Access to the World’s Leading Sovereign Wealth Funds
This specialized dataset provides direct visibility into the global sovereign wealth fund landscape. It covers state-owned investment funds across every major region, representing the world’s most influential pools of long-term capital.
Institutional-Grade Insight for Professional Use
Developed from verified and structured research, this collection consolidates sovereign wealth fund profiles, key executives, governance details, and strategic investment mandates. Each profile is organized to support informed outreach, market analysis, and institutional engagement.
Why It Matters
Sovereign Wealth Funds collectively manage over 10 trillion USD in global assets and are among the most powerful allocators in infrastructure, public markets, private equity, venture capital, and national strategic industries. These institutions are long-term, stable investors that deploy capital across cycles and geopolitical environments. Access to verified SWF information is essential for fund managers, advisors, and developers seeking global partnerships.
🌍 Global Sovereign Wealth Fund Database
Your Complete Gateway to Government-Backed Institutional Capital
Gain structured access to the world’s state-owned investment institutions across North America, Europe, the Middle East, Asia, Africa, and Latin America.
This database provides a clear understanding of each fund’s origin, mandate, investment focus, governance structure, and capital allocation priorities.
Why It Matters
Sovereign Wealth Funds continue to expand their global footprint. They actively invest in:
• Real estate, infrastructure, energy transition, and industrial development
• Private equity, venture capital, strategic innovation, and national growth initiatives
• Stabilization programs, fiscal management, and future generation savings mechanisms
These funds influence global capital flows and are critical strategic partners for large-scale projects.
What Is Included
🌐 Profiles of 76 Sovereign Wealth Funds worldwide
👤 Identification of executives, leadership structures, and governance bodies
🏛️ Detailed fund mandates, establishment history, and strategic focus areas
📩 Official websites, corporate contact channels, and institutional communications paths
Ideal For
Fund Managers, Developers, Government Relations Teams, Advisors, Strategic Consultants, and Institutional Market Participants
Format
Excel (.xlsx)
Delivery
Manually delivered via email within 24 hours of purchase
Payment
PayPal or Credit Card via secure checkout.
No refunds on database products.

Key Insights from My Proprietary Sovereign Wealth Fund Database
After reviewing my proprietary Sovereign Wealth Fund (SWF) database, I have outlined high level insights into how state owned institutional capital is positioning for 2026, where the largest sovereign investors are deploying capital, and why these entities remain the most influential global allocators in real assets, private markets, and strategic sectors worldwide.
🌍 Direct Access to the World’s Most Powerful Sovereign Wealth Funds
These curated datasets provide structured, verified intelligence on leading sovereign investment authorities across the Middle East, Asia, Europe, and key global financial hubs. The funds included manage trillions of dollars on behalf of national governments and are active participants in private equity, infrastructure, technology, and large scale real asset transactions.
🏛 Institutional Grade Intelligence Designed for Professional Use
Built from verified public disclosures, regulatory filings, annual reports, and sector specific research, each profile includes detailed attributes that support robust investor targeting. This includes governance structures, investment mandates, sector appetite, private market preferences, and global deployment strategies. These insights allow fundraisers, advisors, asset managers, and developers to engage sovereign institutions with clarity and precision.
Why Sovereign Wealth Funds Matter
Sovereign Wealth Funds collectively manage more than ten trillion dollars in state controlled assets. Their influence spans global markets because they invest with a multi generational perspective, maintain substantial liquidity, and deploy strategic capital into transformative industries. SWFs have increasingly become direct investors, preferring co investment opportunities, strategic partnerships, and long term real asset positions.
🌐 The Global Sovereign Wealth Fund Investor Database
Your High Level Guide to the World’s Most Strategic State Investors
Gain structured insights into the investment direction, strategic priorities, and sector appetite of the major sovereign wealth funds across the GCC, Asia, Europe, and North America. This consolidated database shows trends to potentially capture how SWFs are allocating capital as they plan toward 2026 and beyond.
🌎 Regional Overview and Allocation Priorities
Middle East and GCC Sovereign Wealth Funds
Sovereign investors across the GCC remain among the most globally active and strategically influential allocators. Their mandates combine national development requirements with disciplined, international return generation. Current deployment patterns reflect a strengthened commitment to real asset growth, economic diversification, and long horizon value creation.
Key Allocation Themes
• Real Estate and Commercial Property
GCC sovereign funds continue to allocate significantly to real estate across domestic and international markets. Activity spans commercial assets, logistics platforms, hospitality, mixed use urban districts, and income producing property strategies.
• Tourism, Urban Development, and Giga Projects
Large scale national transformation projects remain a defining investment pillar. These include new cities, cultural districts, tourism ecosystems, and strategic national assets.
