Kuwait Investment Authority reached $1.072 trillion in assets under management as of May 2026, becoming one of fewer than five sovereign wealth funds globally to breach the trillion-dollar threshold — and immediately signalled its strategic direction by joining as the first non-founder financial anchor in the Microsoft and BlackRock-backed AI Infrastructure Partnership, a $30 billion global initiative to build the next generation of AI compute, data centre, and digital infrastructure. KIA’s entry follows approximately $9 billion the fund has deployed into artificial intelligence and digital sector investments over the previous five years, split between $6 billion in broader digital investments and $3 billion specifically in AI.
The AI Infrastructure Partnership: What Kuwait’s Capital Is Backing
The Microsoft-BlackRock AI Infrastructure Partnership is structured as a large-scale capital programme to finance the data centres, electricity infrastructure, and computing capacity that AI model training and inference require at commercial scale — the physical layer beneath the software that most AI investment attention focuses on. For KIA, participation provides exposure to the fastest-growing capital expenditure cycle in the global technology industry; co-investment alongside two of the world’s most credible institutional capital allocators; and alignment with Kuwait’s long-term interest in ensuring sovereign capital participates in the infrastructure layer of the AI economy rather than purely in late-stage technology equity. Brookfield Asset Management’s $100 billion AI infrastructure programme also named KIA as a key participant, reinforcing the fund’s infrastructure-first investment thesis across multiple major programmes.
Goldman Sachs in Talks to Manage $10 Billion for KIA
Goldman Sachs is in active discussions to manage as much as $10 billion for Kuwait Investment Authority, channelling capital over several years into private equity, private credit, and infrastructure funds. The Goldman mandate, if confirmed, represents one of the largest individual asset manager relationships for KIA and reflects a broader trend of Gulf sovereign funds building structured relationships with global investment banks to access private market deal flow, co-investment opportunities, and specialist expertise that sovereign fund teams cannot maintain in-house at sufficient depth. Total KIA assets rose by approximately $22 billion in 2025 alone, reaching $1.002 trillion before further appreciation brought the May 2026 figure to $1.072 trillion.



