Global Market: Sovereign wealth funds pivot to strategic investments as AI takes centre stage
Sovereign wealth funds are increasingly prioritising national strategic goals over pure financial returns, with artificial intelligence and semiconductors emerging as key investment areas. Backed by governments, these funds are making fewer but si...

Sovereign wealth funds ramp up AI and semiconductor bets as strategic priorities reshape global investing.
The report found that sovereign wealth funds, which collectively manage more than $15 trillion in assets, are playing an increasingly important role in financing artificial intelligence and semiconductor industries. Governments now view these sectors as strategic assets that are essential for long-term economic competitiveness and national security.
The study also highlighted a notable change in investment patterns. While the number of direct investments declined 17% from the previous reporting period to 391 transactions, the total value of those deals surged 91% to $404 billion compared with IE University's 2024 report. Reuters attributed the rise in spending to a growing preference for fewer but significantly larger investments.
Artificial intelligence emerged as the dominant investment theme. The AI-related transactions accounted for roughly one-third of the capital tracked in the study, with sovereign investors backing companies such as OpenAI, Databricks, and Stargate as they seek exposure to technologies expected to drive future economic growth.
Several high-profile AI funding rounds featured strong participation from sovereign wealth funds. Abu Dhabi-based MGX invested in OpenAI and also participated in funding for xAI alongside the Qatar Investment Authority and the Oman Investment Authority. Qatar Investment Authority and Singapore's GIC were also among the investors in Anthropic's $13 billion funding round.
The United States remained the largest destination for sovereign wealth fund investments, attracting $220.4 billion during the 18 months through December 2025, largely due to its leadership in artificial intelligence. Reuters noted that the figures likely represent only a portion of total activity because many sovereign fund investments are not publicly disclosed.
Among individual investors, energy-rich nations such as the Gulf states and Norway remained active participants, while Singapore's Temasek recorded the highest number of transactions, completing 71 deals during the period covered by the report.
The study also tracked the launch of 12 new sovereign wealth funds, including MGX as well as newly established funds in Ireland, Britain, Botswana, and Spain. The expansion underscores a broader global trend of governments creating state-backed investment vehicles to pursue strategic economic objectives and strengthen their international influence.
The findings suggest that sovereign wealth funds are evolving beyond their traditional role as long-term financial investors. As geopolitical competition intensifies and governments prioritise technological leadership and economic resilience, these funds are increasingly being deployed as instruments of national strategy, with AI and other critical sectors expected to remain key areas of investment, according to Reuters.
(Disclaimer: Recommendations, suggestions, views, and opinions given by experts are their own. These do not represent the views of the Economic Times.)
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