• Infrastructure, Logistics, and Critical Systems
Infrastructure remains central to sovereign priorities. Core focus areas include aviation, ports, utilities, water, telecom networks, transportation corridors, and industrial logistics.
• Renewable Energy, Clean Power, and Environmental Sustainability
GCC funds are accelerating investment in solar, wind, hydrogen, water systems, and environmental services. These are tied to both national net zero strategies and global climate aligned investments.
• Technology, Digital Infrastructure, and Advanced Manufacturing
Technology continues to expand within sovereign portfolios, covering fintech, AI, semiconductors, cybersecurity, robotics, cloud platforms, and digital connectivity. Advanced manufacturing is gaining momentum as countries push to develop local industrial capabilities.
• Healthcare, Education, and Social Infrastructure
Healthcare systems, medical facilities, diagnostics, and education platforms remain priority areas, supporting national resilience and long term human capital development.
Strategic Positioning
Middle East sovereign wealth funds continue to pursue a dual strategy:
• Domestic: Strengthening national economies through real assets, local industry, and infrastructure.
• Global: Active diversification into international private equity, real estate, technology, and strategic long term themes.
Asian Sovereign Investors
Funds in Singapore, China, and Korea remain heavily involved in technology, global private equity, and strategic infrastructure. They prioritize innovation led sectors, thematic investment platforms, and long term geopolitical alignment strategies.
European and Other State Funds
These funds maintain a conservative orientation with a strong emphasis on capital preservation. European SWFs continue to shape global ESG standards and back sustainable infrastructure, green technologies, and climate transition initiatives.
🔍 Strategic Themes for 2026
Across the full set of sovereign wealth funds analyzed, several consistent themes guide their deployment strategies.
🏗 Infrastructure and National Development
SWFs continue to prioritize long horizon assets that deliver stable cash flows, including transportation, airports, seaports, utilities, district cooling, data infrastructure, and digital connectivity.
📈 Private Equity and Global Growth
Many funds have expanded their private market programs, increasing direct investments and co investments. Preferred sectors include technology, advanced industries, financial services, healthcare, and scalable consumer platforms.
♻ Renewables, Energy Transition, and Climate Investments
Energy transition capital remains a dominant priority. Key investment targets include:
• Solar, wind, and hydrogen projects
• Carbon capture and storage
• Grid modernization
• Sustainable mobility
• Water management and desalination
🏢 Real Estate, Tourism, and Urban Development
SWFs continue to shape global real estate markets. They target:
• Hospitality and tourism platforms
• Prime commercial assets
• Logistics and industrial real estate
• Housing and master planned developments
🤝 Co Investment, Partnerships, and Global Alliances
Sovereign funds increasingly favor partnership structures that provide influence, knowledge transfer, and long term collaboration. Many use joint ventures, strategic alliances, and direct deals to increase control and enhance returns.
Unmatched Access to 1,203 Senior Decision Makers Across Global Sovereign Wealth Funds
The database includes 1,203 key contacts drawn from the leadership and investment divisions of the world’s most influential sovereign wealth funds. These individuals represent some of the most difficult to reach stakeholders in global finance. The roles covered include Managing Directors, Heads of Real Estate, Heads of Private Equity, Vice Presidents, Senior Associates, ESG Directors, Portfolio Strategy leaders, regional Heads of EMEA and APAC, and multiple Board level positions.
This breadth of access enables direct engagement with professionals responsible for global co-investments, fund allocations, strategic asset deployment, real estate investments, and long range portfolio design. Having visibility into this level of seniority provides a unique advantage for managers, advisors, and developers seeking institutional grade capital relationships that are normally inaccessible.
📘 What The SWF Database Contains
• High level analysis of 76 leading sovereign wealth funds
• Governance structures and oversight entities
• Investment strategy, sector appetite, and mandate focus
• Global deployment trends toward 2026
• Private equity, real estate, and infrastructure priorities
• Emerging strategic themes across regions
• Partnership preferences and co investment behavior
• A curated directory of 1,203 senior decision makers, covering leadership, investment committees, and asset class specialists across the global sovereign wealth system
Ideal for: Fund Managers, Strategic Advisors, Developers, Investment Consultants, and Placement Agents
Format: Structured analytical report for professional use
Delivery: Provided via email within 24 hours
For a detailed description of the Global Sovereign Wealth Fund Database see the YouTube Video Below.
