Brief : Buyout firm KKR & Co Inc is seeking to raise $12 billion for its flagship global fund that will invest in infrastructure assets such as oil and gas pipelines and renewable energy projects, according to people familiar with the matter. The fundraising comes as President Joe Biden has been pushing U.S. lawmakers to back a plan for trillions of dollars in new spending on projects to restore America’s crumbling infrastructure. KKR began raising the fund, KKR Global Infrastructure Investors IV, late last year alongside its other flagship funds, including the North America private equity fund, which is aiming to attract more than $15 billion. A KKR spokeswoman declined to comment. Private equity firms tend to raise successor funds that are 10% to 20% larger than their predecessors. But KKR’s latest global infrastructure fund would be significantly bigger than KKR Global Infrastructure Investors III, which amassed $7.4 billion from investors in 2018.
Brief: Most European Central Bank policy makers have no intention of expanding their 1.85 trillion-euro ($2.2 trillion) emergency stimulus program despite their pledge on Thursday to step up the pace of bond buying to keep yields in check, according to officials familiar with the matter. The Governing Council’s decision to make purchases at a “significantly higher pace” over the next three months means buying debt at a faster rate than the program’s timeline suggests, the officials said, asking not to be identified. Buying would then be slowed if the economic outlook allows. The pandemic purchase program is due to run until at least the end of March 2022, and has almost 1 trillion euros of firepower left. The ECB says it can be “recalibrated” -- ie increased -- if needed.
Brief: More women than men have left British banks during the pandemic, undermining the sector’s pledges to become more diverse. The number of women at the U.K.’s five biggest lenders shrank by 3% during 2020, according to data compiled by Bloomberg News, while men saw a decline of about 2.1% as the banks pushed ahead with long-planned cost cuts and adapted to Covid-19. At NatWest Group Plc, roles filled by women dropped by 9% compared to a 5.2% fall for men. Standard Chartered Plc kept roughly the same number of men but its female staff declined by 2.2%. The banks -- along with Barclays Plc, Lloyds Banking Group Plc and HSBC Holdings Plc -- employ about half a million people globally, broadly even between genders. The stark split has a variety of causes. British lenders have spent years closing branches -- which are staffed more by women -- as they see customers shifting to online banking. This trend accelerated during lockdown. Some women are also withdrawing from the workforce, rather than being cut. At Standard Chartered, the gap between male and female job losses “probably relates to the fact that children were home being home-schooled and that burden within the family fell disproportionately to women,” Chief Executive Officer Bill Winters said on a call with reporters after recent earnings.
Brief: Equity investment into private smaller companies reached new heights in 2020, rising by 9 per cent on 2019 levels to GBP8.8 billion, according to the British Business Bank’s Small Business Finance Markets Report. Average deal size continues to increase, primarily driven by a small number of very large deals. Equity deal sizes increased by 3 per cent in 2020 and the number of deals greater than GBP10 million increased from 173 in 2019 to 176 in 2020. The time taken for some companies to achieve unicorn status reduced in 2020. Beauhurst estimates the average age of all companies gaining unicorn status was seven years, but Hopin gained unicorn status only after one year and Cazoo after two years. Of the six UK companies to achieve unicorn status in 2019, five were backed by venture capital. Judith Hartley, CEO of British Patient Capital, says: "The British Business Bank’s Small Business Finance Markets report was published today and it reveals that, despite the global pandemic, equity investors continue to find smaller private UK companies highly attractive.
Brief: Investors will keep reaching for riskier assets to get returns in a U.S. economy poised for growth this year, according to Natixis Investment Managers. The “dash for trash” will continue, Jack Janasiewicz, portfolio manager and strategist at Natixis Investment Managers, predicted Tuesday during the firm’s web event discussing markets amid the easing Covid-19 crisis. Financial conditions are “highly accommodative,” he said, adding that “it’s tough to see anything but a continued stretch for risk assets.” At the same time, some investors worry that massive fiscal stimulus and easy monetary policy could stoke high inflation, according to Janasiewicz. The Natixis portfolio manager said the concern often comes up in client conversations, particularly with the recent jump in Treasury yields, but that he isn’t expecting a meaningful rise anytime soon.
Brief: Pension fund investors must be watchful this AGM season as to how company responses to the pandemic have impacted governance and workforce practices, the Pensions and Lifetime Savings Association (PLSA) has warned in its updated annual Stewardship and Voting Guidelines. Published to coincide with the PLSA’s annual Investment Conference, the Stewardship and Voting Guidelines 2021 are an important resource for pension trustees, providing practical guidance for schemes considering how to exercise their vote at annual general meetings. Having undertaken a substantial review of the guidelines in 2020, the PLSA has this year focused on ensuring they remain relevant amid the challenges posed by Covid-19 and a fast moving regulatory environment. Since the UK entered the first period of lockdown in March 2020, virtual AGMs have become the "new normal", enabled in law by the Corporate Insolvency and Governance Act on 26 June. The PLSA supports the provisions introduced by the Government and companies to ensure that AGMs can happen virtually during these unprecedented times.