Talk:Sovereign wealth fund
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| The content of Sovereign investment fund was merged into Sovereign wealth fund on 11 January 2018. The former page's history now serves to provide attribution for that content in the latter page, and it must not be deleted as long as the latter page exists. For the discussion at that location, see its talk page. |
Flag
editPlease be advised that flag next to the United Arab Emirates (Dubai World) is incorrect. That flag is acctually the flag of the Kingdom of Bahrain.
Texas PSF missing from table
editArticle body talks about Texas PSF as an early SWF and links to a page that suggests PSF is still actively a SWF with US$48 billion under management as of 2020, but PSF is missing from the table. Should it be present? 2600:1700:4636:0:5146:A1B2:AEF4:44A7 (talk) 23:37, 14 December 2023 (UTC)
List Inclusion
editAIMCo (Alberta Investment Management Corporation) is not considered a sovereign wealth fund. While AIMCo manages a significant amount of assets on behalf of Alberta's government and public sector entities, it doesn't fit the strict definition of a sovereign wealth fund.
Sovereign wealth funds are typically established to invest surpluses from a country or natural resource revenues. AIMCo, on the other hand, is primarily focused on managing the assets of pension plans, endowments, and Provincial government funds. AIMco is not permitted to operate outside of 1 Canadian Province.
Sovereign wealth funds are typically owned by the government. AIMCo is not. Exit2DOS2000 (talk) 20:45, 9 September 2024 (UTC)
COI edit request: U.S. public support for an AI sovereign wealth fund
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I have a paid consulting relationship with Verasight, so per WP:COI I am proposing this wording for editors to consider rather than editing the article directly.
In the “Nature and purpose” discussion of AI-related sovereign wealth funds, I propose adding:
“Reporting on a June 2026 Verasight survey, CNBC and Fast Company said that 69% of Americans supported a proposal requiring AI companies to transfer half their stock to a public sovereign wealth fund.[1][2]”
The full survey included 1,690 U.S. adults. The stock-transfer question used a split-ballot design; the reported 69% result came from the unnamed-sponsor arm. The underlying survey material is available through the Verasight Data Library. I defer to editors on wording, placement and due weight. SurveyDataNotes (talk) 18:08, 13 July 2026 (UTC) SurveyDataNotes (talk) 18:08, 13 July 2026 (UTC)
- ↑ Lee, Justina (July 12, 2026). "Majority of U.S. workers support an AI wealth fund as tech layoffs surge, survey finds". CNBC. Retrieved July 13, 2026.
- ↑ Bregel, Sarah (July 13, 2026). "Should AI companies be 'forced' to give half their stock to the public? Most Americans say yes". Fast Company. Retrieved July 13, 2026.