Global Sovereign Wealth Fund Landscape 2026: A Spotlight on 40 Leading Institutions Included in the SWF Intelligence Database
Sovereign wealth funds represent some of the most influential capital allocators in the world, directing trillions into private equity, venture capital, infrastructure, credit, technology, and strategic national development. The SWF Intelligence Database provides a curated collection of high quality profiles that illustrate the scope, scale, and mandate diversity of these institutions. Below is a structured preview highlighting the nature of the firms included.
1. North American Sovereign Wealth Funds
Summary: This segment features government backed investment entities with mandates focused on long term wealth preservation, resource stabilization, and diversified growth. They are among the most transparent and globally active sovereign funds.
| Fund Name | Country | AUM (USD millions) | Summary |
|---|---|---|---|
| Alaska Permanent Fund Corporation | United States | 78,855 | One of the oldest and largest resource based sovereign funds with a diversified global investment strategy. |
| Alberta Heritage Savings Trust Fund | Canada | 21,183 | Long term savings vehicle supporting provincial financial stability and program funding. |
| Oregon Short Term Fund | United States | 35,000 | State managed pool supporting liquidity and capital preservation across government accounts. |
| North Dakota Legacy Fund | United States | 10,709 | Constitutionally established from energy revenues and managed by the State Investment Board for long term growth. |
2. Middle East and Gulf Region Sovereign Wealth Funds
Summary: The region holds a disproportionate share of very large sovereign capital pools and purpose-built national investment platforms. These institutions combine intergenerational savings, national diversification mandates, strategic direct investments, and systematic global allocation programs. The sample below is representative of the breadth and depth of Middle Eastern sovereign and state investment authorities included in the database, from century-scale reserve managers to recently established, mandate-driven platforms. This concentration makes the database exceptionally valuable for placement agents, GPs, and corporate strategists seeking large-ticket institutional partners.
Representative Table: Middle East and North Africa Funds (sample from database)
| Fund (official name) | Country | AUM (USD millions) | Core mandate / notable attributes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Abu Dhabi Investment Authority (ADIA) | United Arab Emirates | 993,000 | Long-term, global multi asset investor; early proponent of governance standards and climate-aligned working groups. |
| Public Investment Fund (PIF) | Saudi Arabia | 925,000 | Strategic national transformation vehicle; authoritative sponsor of Vision 2030 and large direct investments. |
| Kuwait Investment Authority (KIA) | Kuwait | 923,450 | Oldest sovereign wealth fund; manages General Reserve and Future Generations Fund for intergenerational wealth preservation. |
| Investment Corporation of Dubai (ICD) | United Arab Emirates | 1,252,997 | Principal holding company for Dubai government assets across finance, aviation, real estate, and industry. |
| Qatar Investment Authority (QIA) | Qatar | 510,000 | Large global diversification mandate with strategic sector exposure and state-level oversight. |
| Mubadala Investment Company | United Arab Emirates | 302,000 | Integrated investment platform formed by merging MDC and IPIC; focus on direct investments across technology, energy, aerospace and industry. |
| ADQ | United Arab Emirates | 249,000 | Consolidated Abu Dhabi non-oil operating assets; investor role to accelerate non-oil economic diversification. |
| SAFE Investment Company (relevant Chinese entity with ME presence) | China | 9,258,000 | Major global reserve manager with international offices including in the region; included in database for strategic relevance to ME capital flows. |
| Abu Dhabi Investment Council (ADIC) | United Arab Emirates | 123,000 | Historically a separate Abu Dhabi sovereign investor; now investments are captured within Mubadala structures while preserving distinct portfolios in the dataset. |
| Emirates Investment Authority (EIA) | United Arab Emirates | 91,000 | Federal level sovereign investor representing the UAE states; manages strategic holdings and diversified assets. |
| Kuwait Investment Office / Future Generations Fund (KIA components summarized) | Kuwait | see KIA above | Component funds reflected in KIA consolidated entry; dataset includes breakdowns where published. |
| Bahrain Mumtalakat Holding Company | Bahrain | 6,694 | Commercial holding company managing Bahrain’s principal state assets and driving diversification. |
| Oman Investment Authority (OIA) | Oman | 50,000 | Consolidated national investment arm created by merging SGRF and OIF; mission includes domestic development and strategic international investments. |
| Future Fund Oman | Oman | 2,000 | Newer platform originating from OIA to stimulate investment partnerships and economic diversification. |
| Sovereign Fund of Egypt | Egypt | 11,959 | National fund for asset rehabilitation, co investments, and attracting private capital into strategic sectors within Egypt. |
3. European Sovereign and Strategic Investment Funds
Summary: Europe’s sovereign and strategic investment funds are typically focused on national competitiveness, industrial policy, infrastructure, and minority stakes in strategic enterprises.
