Four sovereign wealth funds on three continents announced allocation shifts toward AI infrastructure and domestic resource stakes in the span of eleven days, marking the most synchronized repositioning of state capital since the 2020 energy transition wave. Norway's $1.7 trillion Government Pension Fund Global increased exposure to data center REITs by $4.2 billion in Q4 2024. Canada launched a dedicated $6 billion mining fund targeting lithium and rare earth projects within its borders. Sarawak's $18 billion sovereign vehicle committed $900 million to hyperscale cloud facilities in Johor. Burkina Faso established a $1.2 billion fund to acquire minority stakes in seven foreign-operated gold mines, reclaiming economic participation after decades of concession-based extraction.
The moves share architecture. Each fund cited supply chain sovereignty and technology dependence as primary rationale, language absent from sovereign allocation memos as recently as 2022. Canada's new vehicle explicitly ties mining investment to defense industrial strategy, a doctrinal linkage that reflects NATO-aligned thinking on critical mineral access. Burkina Faso's fund structure includes automatic escalation clauses allowing the state to increase stakes to 51% if production targets are missed, a mechanism borrowed from Kazakhstan's oil sector playbook. Norway's data center exposure came through 22 discrete REIT purchases, avoiding single-asset concentration while securing claims on the physical layer underlying generative AI scaling. Sarawak's commitment includes power purchase agreements spanning 15 years, embedding the fund in regional energy arbitrage as compute demand grows.
The realignment matters because it redistributes infrastructure ownership away from private equity and toward state actors with indefinite hold periods. Data centers purchased by Norway will not face IRR pressure or exit timelines. Mining stakes acquired by Canada bypass venture-style financing entirely, changing the risk profile for junior explorers dependent on staged capital. Washington's simultaneous proposal to strip sovereign funds of U.S. tax exemptions on portfolio income creates a bifurcation: funds investing in domestic or allied infrastructure retain preferential treatment, while those holding passive U.S. equities face withholding. The policy asymmetry pushes non-U.S. sovereigns toward hard asset positions in their home jurisdictions, accelerating the shift already underway.
Allocators should watch three follow-on effects in the next 180 days. First, whether Australia and Chile announce parallel mining funds, completing the lithium triangle's sovereign enclosure. Second, the pricing dynamics in hyperscale data center sales, where sovereign bidders now compete with Blackstone and KKR without debt constraints. Third, the legislative path of the U.S. tax proposal, which if enacted by July 2025 would trigger an estimated $80 billion in sovereign reallocation out of U.S. equities. Singapore's GIC and Abu Dhabi's ADIA have not yet disclosed infrastructure pivots of comparable scale, but both funds historically move 12-18 months after Norway establishes a new allocation trend.
Burkina Faso's fund capitalization came from gold reserves, not budget appropriations, a financing model that only works at $2,650 per ounce and above.