You may have missed your window on this infrastructure trust’s share price
As the discount narrows to a fairer price, the potential upside has dwindled Markuz Jaffe
29 May 2025
Questor is The Telegraph’s stock-picking column, helping you decode the markets and offering insights on where to invest.
Investors after stable, inflation-linked returns backed by high quality counterparties could do worse than infrastructure. Sub-sectors of the asset class span social infrastructure, such as hospitals and schools, and more economically sensitive investments, such as power generation and transport.
More recently, the significant expansion in digital infrastructure, including data centres, towers and fibre, has captured headlines, driven by the explosion in data consumption globally.
One such access point is Pantheon Infrastructure (PINT), launched in late 2021 with the aim of offering a globally diversified portfolio of high-quality infrastructure assets, co-investing alongside leading private equity houses via individual deals selected by PINT’s manager. Since launch, the company has committed over £500m of investor capital across 13 investments.
PINT’s investment manager, Pantheon, has over 40 years of private markets investing experience, a global investment team and $71bn in discretionary assets under management across real assets, private equity and private credit, as at end-September 2024. This includes $23bn across over 230 private infrastructure investments, of which $4.5bn is invested across 56 private infrastructure co-investments – a significant resource benefitting PINT, despite the trust’s own modest size.
The portfolio is well diversified by sector, with almost half in digital infrastructure, a third in power and utilities and a quarter spread across renewables and energy efficiency, and transport and logistics.
It invests across Europe, North America and the UK, and enjoys a blend of revenue profiles – with the vast majority contracted, supported by almost a fifth in GDP-linked and regulated incomes. To further spread risk, the company makes use of an active currency hedging programme to help reduce portfolio valuation fluctuations due to FX movements.
PINT’s top investments by value highlight this diversification: Calpine, a principally gas-fired US independent power producer; Fudura, a Dutch provider of electricity infrastructure; Primafrio, a European temperature-controlled transportation and logistics firm; National Broadband Ireland, a network developer and operator for the nation; and National Gas, owner and operator of the UK’s sole gas transmission network.
Of these holdings, the most immediately attractive is Calpine, which is set to be bought by Constellation Energy Corporation (CEG). The deal, expected to complete later this year, will grant PINT a mix of CEG shares and cash, split 75pc and 25pc, respectively. While this has introduced some volatility into PINT’s portfolio valuation – the share price of CEG has ranged from a peak of around $350 to a low of $170 in 2025 alone – it also represents PINT’s first disposal, and a potentially significant exit from one of its top performing investments to date.
PINT targets a net asset value (Nav) total return of 8-10pc per annum, and declared dividends of 4.2p for FY24. Although dividend cover was relatively low for the year (0.7x), the manager expects this to improve as portfolio distributions continue to increase.
PINT’s method of accessing these deals via co-investing is a differentiator from peers and provides investors with a fee-efficient exposure to a basket of quality companies that stand to benefit from secular trends of digitisation, decarbonisation and deglobalisation. PINT itself charges a modest 1pc per annum management fee on the first £750m of net assets, with no performance or transaction fees. Additionally, the portfolio’s weighted average discount rate of 13.6pc as at end-December 2024 highlights the high level of return that the underlying businesses are expected to achieve based on their valuation modelling.
The company has a conservative balance sheet, with no debt drawn at the trust level. PINT’s £115m revolving credit facility provides liquidity but was undrawn at yearend and, combined with £24m in cash against outstanding investment commitments of £19m, marks a robust position for this strategy.

Currently a yield around 4% and the price up 20% since the start of the year, so currently not of interest for the Snowball
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