| Fund Name | Country | AUM (USD millions) | Summary |
|---|---|---|---|
| CDP Equity | Italy | 10,214 | Government backed investor acquiring stakes in nationally significant companies with strong growth potential. |
| Solidium | Finland | 7,674 | Strategic investor holding core national industries with an objective to enhance long term value. |
| Ireland Strategic Investment Fund | Ireland | 9,000 | State owned development fund with a mandate to support economic activity and national investment priorities. |
| UK National Fund | United Kingdom | 1,000 | Established to stabilize and support government financial commitments over the long term. |
| UK Green Investment Bank (legacy reference) | United Kingdom | Not listed | Initially government owned platform supporting national decarbonization efforts. |
4. Asian Sovereign Wealth Funds
Summary: Asia hosts some of the fastest growing sovereign investment platforms. These funds often target infrastructure, national competitiveness, industrial digitalization, and cross border capital partnerships.
| Fund Name | Country | AUM (USD millions) | Summary |
|---|---|---|---|
| China Investment Corporation | China | 1,210,000 | One of the world’s largest sovereign investors with a diversified global portfolio. |
| China Social Security Fund | China | 493,236 | National reserve fund supporting the long term stability of the social security system. |
| Government of Singapore Investment Corporation | Singapore | 488,000 | Globally diversified investor with established leadership in private markets and alternative assets. |
| Hong Kong Investment Corporation | Hong Kong | 62,000 | Newly structured multi fund platform targeting strategic technologies and regional growth opportunities. |
| Indonesia Investment Authority | Indonesia | 116,866,344 | National investment institution focused on infrastructure financing and international partnerships. |
| Korea Investment Corporation | South Korea | 169,000 | Global sovereign investor operating across public and private markets. |
| State Capital Investment Corporation | Vietnam | 4,272 | State investment management entity overseeing state owned enterprises and national strategic sectors. |
5. African and Frontier Market Sovereign Investment Bodies
Summary: Emerging market sovereign funds increasingly target economic transformation, diversification, and long term stability. Many operate with dual mandates combining commercial returns with national development objectives.
| Fund Name | Country | AUM (USD millions) | Summary |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sovereign Fund of Egypt | Egypt | 11,200 | Diversified national fund attracting foreign investment into infrastructure, real assets, and strategic sectors. |
| Ghana Infrastructure Investment Fund | Ghana | 3,258 | Institutionally governed platform financing energy, transportation, and industrial projects. |
| Nigeria Sovereign Investment Authority | Nigeria | 27,000 | Structured across stabilization, future generations, and infrastructure funds. |
| Libya Investment Authority | Libya | 67,500 | One of Africa’s largest sovereign funds managing international investments. |
| Mauritius Investment Corporation | Mauritius | Not listed | Investment arm stabilizing the national economy and supporting strategic industries. |
6. Sovereign Wealth Funds in Small and High Income States
Summary: Smaller nations often operate highly specialized funds directed at stability, future generations, or targeted economic goals.
| Fund Name | Country | AUM (USD millions) | Summary |
|---|---|---|---|
| Liechtenstein Foundation | Liechtenstein | 3,800 | National wealth management entity. |
| Luxembourg Intergenerational Fund | Luxembourg | 17,800 | Designed to ensure long term financial security for future generations. |
| Monaco Constitutional Reserve Fund | Monaco | 6,500 | State reserve supporting economic stability and national financial resilience. |
| Timor-Leste Petroleum Fund | Timor-Leste | 16,841 | Resource based fund supporting long term economic sustainability. |
7. State Owned Investment Authorities with Strategic Mandates
Summary: Several institutions operate at the intersection of sovereign fund activity and national development strategy, often acting as catalysts for industrial and technological transformation.
| Fund Name | Country | AUM (USD millions) | Summary |
|---|---|---|---|
| Russian Direct Investment Fund | Russia | 10,000 | Co investment platform partnering with global institutions in strategic sectors. |
| Kazakhstan National Fund | Kazakhstan | 55,500 | Resource derived fund stabilizing the national budget and supporting economic reform. |
| Azerbaijan Investment Holding | Azerbaijan | Not listed | Oversees state owned enterprises and long term national asset performance. |
| Azerbaijan Oil Fund | Azerbaijan | 54,552 | Petroleum based wealth fund supporting intergenerational stability. |
| Mongolia Future Heritage Fund | Mongolia | Not listed | Designed to manage resource wealth for future generations. |
December 2025 – ✍️ Written by Andrew Thomas – The Investors Link
🔗 Explore my exclusive Sovereign Wealth Fund Database, a premium resource designed for fund managers and corporate leaders seeking access to global state capital, strategic co investment partners, and long horizon institutional allocators.
