The New Infrastructure Blueprint

Societies everywhere are grappling with major, overlapping challenges: Energy security pressures, the transition to a low-carbon economy, changing demographics and urbanization, and realigning supply chains. On the horizon is a digital revolution led by artificial intelligence.

A global opportunity

Taken together, these forces require an enormous amount of new infrastructure, from super batteries and hyperscale data centers to modern logistics hubs and upgraded airports.

We explore the major structural forces driving what’s poised to be a transformational moment in infrastructure investing. And we dive into the various ways capital can invest in the opportunities that we’re seeing today as well as the ones we’re expecting, and how investors can incorporate the asset class into their portfolios.

A changing world

Infrastructure sits at the intersection of the trends transforming the world we live in. It’s the cell towers and fiber internet that power the digitization of business and everyday life. It’s the new land, air and sea transportation facilities that support global supply chains as they reconfigure.

More broadly, it’s the new and upgraded infrastructure across transportation, energy, communication and other services required by a growing and urbanizing world population.

60%

increase in India’s energy demand over the next 20 years

Rising working-age populations make EMs like India key targets for infrastructure and energy investment.

227%

in global data center capacity demand between 2024 and 2030

Data use is surging and will keep rising, especially with the growth of artificial intelligence.

70%

the percentage of the population is expected to live in urban areas by 2050 vs. just over half today

Urban expansion means enhanced infrastructure across multiple sectors. Among other things, cities require more electricity, expanded telecommunications networks and essential water and sanitation systems.

Source

Source: The BlackRock Investment Institute

Source: McKinsey & Co: Expanding data center capacity to meet growing demand, October 2024.There is no guarantee that any forecasts made will come to pass.

Source: World Bank, “Urban Development Overview,” April 3, 2023

A new era for energy

An increasingly digital and urban population requires more electricity, while nations work to lower carbon emissions and strengthen their energy security.

Rising demand

The BlackRock Investment Institute Transition Scenario projects that global power demand will grow two-and-a-half-fold by 2050.

The transition to a low-carbon economy

Shifting business practices and changing consumer and investor preferences are contributing to new energy investments.

A focus on energy security

Heightened global tensions have brought energy security to the forefront of many governments’ policy agendas.

Upgrades and upkeep are constant

Planned retirements of existing power plants are another driver of investment as they are replaced by new, often low-carbon, sources of energy.

windmill-A new era for energy
US government spending on infrastructure has fallen relative to GDP

What it means for investors

The infrastructure moment is a growing opportunity for investors. It encompasses a wide range of investment options and sectors, and it can play a variety of roles within a portfolio.

A wide array of opportunities

Private investors have the chance to be at the center of a transformative period for essential infrastructure. The opportunities range from partnering with governments to build physical assets to joint ventures with infrastructure operators, as well as bespoke debt structures.

image showing an airplane

Diversification in a portfolio

Infrastructure has historically had a relatively low correlation to traditional asset classes due to its idiosyncratic characteristics – it typically doesn’t move in step with economic cycles and its service contracts are often inflation-linked.

Real diversification in a portfolio

Stable investment

As an asset class, infrastructure has traditionally been known for its stability. Many projects involve essential services that remain in demand regardless of economic conditions, and which generate steady, regular and predictable cash flows.

Proven performance
Source

Past performance is not a reliable indicator of current or future results and should not be the sole factor of consideration when selecting a product or strategy.

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Rebuilding the U.S. physical economy

Jay Jacobs, U.S. Head of Thematic and Active ETFs at BlackRock joins host Oscar Pulido to explore the impact of infrastructure investment initiatives on the U.S. economy, the key areas of investment, and the role of private and public sectors in driving these changes.

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