|
Tuesday 3rd November 2009 |
Text too small? |
HRL Morrison & Co., the investment bank founded by Lloyd Morrison, has tapped Craigs Investment Partners to investigate setting up a retail fund to take advantage of upcoming public-private partnerships.
Morrison & Co’s fund would allow retail investors to participate alongside institutional investors, such as the Guardians of New Zealand Superannuation, in its Public Infrastructure Partnership Fund. The PIP Fund invests in social infrastructure assets such as schools and prisons.
“Investment in infrastructure through public-private partnerships, an established and successful model internationally, is a unique solution to the provision of social infrastructure in New Zealand,” said Craigs executive chairman Neil Craig in a statement.
The PIP Fund is the first of its kind in New Zealand to be dedicated to investing alongside local, regional and central government in public infrastructure projects. It will have an initial $500 million investment capacity.
The Guardians confirmed it would take a $100 million cornerstone investment in the fund, and Morrison & Co will seek other institutional investors in the coming year. Morrison & Co has a mandate to invest in listed and private market infrastructure on behalf of the Guardians.
The Guardians has clawed back more than $4 billion in value from the NZ Superannuation Fund’s low in February this year after the global financial crisis saw markets shed value.
The fund has grown 5.33% after fees and before tax since its inception to $15.2 billion as at September 30.
Businesswire.co.nz
No comments yet
VHP - Half year results announcement date and webcast details
Devon Funds Morning Note - 30 January 2026
AIA - Auckland Airport new board appointment
General Capital (GEN:NZ) Subsidiary General Finance Update
January 30th Morning Report
January 29th Morning Report
VSL - Date for 1H FY26 results announcement
January 28th Morning Report
IKE - Webinar Notification IKE Q3 FY26 Performance Update
VHP - Preliminary unaudited portfolio valuations 31 December 2025