Published by Todd Bush on December 12, 2023
NEW YORK--(BUSINESS WIRE)--BlackRock today released its 2024 Private Markets Outlook, with investment views on how private markets – spanning different sectors, geographies, investment styles, and risk appetites – will evolve in the year ahead. Several mega forces including the low-carbon transition, digital disruption and AI, demographic divergence, the future of finance and geopolitical fragmentation, are expected to offer major investment opportunities in the coming year, despite significant headwinds in 2023.
>> Related: See how this shapes the energy transition
“Private markets are evolving rapidly and presenting substantial opportunities that can be captured with the right strategy. We expect private markets will remain an attractive option for investors to deploy capital in 2024 and beyond,” said Edwin Conway, Global Head of Equity Private Markets, BlackRock. “While the macroeconomic volatility we saw this past year resulted in more capital left on the sidelines, we expect new higher-quality opportunities with favorable deal structures to emerge for investors across asset classes in the year ahead.”
Infrastructure: Resilience and growth driven by the adoption of low-carbon energy sources
As an asset class, infrastructure is having a moment. As the backbone of the economy, infrastructure offers steady cashflows with long-term, inflation-linked contracts that can span decades – a significant advantage in a volatile environment.
The need to reconfigure the global energy system to decarbonize the economy is one driving mega force that presents considerable long-term private markets investment opportunities in infrastructure development, particularly around energy storage, the electrification of transport, and alternative fuels for aviation and marine.
The BlackRock Investment Institute Transition Scenario predicts that the adoption of low-carbon energy sources could result in an average of USD $4 trillion per year of capital investment in the global energy system through 2050, up from around $2 trillion per year at present, with low-carbon energy sources making up around 70% of the world's energy by 20501.
The structural shifts in the public financing markets – another mega force – have enabled private debt to continue to grow, cementing its status as an established asset class suitable for a wide range of long-term investors. While direct lending is the largest private debt strategy type, the “mix shift” of private debt fundraising varies from year to year, and in 2024, the higher cost of capital is likely to impact sectors and firms differently, due to their varying degrees of pricing power, business strength, and capital-structure management2.
As the private credit market evolves, it is leading to a dispersion of sources from which companies can raise capital. Borrowers are increasingly looking for flexible capital or customized funding solutions with many running a “dual track” process, using private and public funding sources simultaneously. The banking industry meanwhile is serving ever-larger borrowers, leaving a hole in the middle-market for private market lenders to step into. BlackRock estimates that the global private debt market will reach $3.5 trillion3 in AUM by year-end 2028.
Private equity is in a period of adjustment in the current era of higher rates and market uncertainty. BlackRock maintains a positive view on the asset class and the ability of the marketplace to adapt, given its historical outperformance during times of market volatility, new unique investment opportunities generated by the mega force of artificial intelligence technology advancement, and several signs that the deal landscape could be attractive for buyers:
BlackRock is optimistic that deal activity will accelerate in the near-term and produce attractive returns for private equity buyers with access to capital.
A window of opportunity is opening for real estate investors. In today’s dislocated macroeconomic environment, investors can purchase high-quality assets at attractive prices – often below replacement cost. In addition, BlackRock sees a mega force, shifting global demographics, as driving dispersion in real estate performance.
Two giant generational cohorts – the Baby Boomers and Millennials – are moving to new phases of life over the next several years, which will affect real estate trends. Millennials are growing their families, resulting in an increased demand for affordable housing stock and related necessity retail (e.g., supermarkets, strip mall complexes) and service providers (e.g., childcare centers).
At the same time, the aging of the world’s Baby Boomers as a “silver wave” will boost demand for destination retail and hospitality properties6. And as they age, these Baby Boomers will also increase the global need for medical office space. To harness this mega force successfully, investors need an acute understanding of the particular social, economic, and cultural trends in specific regions, countries, and micro-locations. Not all opportunities in this environment will be created equally.
BlackRock’s private markets platform serves investors seeking outperformance in infrastructure, private debt, private equity, real estate, and multi-alternatives solutions. We strive to bring our investors the highest quality opportunities by drawing upon our global footprint, superior execution capabilities, proprietary technology, and position as a preferred partner. As of September 30, 2023, BlackRock manages US$317 billion in liquid and illiquid alternative investments and commitments on behalf of clients worldwide.
Follow the money flow of climate, technology, and energy investments to uncover new opportunities and jobs.
Inside This Issue 🌍 Technip Energies and Shell Catalysts & Technologies Join Forces to Advance Carbon Capture Solutions ⚡ FuelCell Energy Announces Global Restructuring, Focusing Core Technolo...
Inside This Issue 🌍 COP29 Countries Endorse Global Carbon Market Framework 💧 Hydrogen Produced at Scale Using Biological Process Combining Carbon Capture 🎯 Starmer: New UK Target for 81% Emissions...
Inside This Issue 🌍 CARB Raises Carbon Intensity Reduction Targets of LCFS to 30% in 2030 and 90% by 2045 🌪️ COP29: the UAE, Host of COP28, is First to Submit Its New National Climate Plan, but Fa...
PARIS--(BUSINESS WIRE)-- Pursuing the development of its low-carbon hydrogen ecosystem in the Normandy industrial basin, Air Liquide (Paris) will invest 50 million euros in a new hydrogen packaging...
Rio Tinto and GravitHy Join Forces to Accelerate the Decarbonisation of Steelmaking in Europe
LONDON--(BUSINESS WIRE)-- Rio Tinto has entered into definitive agreements with GravitHy, an early-stage industrial company, to help accelerate GravitHy’s steel decarbonisation project in France.As...
Center for Transportation and the Environment to Lead Innovative Battery-Free Fuel Cell Bus Project
ATLANTA, Nov. 14, 2024 /PRNewswire-PRWeb/ — The Center for Transportation and the Environment (CTE) has launched a battery-free Fuel Cell Dominant Proof of Concept project under the FTA-sponsored T...
DANBURY, Conn., Nov. 15, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- FuelCell Energy, Inc. (Nasdaq: FCEL) announced a global restructuring of its operations in the U.S., Canada, and Germany that aims to significantly...
Follow the money flow of climate, technology, and energy investments to uncover new opportunities and jobs.