Portugal is getting a sovereign wealth fund: what Montenegro announced
Closing the PSD congress, the prime minister laid out eight priorities for the coming weeks — headlined by a sovereign fund that could buy into strategic companies.
If one headline came out of the PSD congress this weekend, it’s this: Portugal is getting a sovereign wealth fund.
In his closing speech on Sunday in Anadia, Luís Montenegro announced the creation of a Sovereign Fund of Portugal, run alongside the IGCP (the agency that manages public debt). The idea is to give the State a tool to take — or strengthen — stakes in companies in sectors deemed strategic: energy, banking, communications, even airport infrastructure, should current concession holders fall short of their commitments.
Not just the fund
The fund was the star, but it didn’t come alone. Montenegro set out eight priority areas for the coming weeks, including a reform of administrative and tax justice, changes to the rental regime, and fresh investment in railways and artificial intelligence. Along the way he repeated the line he’s hammered since the labour reform was voted down: “the day I have to cut pensions, I resign.”
Why it matters
A sovereign fund that pools the State’s holdings and can buy more isn’t a technical footnote — it’s a shift in how Lisbon sees its role in the economy. The criticism will come (the opposition is already crying the opposite of “standing still”), and the devil, as always, will be in the fine print we haven’t seen yet. For now, it’s intent. The coming weeks will show how much of it becomes law.
Illustrative · Photo: Baptiste / Pexels