Gulf sovereign wealth funds deployed almost $26 billion across global assets in the March to May 2026 period — an investment acceleration that confounded predictions of caution amid regional geopolitical uncertainty and demonstrated the structural advantage that long-horizon sovereign capital holds in periods of elevated market risk. The five largest Gulf sovereign spenders treated volatility not as a reason to defer deployment but as a pricing opportunity — allocating capital into AI infrastructure, energy transition, healthcare, and global trade assets at prices that incorporated geopolitical risk premiums without fundamental deterioration in the underlying investment case. Abu Dhabi’s AD Ports Group anchored the infrastructure theme with its acquisition of CLI — Brazil’s leading agri-bulk port terminal operator — for more than AED 3 billion, marking the group’s most significant South American transaction and extending its global terminal network into one of the world’s most important agricultural commodity export corridors.
AD Ports and CLI: Entering the South American Agricultural Trade Corridor
CLI is Brazil’s leading operator of agri-bulk port terminals, handling the flow of soybeans, corn, sugar, and other agricultural commodities that have made Brazil one of the world’s most important agricultural exporters — second only to the United States in several key crop categories. For AD Ports, the CLI acquisition adds direct exposure to South American agricultural commodity export flows and extends its global terminal network into a region where it has had no previous presence. The strategic logic mirrors AD Ports’ broader network-building approach: acquiring productive port infrastructure across multiple geographies and commodity classes to build a globally diversified logistics platform that generates revenue independently of Gulf trade conditions and captures growth in global trade volumes across agriculture, energy, manufactured goods, and bulk materials.
Fortune Confirmed: Gulf Appetite for Global Investment Defied Western Predictions
Reports published in June 2026 noted that Western investors and analysts had predicted the Iran conflict and Hormuz disruptions would curtail Gulf appetite for international capital deployment, as domestic stability and wartime priorities diverted sovereign attention. The data has proved those predictions incorrect. Gulf funds have continued their international investment pace without interruption, with the $26 billion three-month figure reflecting the continuation of a deployment cadence established before the current regional conditions. For Gulf sovereign funds with 50-year investment horizons, near-term regional uncertainty — while real and consequential for certain portfolio segments — is a short-term factor that does not change the fundamental attractiveness of AI infrastructure, clean energy, agricultural logistics, and healthcare assets whose value accrues over decades rather than quarters.



