Turkey Wealth Fund
The Turkey Wealth Fund is the sovereign wealth fund of Turkey. It was established on 26 August 2016 under Law No. 6741, with the purpose of contributing to the development of strategic investments, supporting large-scale infrastructure, and strengthening capital markets
As of 2024, its assets under management were estimated at more than US $360 billion, placing the fund among the 10 largest sovereign wealth funds in the world, according to the Sovereign Wealth Fund Institute.
TWF's operations have been characterized as secretive and opaque.
History
TWF was officially founded on 26 August 2016. In its early years, TWF received the transfer of major state-owned enterprises, including Turkish Airlines, Ziraat Bank, Halkbank, the national postal operator PTT, Türk Telekom, and Turkish Petroleum Corporation. These holdings provided the fund with a broad base in sectors such as transport, finance, energy, and telecommunications. During the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, the fund acted as a stabilizing institution by engaging in market-support measures and liquidity initiatives.By the mid-2020s, it had become more active internationally, launching sector-specific investment vehicles such as a dedicated technology fund to support the country’s innovation ecosystem.
2017-2019 changes
After the Turkish constitutional referendum">Turkish language">Turkish constitutional referendum, the Prime Ministry of Turkey was abolished. In accordance with this change, TWF law was changed to allow the President of Turkey to become the chairman of the TWF and to appoint the CEO, Vice Chairman and board members. On 12 September, President Erdoğan became the chairman of the fund. He also appointed Zafer Sönmez, formerly of Malaysia's government investment vehicle Khazanah Nasional from September 2012 until September 2018, as Senior Vice President & Head. Erdoğan's son-in-law Berat Albayrak was named as his deputy on the board of the sovereign wealth fund.2020s
In January 2020, TWF acquired an additional 10% stake in Borsa Istanbul from the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development. The EBRD had made use of its rights to sell in October 2019 after the appointment of Mehment Hakan Atilla, who was convicted in the US for helping Iran evade US sanctions, as chief executive of the stock exchange.In April 2020, TWF Financial Investments was founded with previously government owned shares of insurance companies. In September 2020, the fund completed the acquisition of non-government shares in several insurance companies and consolidated them through mergers. This led to the creation of Türkiye Sigorta, formed by combining Güneş Sigorta, Halk Sigorta, and Ziraat Sigorta, and Türkiye Hayat ve Emeklilik, established through the merger of Vakıf Emeklilik ve Hayat, Halk Hayat ve Emeklilik, and Ziraat Hayat ve Emeklilik. The transactions constituted the largest insurance merger in Turkish M&A history.
On 18 June 2020, the fund agreed to acquire a 26.2% stake in Turkcell from Telia Company and Çukurova Holding for US $1.801 billion. The deal included US $196 million paid to Telia and a US $1.605 billion loan from Ziraat Bank to finance the transaction. On 22 September 2020, following amendments to Turkcell’s Articles of Association, TWF gained the right to appoint five of the nine members of the company’s board of directors.
On 26 November 2020, TWF announced the sale of a 10% stake in Borsa Istanbul to the Qatar Investment Authority, a stake it had previously acquired from the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development. The deal was valued at US $200 million, after which TWF retained an 80.6% shareholding. The following day, TWF’s Vice Chairman Berat Albayrak announced his resignation, shortly after his resignation from the Ministry of Finance.
On 10 March 2022, TWF acquired a controlling stake in Türk Telekom for US $1.65 billion in order to resolve ownership handover issues expected in 2026. In December 2022, the fund purchased a minority stake in steel producer Kardemir, paying US $35.2 million for 50.3 million shares in the company.
In February 2025, negotiations for the proposed operation of the Alsancak Port in İzmir by Abu Dhabi Ports were canceled after the Turkish government ended the talks. The port remains part of TWF’s portfolio and is operated by the Turkish State Railways.
