By Libby George
LONDON, July 10 (Reuters) – Shifting geopolitical alliances are pushing sovereign wealth funds to place greater emphasis on strategic national priorities ā from resilient infrastructure to ākey domestic industries ā alongside investment returns, a study released on Friday showed.
The study āby Spain-based IE University found sovereign wealth funds managing more than $15 trillion are playing a growing role in funding āartificial intelligence as governments increasingly treat AI and semiconductors as strategic assets.
“This fragmented world has had an impact,” said Javier CapapĆ©, editor of the report and director of sovereign wealth research at IE University. “Sovereign wealth funds are more and more used by governments to deploy national strategies, develop āstronger positions in the global ā value chains.”
The study also showed a shift towards larger deals. While the number of direct investments fell 17% from the previous reporting period to ā 391 transactions, total spending jumped 91% to $404 billion compared with the university’s 2024 report.
CapapĆ© said AI-related investments accounted for about one-third of the spending tracked by the study, with companies such as Stargate, āOpenAI āand Databricks attracting capital from sovereign investors with ālong-term investment horizons.
Recent deals include Abu āDhabi-based MGX’s backing of OpenAI, funding for xAI from MGX, the Qatar Investment Authority and the Oman Investment Authority, and participation by QIA and Singapore’s GIC in Anthropic’s $13 billion funding round.
The U.S. attracted the largest share of investment at $220.4 billion, helped by the strong focus on AI. However, CapapĆ© said the study, which tracked direct investments over the 18 months to āDecember 2025, captured only “the tip of the iceberg” because āmany sovereign fund investments are not publicly disclosed.
Energy-rich nations, āincluding Gulf states and Norway, were ābig spenders, but Singapore’s Temasek led by deal volume with 71 transactions.
The āreport tracked 12 new funds, including MGX āas well as funds āin Ireland, Britain, Botswana and Spain. CapapĆ© said the trend reflected growing interest in using state capital to pursue strategic investments and expand influence abroad.
“Non-market factors are having āmore importance than … in āany period since the end of the Cold War,” CapapĆ© said. “We are entering into āa new paradigm, and sovereign wealth funds have been part of that āchange.”
(Reporting by Libby George. Editing by Mark Potter)
