No, this isn’t a Batman adventure, but rather a post explaining the Brookfield companies. Brookfield Corporation is huge. With over 180,000 employees in 30+ countries, it manages more than $750B in assets invested in its various businesses. Brookfield companies operate in different industries, for example, asset management, renewable energy, reinsurance, and infrastructure (with tickers including BIP, BEP, BAM, etc.). They can be great investments, as long as you understand which is which!
Many investors have been excited about Brookfield’s diversification, its smart business model, and its ability to thrive for more than a century while paying generous dividends and providing excellent total returns. Others turned away due to Brookfield’s complex structure.
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Why so complex?
Starting as the San Paolo Tramway, Light and Power Company in 1899, the company has diversified into new activities. Along the way, it spun off these new business segments as separate companies. The mothership, the parent company now called Brookfield Corporation, owns part of or all of these Brookfield family companies. Investors can buy stock in any of the Brookfield companies that are publicly traded, or buy shares of the parent, Brookfield Corporation, which itself owns a piece of all the others.
What Brookfield does
Brookfield Corp. (BN) is an alternative asset manager. It focuses on what’s called alternative assets rather than classic assets such as equities (stocks), fixed income (bonds, preferred shares), or cash (money market funds). Alternative assets are long-life, high-quality assets including hydroelectricity plants, wind and solar farms, toll roads, pipelines, railroads, data centers, healthcare facilities, etc.
Brookfield expertise
Investing and managing alternative assets requires unique expertise. While each Brookfield company operates in different industries, they all share many characteristics. Most of their projects and investments:
- Are large and complex.
- Require patient money, i.e., money must remain invested for decades to generate substantial cash flow.
- Perform well over time.
- Relate to assets not considered liquid, meaning that they cannot be sold quickly and easily.
- Are not greatly affected by economic cycles. They tend to be recession resistant.
Diversification
Brookfield assets are managed through different companies owned or partly owned by Brookfield Corp. The profits BN makes come from different types of assets as shown below.
With asset types having different risk profiles and strategies, each one contributes to overall diversification and reduced volatility.
What’s in it for investors?
Investing in alternative assets is a great way to diversify a portfolio. Usually, the returns on such investments aren’t determined by what’s happening on the stock market. You can expect them to generate about 5-7% above inflation over long periods.
The problem for a retail investor is quite simple: it’s virtually impossible to buy a piece of a bridge or a railroad. This is where Brookfield comes into play. Investing in Brookfield Corp. (BN) is like investing in your own “alternative asset fund”.
The Brookfield companies
Brookfield manages assets through seven companies in the Brookfield family and one standalone business.
Brookfield Asset Management (BAM)
BAM is an asset-light alternative asset manager. It doesn’t have many assets but rather manages funds coming from pension plans and other institutional and retail investors. BAM manages the funds and establishes strategies. It makes money by charging fees on its assets under management (AUM). The more money it raises for investments, the more its earnings grow.
Brookfield Corporation (BN)
As the parent company, BN owns part of the other Brookfield companies. It’s also a heavy-asset manager; it not only does the asset-light manager’s job (strategy + earning fees on AUM), but also contributes with its own assets. BN can benefit from its own strategies, sell those assets for a profit in the future, and reallocate the proceeds into new projects or undervalued assets. This is known as asset recycling.
BN has $60B invested in public holdings (BEP, BIP, BBU, BAM, BNRE) and $78B invested in private holdings.
Brookfield Renewable (BEP)
BEP operates one of the world’s largest publicly traded renewable power platforms. Its portfolio consists of approximately 33000 MW of capacity and over 7,000 generating facilities in North America, South America, Europe, and Asia. The company is an experienced global owner and operator of hydroelectric, wind, solar, distributed generation, and storage facilities. Been concerned about renewable energy companies not getting a lot of love lately? See What’s happening with renewables?
Brookfield Infrastructure (BIP)
BPI is one of the largest owners and operators of critical and diverse global infrastructure networks. It operates four segments:
- Utilities: electricity and gas connections
- Transport: rail operations, toll roads, terminals, and export facilities
- Midstream: pipelines, processing, storage
- Data infrastructure: multi-purpose towers, fiber optic cable, data centers
BIP is well diversified with operations in the Americas (69% of assets), Asia Pacific (14%), and Europe (17%).
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Brookfield Business Partners (BBU)
BBU is a global business services and industrial company focused on owning and operating high-quality providers of essential products and services. Their operations are diversified across the industrial, infrastructure services, and business services sectors.
This is the smallest of the Brookfield kids and potentially the least interesting in my opinion, in part because of its lack of dividend growth. BBU goes after public businesses and acquires them to convert them into private companies.
Brookfield Reinsurance Ltd (BNRE)
Brookfield Reinsurance offers a broad range of insurance products and services to individuals and institutions, including life insurance and annuities, health, personal and commercial property, and casualty insurance. It’s expanding in the U.S. with the announcement of a $1.1B acquisition of Argo Group International Holdings in February 2023. BNRE is a young company. It will take to analyze how it evolves.
Brookfield Property Group (Private)
This private company has a portfolio of $276B in assets invested in housing, logistics (industrial), hospitality, science & innovation, offices, and retail. The portfolio is diversified across many industries and spread across five continents.
In addition to these companies, Brookfield acquired a majority interest in Oaktree, which continues to operate as a standalone business. Brookfield and Oaktree managed a credit portfolio worth $157B with a contrarian, value-oriented and risk-managed approach to protecting capital.
Ownership and stock symbols
Below, you see the asset types, the Brookfield company that manages them, the percentage of ownership the parent BN company has in each company, and the different stock symbols for each company.
In closing
Brookfield has a complex structure and opaque business models that make it hard to understand. Some of its companies (BN, BIP, and BEP) have sizeable debt but with their cash and assets on hand, debt repayment hasn’t been a problem. In my opinion, the most interesting investments today are BN, BAM, BIP, and BEP. Listen to the following podcasts for recent results:
If something major happens to BN, it likely affects BAM, BIP, and BEP so holding all of them isn’t advisable. Since BN, the parent, has a stake in many industries, investing in it is like a mini-ETF.
[…] In focus this week is Brookfield Infrastructure (BIP / BIPC), one of the largest owners and operators of critical global infrastructure networks. BIP assets facilitate the movement and storage of energy, water, freight, passengers, and data. It’s part of the Brookfield family of companies. […]