This research paper examines the structural transformation of sovereign wealth funds (SWFs) from passive institutional investors into strategically oriented instruments of national economic and geopolitical policy. The study analyzes how geopolitical fragmentation, technological competition, sanctions regimes, energy security concerns, and supply-chain disruptions have reshaped sovereign capital allocation patterns between 2008 and 2025. Using a mixed-method research framework combining quantitative investment flow analysis and qualitative policy assessment, the paper evaluates sovereign investment behavior across major sovereign wealth funds including those from Norway, China, the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC), Singapore, and emerging economies. The findings indicate a significant increase in sovereign investments targeting strategic sectors such as semiconductors, artificial intelligence, energy transition infrastructure, critical minerals, logistics networks, and domestic industrial ecosystems. The study introduces the Strategic Sovereign Investment Index (SSII) as an analytical framework to evaluate the strategic orientation of sovereign wealth funds across different geopolitical and institutional environments. The research concludes that sovereign capital is increasingly guided by national resilience, technological sovereignty, industrial competitiveness, and geopolitical alignment alongside traditional financial return objectives. The paper contributes to contemporary literature on sovereign investing, geopolitical finance, state capitalism, and global financial fragmentation by demonstrating how national interests are increasingly redefining global capital investment flows.
ASISH DASH (Fri,) studied this question.