Governance
TWF was established under Law No. 6741, which provides its legal foundation and sets out its management framework. Unlike traditional state budgetary institutions, the fund is organized as a joint-stock company under private law. This arrangement allows greater operational flexibility while also creating a distinct regulatory environment.The governance framework of the fund includes several oversight mechanisms. Its accounts are subject to independent external audits, and expert committees provide further evaluation. In addition, the fund is required to report to national authorities. While these measures provide a degree of accountability, commentators have noted that the fund operates with less transparency than some other public institutions and remains partly removed from routine public oversight. On the international level, TWF has stated its alignment with the Santiago Principles of the International Forum of Sovereign Wealth Funds.
With estimated assets of more than US $300 billion, the Turkey Wealth Fund is ranked among the world’s largest sovereign wealth funds. Unlike many resource-backed sovereign wealth funds, such as Norway’s Government Pension Fund and the Abu Dhabi Investment Authority, the Turkey Wealth Fund is primarily capitalized through the transfer of state-owned enterprises and financing operations. While it owns companies active in petroleum, liquefied natural gas, and mining, it does not receive direct transfers of natural resource revenues. This structure has led to discussion of whether it should be regarded as a state investment holding company as well as a sovereign wealth fund.
TWF’s model places it alongside other large non-resource-backed funds such as Temasek Holdings in Singapore, Khazanah Nasional in Malaysia, and the Indonesia Investment Authority, which manage national assets and state-owned enterprises rather than natural resource surpluses.
Management
International partnerships
Turkey Wealth Fund has established a series of formal cooperation agreements intended to promote cross-border investment and strategic partnerships. In March 2017, TWF signed a memorandum of understanding with the Russian Direct Investment Fund to create a Russia–Turkey Investment Fund, into which each party would contribute up to US $500 million, with a focus on sectors such as healthcare and tourism. In November 2020, the fund entered into an MoU with the Qatar Investment Authority concerning a 10% stake in Borsa Istanbul, laying the groundwork for potential governance collaboration. In November 2021, TWF and the Abu Dhabi Developmental Holding Company signed a strategic partnership agreement aimed at joint efforts in fields such as technology, logistics, capital markets, and other sectoral initiatives. Most recently, in April 2025, TWF concluded an MoU with the Iraq Development Fund, targeting collaborative investment in sectors including renewable energy, infrastructure, transportation, agriculture, and fintech.Türkiye Technology Fund
In 2022, Turkey Wealth Fund established the Türkiye Technology Fund together with Abu Dhabi Developmental Holding Company. The fund was launched with an initial size of US $300 million and a target of US $1 billion. At the time of its creation, it was described as the largest technology-focused venture capital fund in Turkey. The TTF is structured with both a fund-of-funds component, which invests in domestic and international venture capital funds, and a direct investment arm that provides financing to Turkish start-ups and technology companies at different stages of development. The fund’s investment focus includes information technology, telecommunications, and other high-growth sectors.Capital markets and financing
Turkey Wealth Fund has raised funding through both conventional and Islamic capital market instruments. In February 2024 it issued a US $500 million Eurobond maturing in 2029, the fund’s first international Eurobond issuance. In October 2024 the fund issued a US $750 million sukuk al-ijarah with a tenor of just over five years. The issuance was oversubscribed, with investor orders totaling nearly US $7 billion, approximately 14 times the amount offered.In November 2024, TWF secured a US $150 million murabaha financing agreement with Dubai Islamic Bank, featuring a five-year maturity. The following year, in March 2025, the fund arranged a €1.1 billion syndicated loan, split between euro and dollar tranches, without a sovereign guarantee. In August 2025, TWF completed a US $600 million, five-year murabaha deal with a consortium led by Kuwait Finance House, bringing its Islamic finance borrowings to a cumulative total exceeding US $1.8 billion.
Between early 2024 and mid-2025, Turkey Wealth Fund raised close to US $5 billion through a combination of Eurobonds, sukuk, murabaha agreements, and syndicated loans.
Holdings
Real Estate:- The fund also holds various real estate assets, most notably the Istanbul Finance Center, a major commercial and financial hub project in Istanbul.