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Sovereign investors with $29 trillion pivot to energy assets, flag dollar fears

By Thomson Reuters Jun 28, 2026 | 6:07 PM

By Libby George

LONDON, June 29 (Reuters) – Sovereign wealth funds and central banks managing $29 trillion in assets are turning to energy assets, and raising concerns about the dollar, in a portfolio reassessment driven by unprecedented geopolitical shifts, according ​to an Invesco survey published on Monday.

The survey of 90 sovereign wealth ‌funds and 54 central banks showed an increasing focus on diversification, and investment portfolios that can “take a hit and still hold it together” amid trade tariffs, closed shipping channels and wars in Ukraine and the Middle East.

Some 80% of those polled said energy security and energy transition infrastructure were the most ‌credible ​investments for making their portfolios more resilient, and infrastructure ⁠reached 9% of sovereign wealth fund ⁠assets in 2026.

The race to build energy-hungry AI infrastructure added to the appeal, the report by the global investment management firm found.

“In a world of inflation shocks, geopolitical fragmentation and more concentrated markets, investors are rethinking old assumptions about diversification ​and redesigning portfolios to withstand a wider range of outcomes,” Invesco head of research Benjamin Jones said.

“Resilience is becoming a hard requirement, not a nice-to-have.”

The positive bond-equity correlation ⁠in recent years has also eroded reliance on ⁠bonds for diversification, with more focusing on liquidity and real assets.

DOLLAR, ​DEBT, AND RISK

Concerns about the dollar were “widespread and deepening,” and 61% of central banks polled ​also said that U.S. debt levels negatively impact the dollar’s long-term position ‌as a reserve asset, up from 20% in 2024.

While the U.S.-Israeli war with Iran has helped lift the dollar 3% this year, analysts say U.S. policy uncertainty and high debt mean the currency could weaken over the long term.

The lack of a credible dollar ⁠alternative is likely to make any shift away from it incremental, but 29% of those in the Invesco survey said the dollar’s reserve-currency status will be weaker in five years, ⁠up from 12% in 2022.

Several ‌institutions also reported reviewing their reliance on U.S.-based custodians, counterparties ⁠and clearing infrastructure due to geopolitical tensions, Invesco said.

One European central ​bank said ‌it had already replaced its U.S. custodian. A Latin American ​central bank ⁠said it was setting up new non-U.S. custodial relationships to prepare for a “worst-case scenario.”

But one central bank respondent said any such move was fraught: “This act in and of itself could be interpreted as hostile by the U.S.”

One-third of those polled meanwhile said they intended to boost gold holdings as part of the diversification trend.

(Reporting by Libby George; Editing by Dhara ​Ranasinghe and Tomasz Janowski)