Ambitions to create what was billed as the UK’s largest infrastructure investment fund have been shelved following a backlash from key investors. The proposed vehicle, which was expected to channel substantial capital into long-term infrastructure assets, failed to secure sufficient backing after concerns were raised over its structure and strategy.
According to reports, several institutional investors questioned the fund’s governance arrangements and fee model, as well as the balance between risk and return in the current interest-rate environment. Some backers were also understood to be uneasy about the scale and timing of the launch, given market volatility and competing demands on capital.
The collapse of the plan is a setback for efforts to mobilise more private finance into UK infrastructure, including transport, energy and social assets. While individual managers are still raising capital for sector-specific and regional strategies, the failure of a flagship, market‑defining fund underlines the difficulty of aligning investor expectations around large, multi-asset platforms.
Market participants now expect sponsors to revisit fund terms and potentially pursue smaller, more targeted vehicles rather than a single, dominant pool. For contractors and developers, the episode highlights that while appetite for infrastructure exposure remains, access to large-scale private capital will continue to depend on investor confidence in governance, pricing and pipeline visibility.