Key Takeaways:
- Temasek plans to expand AI holdings from $25 billion to $75 billion by 2030
- The fund cites a "virtuous cycle" of enterprise AI adoption driving returns
- Temasek has already invested in Anthropic, Isomorphic Labs, and Waymo this year
Key Takeaways:

Singapore's state-owned investment firm is betting the AI adoption cycle has only just begun, planning to triple its exposure to the sector over the next six years.
Temasek Holdings plans to expand its artificial intelligence-related investment holdings to $75 billion by 2030, up from $25 billion currently, according to executives speaking in San Francisco. The target would lift AI assets from 7% of the firm's total portfolio to roughly 15%, and to nearly a quarter of its non-Singapore holdings.
"The virtuous cycle is real," said Aftab Mathur, managing director for venture and growth investments at Temasek. "Our portfolio companies are deploying AI at scale, and that drives revenue to the model providers, which funds the infrastructure buildout, which enables more model development."
The logic draws directly from Temasek's experience with its own portfolio. DBS Group Holdings, the Singapore lender valued at $140 billion, has been cutting headcount through AI automation — giving the fund a front-row seat to enterprise AI's return on investment. "The question we keep asking is whether there's ROI," said Martin Fichtner, a San Francisco-based managing director at Temasek. "So far, the answer has been yes."
The $50 billion pivot
Temasek has already placed bets across the AI stack this year, participating in funding rounds for Anthropic, the developer of the Claude model family; Isomorphic Labs, Alphabet's AI drug discovery spinout; and Waymo, the autonomous driving unit also owned by Alphabet. The investments span foundation models, life sciences AI, and autonomous systems — three distinct layers of what Temasek sees as a single structural shift.
The fund's approach reflects a broader shift in institutional capital. Sovereign wealth funds and pension managers — patient money with multi-decade horizons — are increasingly crowding into AI deals alongside traditional venture and growth investors. Temasek's $50 billion expansion plan, if executed, would make it one of the largest single institutional allocators to the sector globally.
But Temasek's executives are careful not to pick winners. When asked which private AI company might become a household name, Fichtner declined to name one. "We think in portfolios, not single bets," he said. Mathur added that it is "too early" to determine which enterprise AI use cases will fail, citing the speed of change in the market.
The ROI question
The fund's conviction comes with a caveat. The "virtuous cycle" — enterprise adoption driving model revenue driving infrastructure spending — depends on whether companies are actually seeing returns from their AI investments. Temasek's own portfolio provides evidence on both sides: DBS is cutting costs, but many enterprises are still in the experimentation phase.
Temasek's willingness to deploy capital at scale signals that the largest institutional investors see AI as a multi-cycle theme rather than a speculative bubble. The fund's portfolio already includes stakes in Stripe, Databricks, Singapore Telecommunications, and Singapore Airlines — a mix that gives it exposure to both AI-native companies and traditional businesses adopting the technology.
The $50 billion commitment also raises the stakes for Temasek's existing AI holdings. If the virtuous cycle falters — if enterprise ROI fails to materialize, or if model providers' revenue growth slows — the fund would be carrying a much larger position in a sector whose returns remain unproven at scale. For now, Temasek is betting the cycle holds.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.