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Sovereign wealth funds and central banks managing $27 trillion are shifting to active management and diversifying reserves amid a volatile global outlook, according to Invesco’s latest survey. Reuters reported that institutions with over $100 billion in assets are leading the shift to active strategies, abandoning passive approaches favored in more stable markets. Wealth funds posted a 9.4% return last year, tying their second-best result in survey history. Market volatility and de-globalisation have intensified, with long-term concerns focused on climate change and growing sovereign debt. Nearly 60% of wealth funds plan to increase investments in China over the next five years, particularly in AI, EVs, and semiconductors. Seventy percent of central banks see rising U.S. debt as a long-term risk to the dollar, yet 78% say a true rival reserve currency is still more than 20 years away.

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00:00It's Benzinga, bringing Wall Street to Main Street.
00:03Sovereign wealth funds and central banks managing $27 trillion are shifting to active management
00:09and diversifying reserves amid a volatile global outlook, according to Invesco's latest survey.
00:16Reuters reported that institutions with over $100 billion in assets are leading the shift
00:21to active strategies, abandoning passive approaches favored in more stable markets.
00:26Wealth funds posted a 9.4% return last year, tying their second-best result in survey history.
00:32Market volatility and deglobalization have intensified, with long-term concerns focused
00:38on climate change and growing sovereign debt.
00:40Nearly 60% of wealth funds plan to increase investments in China over the next five years,
00:45particularly in AI, EVS, and semiconductors.
00:4970% of central banks see rising U.S. debt as a long-term risk to the dollar,
00:54yet 78% say a true rival reserve currency is still more than 20 years away.
00:59For all things money, visit Benzinga.com.

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