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Tracking Private Market Natural Resources Investments Through the Evolving Regulatory Environment

Written by Colin Devereaux | Jul 31, 2024

Recent months have seen temperatures rise between Exxon and large institutional LPs, namely CalPERS. The conversations are centered around board member votes and, more broadly, shareholder rights. While these factors don’t directly impact our Cobalt dataset, it’s a timely opportunity to analyze our LP base portfolio allocations to Natural Resource. 

For the analysis, we focus on the pace at which distributions are being made in that strategy across all geographies over the last 10 years. (distribution pace = distributions as a % of NAV).

Key Takeaways

The most evident trend in the chart is the steady downward trajectory throughout the 2020s, from a high of 23.5% in 2014 to the low of 11.6% in 2019. This mirrors the trend in the public markets in that timeframe, with the S&P Global Natural Resource Index peaking over 2900 in 2014 compared to a high of only 2500 throughout 2019. This reinforces that Natural Resource saw decreasing fortunes through the decade, even as many other industries thrived.

The trend continued to an even larger extent into 2020, with only 7.6% pacing throughout the year, the lowest since 2009. As COVID greatly impacted all markets earlier in that year, Natural Resources continued to struggle in the latter half as well with each individual quarter with all returning < 2.5%.

The span of 2021 - 2022 proved to be a strong bounce-back period, with 2022 returning a high of 32.8% in the timeframe. Although 2023 isn’t quite on pace to match that recent strong form, it should reach roughly 14% - 18% depending on the final Q4 numbers. That would fall in line with many of the average years of the 2010s.

Looking Ahead

The Natural Resource Index saw 3.7% growth in Q4 2023, so while not a 1-to-1 comparison to the trends seen over the past decade, it’s a sign we may see a healthy Q4 once numbers are finalized and posted.

The index has also been strong in 2024 thus far, so we should continue to see the 2020 dip in the above chart as an outlier in an otherwise strong recovery from the downturn throughout the 2010s.

The questions raised by this difference will be interesting to monitor over the next decade. The dynamic between LPs and large companies with regard to investment horizons and policies will continue to play out and factor into these investment trends moving forward.

 

This blog post is for informational purposes only. The information contained in this blog post is not legal, tax, or investment advice. FactSet does not endorse or recommend any investments and assumes no liability for any consequence relating directly or indirectly to any action or inaction taken based on the information contained in this article.