- Qatar Investment Authority buys 4% stake in Ivanhoe Mines with $500m deal
- Investment bolsters African projects vital to global energy transition
JOHANNESBURG, SOUTH AFRICA – Ivanhoe Mines has secured a $500 million investment from Qatar Investment Authority (QIA), marking one of the largest sovereign wealth fund commitments to Africa’s critical minerals sector in 2025.
The deal, struck through a private placement of 57.5 million shares at C$12.00 per share, gives QIA a 4% stake in the Canadian mining company. The move underscores the growing role of African resources in powering the global shift toward electrification, artificial intelligence networks, and renewable energy infrastructure.
“This strategic alliance with QIA is a profound vote of confidence in our properties and our vision,” Ivanhoe Mines Executive Co-Chair Robert Friedland said. “It reflects a shared commitment to unlocking the mineral resources responsibly that will drive the next industrial revolution.”
QIA CEO Mohammed Saif Al-Sowaidi said the long-term investment aligned with the sovereign wealth fund’s mandate.
“Ivanhoe’s grade-exceptional projects and ESG-oriented development strategy resonate with our mission of enabling sustainable growth and global energy security,” he said.
Boost for African mining assets
Ivanhoe’s portfolio includes the Kamoa-Kakula copper complex and Kipushi zinc mine in the Democratic Republic of Congo, as well as the Platreef platinum-nickel project in South Africa, which is expected to begin production in late 2025.
Analysts say the QIA injection will accelerate development timelines at these projects and strengthen Ivanhoe’s balance sheet.
The investment also triggers pro rata rights for Ivanhoe’s existing strategic investors, CITIC Metal Africa and Zijin Mining, allowing them to maintain their equity at the same issue price. QIA will be entitled to normal closing investor rights, which could extend to board representation if its stake rises to 10%.
Ivanhoe is expanding exploration beyond its flagship mines, with active projects in Angola, Kazakhstan, Zambia, and the Western Forelands district, where its licences cover an area six times larger than Kamoa-Kakula.
Market watchers see QIA’s move as part of a wider trend of sovereign wealth funds seeking secure supplies of critical resources amid rising geopolitical tensions and supply chain risks.
“The transaction highlights how Africa’s minerals are central to global resource security,” said one Johannesburg-based mining analyst. “Ivanhoe’s sovereign-backed balance sheet is well placed to attract additional institutional interest.”
With global trade flows being reshaped by political and economic uncertainty, Ivanhoe’s partnership with QIA cements Africa’s role at the heart of the low-carbon energy transition.