Until recently, sponsors investing in real assets sectors were slower to adopt continuation vehicles to deliver liquidity for their limited partners. Things are different today: sponsors are increasingly tapping the secondary market not only to generate liquidity solutions for their energy, real estate, and infrastructure assets, but also to achieve their long-term strategic objectives.
On August 18, 2025, Jefferies completed the three-part $3.1 billion sale of Altera Infrastructure, an energy portfolio company of Brookfield Asset Management. Learn how across 17 months, Jefferies lined up buyers in Malaysia, Greece, and the U.K..
Just two months into the new U.S. presidential administration, the conversation—and regulatory framework—around energy is shifting dramatically. Yet global energy trends unfold along much different trajectories and timelines than those governing politics. According to Pete Bowden, Jefferies’ Global Head of Industrial, Energy & Infrastructure Investment Banking, this is why most energy investors and leaders with
New innovations aimed at modernizing the grid are gaining traction—and one, in particular, is turning heads. Infravision’s drone-enabled power line stringing uses unmanned aerial vehicles to install power lines faster and more cost-effectively than traditional methods.
Jefferies’ Sustainability & Transition Team recently sat down with Pierre Friedlingstein, Professor and Chair in Mathematical Modeling of the Climate System at the University of Exeter to discuss what the latest data reveals about the trajectory of climate change.
There are opportunities to build a cleaner energy system beyond simply transitioning to renewables.
Jefferies Insights caught up with Greg Chitty and Conrad Gibbins, to discuss the current dealmaking and capital markets environment in oil and gas.
Though uncertainty abounds in Washington a look at recent presidential transitions may offer clues into how these shifts influence issues like climate, energy transition, and human capital.
Investors and governments are beginning to recognize the problems facing electricity grids, and significant expansions and investments may be on the horizon.