Global Listed Infrastructure monthly review and outlook

Global Listed Infrastructure monthly review and outlook

A monthly review and outlook of the Global Listed Infrastructure sector.

Market review - as at July 2025

Global Listed Infrastructure gained in July, buoyed by healthy earnings results, corporate activity within the asset class and rising interest in listed infrastructure assets from private market buyers.

The best performing infrastructure sector was Airports (+4%), led by Asian and European operators which gained against a backdrop of generally robust passenger volumes. Utilities / Renewables (+3%) also performed well. US electric utilities gained as political uncertainty eased following the passage of President Trump’s “One Big Beautiful Bill” (OBBB) into law on July 4th. The worst performing infrastructure sector was Towers / Data Centres (-3%), which gave up ground following strong ytd gains.

The best performing infrastructure region was Japan (+6%), reflecting strong gains for its electric utilities and passenger railroads. The worst performing infrastructure region was Latin America (-3%) as underperformance from Brazil’s broader stock market weighed on the country’s transport infrastructure and utility stocks.

Fund performance

The Fund returned +2.6% after fees in July1 , 40 basis points ahead of the FTSE Global Core Infrastructure 50/50 TR Index (SGD).  

The best performing stock in the portfolio was US-listed utility and renewables developer AES Corp (+25%), which operates substantial wind and solar assets and has signed deals to provide technology companies including Google, Microsoft and Amazon with carbon-free energy. The stock increased on hopes that the company may be acquired, after it was reported that leading unlisted infrastructure investors had been drawn to the company’s appealing valuation multiples. 

American Electric Power (+9%), whose utility businesses serve 5.6 million customers across 11 US states, gained after announcing better-than-expected June quarter earnings, citing strong customer growth and an improving regulatory backdrop, and raising its full year earnings guidance. Minnesota-based regulated utility Xcel Energy (+8%) also climbed. During the month, the company announced plans to increase power generation capacity in its Texas and New Mexico service areas – including additional wind, solar and battery resources – in order to meet “rapidly rising” demand.

US east coast railroad operator Norfolk Southern (+9%) rose after its larger US west coast railroad Union Pacific (-4%, not held) provided confirmation of its plans to acquire the company in a US$85 billion cash-and-stock deal. Assuming regulatory approval is granted, the deal is expected to close in early 2027, creating the first railroad whose track network connects the US east and west coasts. East coast peer CSX Corp (+9%) also gained on the news. If the Union Pacific / Norfolk Southern merger is allowed to proceed, CSX would become a clear target for BNSF Railway, UNP’s west coast rival which is part of Berkshire Hathaway (-2.9%, not in our Focus List).

The worst performing stock in the portfolio was Motiva (-11%), Brazil’s largest toll road operator, which gave up ground following strong share price gains so far this year. In an absence of material stock-specific news, the decline appears to have been primarily driven by profit-taking. Rising political tension between Brazil and the US weighed on Brazil’s stock market, representing a further headwind. Mexican peer PINFRA (+5%), whose main assets include Mexico City toll road concessions, fared better after announcing the sale of its non-core Altamira port business for a higher-than-expected US$800 million, or ~20x EBITDA (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortisation) multiple. 

A holding in Hera (-9%), an Italian multi-utility with four main business segments – gas, electricity, water and waste management – underperformed. The company’s June quarter earnings were lower than expected, as new electricity utility customers weighed on margins for that segment of its business. The company remains well positioned to deliver solid earnings growth over the longer term, underpinned by opportunities to invest capex across its service territories, and aided by the potential to continue its successful track record of acquiring smaller peers.

US energy midstream stock DT Midstream (-7%) ended the month lower on concerns that easing natural gas prices may reduce future volume growth and affect demand for the company’s networks of natural gas transportation and storage assets. Peer Targa Resources (-4%) lagged as lacklustre crude oil production growth across Texas’ Permian basin weighed on sentiment towards the stock. With Natural Gas Liquids (NGL) production outperforming crude, we think Targa can continue to deliver solid earnings growth.

Mobile towers were another area of softness for the portfolio, despite encouraging network deployment trends. Following strong ytd share price gains, American Tower (-6%) and smaller peer SBA Communications (-4%) both dipped in July. Positively, mobile network equipment maker Ericsson reported “good growth” for its North American operations in the June quarter, indicating better tower leasing ahead. 

1  Fund performance is based on the Singapore unit trust, net of fees, expressed in SGD terms.
All stock and sector performance data expressed in local currency terms. Source: Bloomberg.

Fund activity

The portfolio initiated a position in US-listed Equinix, one of the world’s largest listed pure-play data centre companies with 270 data centres across the United States, EMEA and Asia. Equinix operates primarily in the retail colocation space with a small presence in hyperscale; its customers rent space at its data centres to house their servers and other IT infrastructure. The stock was added to the portfolio after its biennial Analyst Day disappointed on higher capex and funding costs, providing an attractive entry point to this well-managed company positioned to benefit from long term growth drivers.

The portfolio also added a holding in Brazilian freight rail company Rumo. The company operates a ~14,000km track network, including the rail infrastructure that transports agricultural goods (soybeans, wheat, maize) from the inland Mato Grosso region to the Port of Santos, one of Brazil’s key export gateways. The stock has lagged in recent months as a late soybean harvest and increased grain storage capacity in Mato Grosso have weighed on haulage volumes. As the year progresses these headwinds should unwind; over the longer term Rumo is well-positioned to benefit from Brazil’s rising agricultural production levels and the strong pricing power of its assets.

Market outlook and Fund positioning

The Fund invests in a range of listed infrastructure assets including toll roads, airports, railroads, utilities and renewables, energy midstream, wireless towers and data centers. These sectors share common characteristics, like barriers to entry and pricing power, which can provide investors with inflation-protected income and strong capital growth over the medium-term.

The asset class remains supported by several structural growth drivers. Electric utilities, particularly in the US, face higher capital expenditure needs to meet the increases in electricity demand being driven by Artificial Intelligence (AI), data centres, onshoring of manufacturing and electrification. While additional equity will be needed to fund some of this capex, this theme should also enable the sector’s Earnings per Share growth to accelerate from a typical range of between 3% and 5% per annum to between 5% and 8% per annum, representing a meaningful positive shift. Higher-than-expected prices for the 2026-27 PJM capacity auction (the mechanism which manages the electric grid across 13 eastern US states and Washington DC) provided the latest data point highlighting robust US power demand.

This rising demand is also likely to bolster the need for natural gas, which has a crucial role to play in maintaining energy reliability and affordability. As well as benefitting utilities, this is also likely to drive additional demand for North American energy transportation, storage and export assets, presenting energy midstream companies with new opportunities to invest and grow.

Digitalisation is another key theme for the asset class. We expect structural growth in demand for mobile data (underpinned by an ever-growing reliance on digital connectivity) to support long-term earnings growth for Towers. The adoption of 5G technology over coming years will require networks to handle increased data speed and lower latency as well as a much higher number of connected devices. The surge of interest in AI is driving data center demand, as well as boosting the need for electricity. Data centers are also benefitting from companies seeking the improved reliability and flexibility offered by cloud computing.

All stock and sector performance data expressed in local currency terms. Source: Bloomberg.
Source: First Sentier Investors and company data as at 31 July 2025

 

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