MGX has raised $49 billion for one of the biggest ever funds dedicated to artificial intelligence deals, propelling the two-year-old Abu Dhabi firm into the ranks of the most consequential investors in the sector globally.

The Emirati firm attracted investments from a group of major institutional and private investors from the Middle East, North America, Asia, and Europe, according to a statement on Wednesday. The total money raised came in above a target of $45 billion, it said.

MGX has already deployed capital from the new fund, which closed in recent weeks, Bloomberg News reported last week. The move underscores how Abu Dhabi is seeking to transform its vast oil wealth into long-term influence over the technologies expected to reshape the global economy.

The emirate is fast emerging as one of the preeminent financiers of the AI boom, and MGX has been central to these efforts, using Abu Dhabi’s financial firepower and partnerships with leading technology companies to build stakes across the industry’s most strategic assets.

Chaired by Sheikh Tahnoon bin Zayed Al Nahyan and backed by Mubadala Investment Co. and G42, MGX has rapidly assembled a portfolio spanning frontier AI models, semiconductor infrastructure and data centers. It has invested in OpenAI and xAI, while also backing global projects alongside BlackRock Inc. and Microsoft Corp.

Any new outlays will come on top of the billions it’s already deployed as it races toward a target of more than $100 billion in assets under management. To get there, it plans to spend as much as $10 billion annually over the next few years, Bloomberg News has reported.

The new fundraising comes amid intensifying competition for AI assets, with governments, sovereign wealth funds and private equity firms racing to secure exposure to what many executives view as the defining technology cycle of the coming decades. Abu Dhabi has positioned itself at the center of that ecosystem, combining abundant capital, access to low-cost energy and close relationships with global technology leaders.

At the same time, the tech rally has faltered in recent days as investors worry that share prices may have run up too far, particularly for companies that are spending hundreds of billions of dollars on AI.

For MGX, attracting third-party capital would further distinguish it from traditional Gulf sovereign wealth funds, which largely deploy government money. The firm was designed from the outset to operate more like a global alternative asset manager, raising institutional capital while investing alongside its Abu Dhabi sponsors.

That model allows it to pursue larger transactions while broadening its investor base and potentially scaling toward its long-term ambitions.

The fresh capital would provide MGX with additional firepower as the cost of developing frontier AI systems continues to climb. Training models, as well as building the data centers and semiconductor infrastructure required to support them increasingly demand tens of billions of dollars in outlays, prompting investors to seek ever-larger pools of capital.