| | The Weekend Pitch | August 15, 2021 | Presented by Masterworks | | | | | | (Vivien.x.Li/Getty Images) | | | Hello and welcome back to The Weekend Pitch. Adam Lewis here. I'm back from my summer sabbatical. And just in time for infrastructure week, no less. So let's jump right into it. Oh, and email me at adam.lewis@pitchbook.com or hit me up on Twitter at @AdamLewisPI if you'd like to chime in. | | | | | A PE windfall from infrastructure package is no sure thing The US Senate this week passed a sweeping $1.2 trillion infrastructure bill, marking President Biden's biggest legislative victory to date. But it remains unclear if the bill will be a win for a US private equity industry that has raised hundreds of billions over the past decade to rebuild the country's roads, bridges, utilities and more. Public-private partnerships, also known as P3s, have struggled to gain traction in the US, even as the country's infrastructure has slowly crumbled. The Senate bill, which totals some 2,700 pages, attempts to change that by directing states and municipalities to consider instituting public-private agreements. Part of the infrastructure bill requires local governments seeking federal funding for a project of over $750 million to run a cost analysis on a private partnership. But the bill reportedly doesn't require local governments to actually create public-private partnerships. That means investors that have raised billions for infrastructure deals could be in the precarious position of having ample dry powder but few opportunities to spend. And the bill still needs to pass a divided House of Representatives before being signed into law. Investment is needed. The American Society of Civil Engineers gave the country's infrastructure a "C-" grade in a 2021 report card, reportedly estimating that it would cost almost $2.6 trillion to implement the necessary repairs and earn a "B" grade. Some within the private equity industry have sounded an optimistic tone about the legislation. Adam Bernstein, a managing director at infrastructure and impact investor North Sky Capital, said the bill could open the door for more investment in electrical vehicle infrastructure, renewables and the electrical grid. And that could open the door for mega-deals. "You're going to have to take some big swings," Bernstein explained. "And you would just have to think that a larger infrastructure fund would be able to participate in that." Over the past decade, infrastructure fundraising has climbed, albeit in fits and starts, with the total raised peaking at more than $46 billion in 2018, according to PitchBook data. Private equity firms have turned to infrastructure deals in part because they are often immune to the level of volatility seen by fixed income or equities, for instance. And the contracts can often last decades, providing steady returns regardless of broader market trends. In 2017, Blackstone announced it would raise $40 billion for an infrastructure fund, with $20 billion coming from the Public Investment Fund of Saudi Arabia. But the vehicle has struggled to get off the ground. In Blackstone's fourth quarter earnings call, president Jonathan Gray said the vehicle had raised around $14 billion, well short of its original target. | | | (Mike Brinson/Getty Images) | | | Over the past few years, there's been growing angst about allowing private equity firms to dip their beaks into public works projects. In Bayonne, N.J., water bills spiked 28% after KKR invested in the city's public water systems, according to an analysis by The New York Times. Other cities including Missoula, Mont. have actually sued to buy back their water systems. Private equity investments in public utilities haven't always gone well for the firms, either. In 2014, electricity company Energy Future Holdings filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, bogged down by more than $40 billion in debt after TPG, KKR and the private equity arm of Goldman Sachs took the company private in 2007 in a $45 billion deal. At the time, The Wall Street Journal reported it was the eighth largest bankruptcy in the history of the US. And it's one of the most high-profile LBOs to ever fail, with the firms reportedly losing a combined $8 billion of their invested capital. "Overall, a lot of money has been raised, and that's commensurate with the capital needs of the amount of infrastructure spending," Bernstein said. "That, of course, doesn't guarantee it'll end up being a good investment." For local and state governments, it's not always easy to know whether or not to partner with PE. Governments often tap the $4 trillion municipal bond market for financing. This allows them to keep more of the profits from massive infrastructure projects to themselves, but they are then responsible for any cost overruns. For North Sky, Bernstein sees an opportunity to pour more capital into lower-middle-market infrastructure projects, with investments ranging between $15 million and $20 million and on a shorter timeline than the typical private equity holding period, which can extend up to seven years. "Where we see the opportunity is to really partner with those smaller counties [and] cities that may not necessarily need 100 MW solar or wind farms or electricity, but may need to refurbish a recycling facility, or a water treatment plant, or a smaller, renewable electricity facility," he said. "And those are the kinds of transactions that aren't going to get attention from some of the larger players." | | | | | | | | A message from Masterworks | | | This $6T asset class is poised to dominate NFTs | | There is an untapped asset class that has been around for centuries. Yet only the 0.0001% had access, due to high entry costs and limited supply. Most of the big players have a net worth in the billions, not millions. It's not venture capital or private equity, or anything related to cryptocurrency. It's blue-chip art. To invest in contemporary art, you used to need hundreds of millions of dollars to build a proper portfolio. But no longer. Masterworks has fractionalized investments in works by Banksy, Picasso and Warhol so you can invest at a tiny fraction of the typical purchase price. PitchBook subscribers are invited to join this exclusive art investing community today. (Note: Offerings can sell out in a matter of days).* *See important disclaimer | | | | | | | | | (Ed Reschke/Getty Images) | | | | … That you might see a burger made of microalgae showing up on your menu soon? The hunt for sustainable food sources has led a new crop of startups to explore microalgae as an alternate protein. Because the unicellular species offers a host of supply chain, health and environmental benefits, microalgae could help many large food companies meet their bold pledges to focus on processes that are carbon neutral. PitchBook's latest Emerging Tech Research report has more details on microalgae startups and global VC deal activity in the nascent sector. | | | | | | | | | (Tetra Images/Getty Images) | | | | VC-backed enterprise healthtech exits are having an exceptionally strong year, with global startups adding more than $15 billion in exit value in the second quarter of 2021. - Bright Health was the fourth health insurer to go public this year, raising a record-setting $924.3 million in its IPO.
- Q2 had the lowest quarterly deal count globally since 2014. However, overall VC deal value in the vertical continues to surpass prior years—a sign of industry maturity, according to our latest Emerging Tech Research report on enterprise healthtech.
| | | | | Venture deals outside of China now account for 89% of SoftBank's new investments, compared with 62% in 2018, according to PitchBook data. The investor will push pause on Chinese deals until Beijing's changing regulatory landscape and its stock market impact are better understood, but the Japanese tech behemoth has no intention of abandoning the Chinese market, CEO Masayoshi Son said on an earnings call. | | | | | How a police shooting in 1971 set in motion a decadeslong chase across the American West. [Deseret News] In hopes of higher returns, asset owners are increasingly turning to co-investments alongside private equity firms or hedge funds. But experts warn there can be pitfalls. [Institutional Investor] Energy companies are beginning to pitch the idea that planet-warming natural gases can be erased by paying villagers to protect forests. Can it work? [Bloomberg] Somewhere between 20,000 and 130,000 people are farming coffee illegally within an Indonesian national park. And while that may seem like an easy crime to stop, a globalized economy can sometimes undermine even the best-laid plans. [The New York Times] One rock band's recent embrace of non-fungible tokens has provided a wake-up call for the music industry. [Forbes] Computer scientist and humanities professor Philip Agre predicted a dark side to the internet some 30 years ago. So why did no one listen? [The Washington Post] | | | | | This edition of The Weekend Pitch was written by Adam Lewis and Priyamvada Mathur. It was edited by Kate Rainey, Angela Sams and Sam Steele. Were you forwarded The Weekend Pitch? Sign up at pitchbook.com/subscribe. | | | | | | | | Since yesterday, the PitchBook Platform added: | 5 Deals | 18 People | 3 Companies | | | | | | | | | | | |
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