Why BlackRock is betting billions on infrastructure
Demand for investment is soaring thanks to decarbonisation, digitisation and deglobalisation
The global economy is on the cusp of an “infrastructure revolution”, if Larry Fink is to be believed. The boss of BlackRock, the world’s largest asset manager, made the modest prediction shortly after announcing on January 12th that his firm would acquire Global Infrastructure Partners (GIP) for $12.5bn. That company, led by Adebayo Ogunlesi, an old pal of Mr Fink’s from their banking days, is the world’s third-largest infrastructure investor, behind Australia’s Macquarie and Canada’s Brookfield. Its assets range from Gatwick Airport in London to the Port of Melbourne. Mr Ogunlesi and his fellow partners will collectively become BlackRock’s second-largest shareholder.
Explore more
This article appeared in the Business section of the print edition under the headline “Rock solid”
Business January 20th 2024
- Many CEOs fear a second Trump term would be worse than the first
- Donald Trump’s populism is turning off corporate donors
- Donald Trump’s tax cuts would add to American growth—and debt
- The bosses of OpenAI and Microsoft talk to The Economist
- China may be losing its sway over Taiwanese business
- Companies run to their own annual rhythms
- Can Arc’teryx’s owner revive Chinese IPOs in America?
- A $35bn mega-merger strengthens a quiet chip duopoly
More from Business
DeepSeek poses a challenge to Beijing as much as to Silicon Valley
The story of Liang Wenfeng, the model-maker’s mysterious founder
Nvidia is in danger of losing its monopoly-like margins
But don’t count it out yet
DeepSeek sends a shockwave through markets
A cheap Chinese language model has investors in Silicon Valley asking questions
Germans are world champions of calling in sick
It’s easy and it pays well
Knowing what your colleagues earn
The pros and cons of greater pay transparency
A $500bn investment plan says a lot about Trump’s AI priorities
It’s build, baby, build