ADIA sets up ADIA Labs in another boost to tech capabilities

The Abu Dhabi Investment Authority, the 46-year-old state-owned investor with an estimated $800 billion assets under management, is planning to set up a specialist independent research unit. ADIA Lab will operate as a standalone entity with broad research goals to explore the latest trends and technologies in data and computer sciences.

Projects and research programmes will not be designed specifically to enhance and support ADIA’s investment programme, which already has its own 50-person in-house team of quantitative researchers and developers. ADIA Lab’s research agenda will be set by an advisory board of scientists, independent of ADIA, and a key rationale for the new unit is to nurture an innovative IT ecosystem in Abu Dhabi as the economy diversifies from fossil fuels.

Still, that won’t rule out the research, which will span data science, AI, machine learning and quantum computing, all highly applicable to the global trends set to drive returns in the future like the transition, blockchain, financial inclusion, cybersecurity or space, informing ADIA’s investment processes.

Next step

ADIA Lab marks another step in the giant investor determinedly boosting its technical prowess and application of technology. Speaking to Top1000Funds.com last year Jean-Paul Villain, ADIA’s director of strategy and planning, said ADIA had missed out on opportunities to generate alpha because of a lack of investment in big data and AI.

Over the last 18 months ADIA has begun investing in different kinds of quantitative approaches staffed by an in-house team of quants, physicists, AI and computer experts drawn from hedge funds and academia. They collect, clean and test data to apply across the portfolio from long short equity allocations to tactical positions and facilitate access to the best managers – around 55 per cent of the portfolio is externally managed.

Collaboration

Perhaps one of the most important benefits to ADIA will come from the investor’s proximity to ADIA Lab. ADIA Lab may not be housed in the same high rise building as ADIA, but investment staff will be able to interact and collaborate with researchers, academics and global experts in data and computer science and further embed a scientific mindset through the organization.

Sponsored Content

Start-ups

ADIA Lab will also focus on projects that could lead to the creation of start-ups. This doesn’t mark the beginning of ADIA investing in start-ups like some other state-owned investors, however. For example, in a pioneering strategy, Singapore’s Temasek creates and seeds its own innovative companies from scratch, effectively building its own strategic capabilities rather than investing in entrepreneurs in the space. ADIA does invest in start-ups of a certain scale through a venture capital allocation in its private equity portfolio, but doesn’t tend to invest in the UAE.

Leave a Comment

The twin forces rewriting the rules of investing

The twin forces rewriting the rules of investing

Portfolios built for the old world will be severely tested as emerging forces rewrite the rules of investing. The Fiduciary Investors Symposium heard that geopolitical and macroeconomic upheaval, together with the disruption wrought by AI, should force asset owners to rethink the structure and composition of portfolios.

Sort content by

Lessons from the middle: Leadership, resilience and the courage of conviction

The principles of high-performance leadership – whether in business or sport – remain remarkably consistent and include the ability to maintain clarity, integrity, and conviction under immense pressure. Former Australian test cricketer Usman Khawaja told the Fiduciary Investors Symposium that the only time you really lose is when you stop trying.

Steering portfolios through a fragmented world

As stagflationary shocks flip stock-bond correlations and the illiquidity premium in private markets proves elusive, the investors best placed to navigate a fragmented world are those with the governance infrastructure to deploy capital when others are forced to sell.

Private markets enter era of ‘true alpha’

Allocators are interrogating their private markets investments more rigorously as institutional investors question whether unlisted asset classes are entering an era of “true alpha” where managers skills are put to test. This trend is especially salient in private equity, and at FIS Singapore, asset owners and managers weighed the thesis around the asset class.

‘Math wins’: Why investors should push harder on fiscal discipline

Investors need to start demanding that governments act with more fiscal discipline as ballooning debts on sovereign balance sheets around the world approach a breaking point, MFS Investments, one of the world’s oldest asset managers, said at FIS Singapore.

‘We are way ahead’: How Fairfax County bagged staggering crypto returns

Fairfax County Employees’ Retirement System says its allocation to digital assets has become the best-performing investment in the fund’s history. The $6.3 billion pension plan first invested in blockchain infrastructure and digital assets through venture funds in 2019, and early distributions are now beginning to arrive.

IMCO World View: Active strategies, diversification and liquidity focus

Canadian pension investor IMCO is bracing for higher inflation and a weaker US dollar in 2026, as the $62 billion fund said investors need to protect diversification and liquidity in a volatile environment and be wary of risks in passive investments. In a podcast, chief strategist Nick Chamie unpacked the asset allocation insights, which were released in the annual IMCO World View paper, in conversation with Top1000funds.com editor Amanda White.

Previous