The world's largest capital allocators are rewiring portfolios for a fragmented world, betting on energy and hedging against the dollar.
The world's largest capital allocators are rewiring portfolios for a fragmented world, betting on energy and hedging against the dollar.

Eighty percent of sovereign wealth funds and central banks managing $29 trillion in assets are turning to energy security and transition infrastructure as the most credible hedge against geopolitical fragmentation, according to an Invesco survey published Monday.
"Resilience is becoming a hard requirement, not a nice-to-have," Benjamin Jones, head of research at Invesco, said.
The survey of 90 sovereign wealth funds and 54 central banks found infrastructure allocations reached 9 percent of sovereign fund assets in 2026. Separately, 61 percent of central banks said rising US debt levels are eroding the dollar's long-term standing as a reserve currency. The reassessment comes as trade tariffs, closed shipping channels and wars in Ukraine and the Middle East force a portfolio rethink.
The shift carries implications for global capital flows. If sovereign investors reduce dollar exposure while increasing energy infrastructure allocations, US Treasuries could face structural demand headwinds while energy equities and commodities see sustained institutional inflows — a rotation that could reshape cross-asset correlations for years.
The positive bond-equity correlation in recent years has eroded the traditional diversification benefit of holding government bonds, pushing sovereign funds toward real assets. Infrastructure now accounts for 9 percent of sovereign wealth fund portfolios, a share that has climbed as funds seek inflation-hedging properties that fixed income no longer reliably provides.
The race to build energy-hungry AI data centers has added to the appeal of energy infrastructure. The American Society of Civil Engineers estimates the US alone needs roughly $2 trillion in energy infrastructure investment over the next decade, with a focus on grid resilience. Energy projects in the US routinely run 15 percent to 20 percent over budget, a gap that project sponsors say requires new delivery models combining digital automation with front-end co-design.
Dollar Reserve Status Under Scrutiny
The dollar concern marks a notable shift. While central banks have gradually diversified reserves for years, the 61 percent share citing US fiscal sustainability as a negative for the greenback is among the highest recorded in Invesco's survey history. The last time a comparable share of reserve managers flagged dollar risks was during the 2020 debt-spike period, preceding a 6 percent decline in the DXY over the subsequent 12 months.
Energy Infrastructure as the New Core Holding
For sovereign funds, the pivot to energy is both defensive and structural. The same forces driving portfolio reassessment — supply chain fragmentation, tariff uncertainty, military conflict — are also creating direct investment opportunities in LNG terminals, grid modernization and nuclear projects. The US Department of Energy under the Trump administration has preserved more than 17 gigawatts of coal-fired generation capacity in 2025 alone, a sign that energy security now takes priority over the pace of decarbonization in current policy.
The survey suggests sovereign investors view energy infrastructure not as a tactical allocation but as a long-term portfolio anchor. "In a world of inflation shocks, geopolitical fragmentation and more concentrated markets, investors are rethinking old assumptions about diversification," Jones said.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.