed 569 billion Euros ($617.58 billion) in assets as of December 2023.

GPIF, the largest pension fund in the world manages $1.5 trillion in assets in its portfolio, which is roughly 50% equities and 50% bonds. Approximately 1.53% of the fund’s assets are set aside for other alternative investments, including private equity and infrastructure.

In March, GPIF sent out requests for information on alternative investments, signaling that the fund had interest in expanding its investments outside of bonds and stocks. The fund requested information on infrastructure, cryptocurrency, timber and other alternative investments.

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“GPIF has been increasing its exposure to alternative investments (infrastructure, private equity, and real estate) in expectation of greater portfolio diversification, seeking to improve investment efficiency and further ensure the stability of pension finance,” said Masataka Miyazono, president of GPIF, in a press release announcing the partnership.


“We have recently launched a joint investment program with APG in the infrastructure sector. We are pleased to embark on a long-term partnership initiated between APG and GPIF, as representatives of public pension fund investors from respective countries,” Miyazono continued.

According to APG, in a separate press release, part of the focus of the investment partnership will be on sustainable energy, fiber networks, and transport. APG has a history of making infrastructure investment that supports the energy transition, and currently manages 24 billion euros in infrastructure investments globally, which have returned an annualized 10.2% over the past five years.

“We are delighted to partner with GPIF, as our shared commitment to long-term private investments makes this collaboration a natural fit. We believe that joining forces will help to address the growing need for coordinated actions from like-minded, long-term investors to deliver long-term value to our beneficiaries and the broader society. We look forward to collaborating with GPIF to achieve our shared goals,” said Ronald Wuijster, CEO of APG Asset Management in the release.

Previous APG infrastructure investments include a 33% stake in 26 solar facilities across the U.S. acquired from insurer Global Atlantic Financial Group in November 2023, and a 49% stake in solar energy and storage company Gemini.

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Private Capital Fundraising Tilts Toward the Big Guys

Slowdown in number of firms pulling in fresh money means more for the top 10 funds, Preqin says.

The big getting bigger was the story for 2023 and perhaps this year, according to a new report from research firm Preqin on private capital fundraising.

For private capital—predominantly private equity, but also private credit and venture capital, among others—last year marked a larger concentration of fundraising in the 10 biggest funds globally.

They scarfed up 18% of the total, almost double their portion in 2021. The top 10 raised $224 billion, some 80% higher than the previous year, while funds in the top 11 to 20 got $111 billion, down from 2022’s $122 billion.

The report declared that “more capital has landed in the hands of the best-known market participants, making the liquidity available to restart the investment cycle hard to come by for some fund managers.”

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In the Preqin survey, 70% of private capital investors and fund managers cited reduced exit activity as their leading worry about fundraising in 2024. Fewer mergers and acquisitions and initial public offerings daunted fund general partners, Preqin noted: They have reduced opportunities to cash out their investments. The report found that for “some GPs, 2023 will be remembered as a year-long battle to win new business.”

The greatest 2023 fundraising hauls belonged to big-name entities: Blackstone Real Estate Partners X garnered $30.4 billion in new capital, Brookfield Infrastructure Fund V scored $30 billion and CVC Capital Partners Fund IX raised $28.9 billion.

Compared with 2021, these huge funds were slicing larger pieces of a smaller pie. The fundraising total for PE last year was $670.9 billion, versus $745.6 billion two years prior. Fewer participants were in the game: 876 PE funds raised money last year, down from 1,455 in 2022 and 2,009 in 2021.

One interesting countertrend: Despite the political obloquy surrounding them, funds specializing in environment, social and governance fared well, the report found: “More than 400 ESG-labeled funds closed in 2023, up from 316 in 2022, with aggregate fund size almost doubling.”

There are small signs, however, that the exit situation may improve, amid the Federal Reserve’s saying it intends to cut interest rates later this year and a continued strong economy, a PwC study indicated. In 2024’s first quarter, 14 traditional (not counting special purpose acquisition companies) initial public offerings took place, higher than last year’s nine for Q1 and 2022’s eight for Q1. Still not close to the 92 in 2021’s robust first quarter.

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