• The price elasticity of the demand for the good
• The price elasticity of the supply for the good
• The extent to which an operating firm is exposed to or has hedged its expenses and revenues (i.e.,
its profits).
• In the short run, it appeared that the operationally-intensive firms related to gold production were driven more by the volatility of the equity markets than by the volatility of gold prices.
• MLPs receive tax treatment predicated on adhering to regulations, including that at least 90% of the entities’ revenues come from specified businesses, such as energy (in the U.S.)
* A Ponzi-like valuation theory (high, but potentially unsustainable distribution yields).
• No. There are no clear, hard lines separating infrastructure from other assets. Gray areas exist. Most infrastructure assets lack one or more of the seven elements, but they must contain many or most.
• A greenfield project is new, whereas a brownfield project is existing.
• Privatization
• Management fees typically range from 1.0% to 2.0% annually, in addition to carried interest of 10% to 20% over a preferred return of 8% paid at the exit of the fund or liquidation of specific investments.
• Private good because the cash generated can be privately received and owned.
brownfield project
that has a history of operations and may
have converted from a government asset into something
privately investable.
double
taxation is the application of income taxes twice:
taxation of profits at the corporate income tax level and
taxation of distributions at the individual income tax level.
downstream operations
focus on refining, distributing, and
marketing the oil and gas.
evergreen funds
or unlisted open-end fund, allow
investors to subscribe to or redeem from these funds on a
regular basis.
excludable good
is a good others can be prevented from
enjoying.
gates
are fund restrictions on investor withdrawals.
Greenfield project
Investable infrastructure can originate as a new, yet-to-beconstructed
project.
intangible assets
are economic resources that do not have a
physical form.
Intellectual property (IP)
is an intangible asset that can be
owned, such as copyrighted artwork.
investable infrastructure
is typically differentiated from
other assets with seven primary characteristics: (1) public
use, (2) monopolistic power, (3) government related, (4)
essential, (5) cash generating, (6) conducive to privatization
of control, and (7) capital intensive with long-term
horizons.
midstream operations
midstream MLPs—the largest of
the three segments—process, store, and transport energy and
tend to have little or no commodity price risk.
negative costs
refer not to the sign of the values but to the fact
that these are costs required to produce what was, in the
predigital era, the film’s negative image.
present value of growth opportunities (PVGO)
describes a high value assigned to an investment
based on the idea that the underlying assets offer exceptional
future income.
public-private partnership (PPP)
occurs when a private
sector party is retained to design, build, operate, or maintain a
public building (e.g., a hospital), often for a lease payment for
a prespecified period of time.