Mubadala has invested in
logistics software
startup Turvo,
Alphabet-owned self-driving technology company
Waymo, Reliance
Jio Platforms, UK life sciences company Envision, and
Telegram. Mubadala is a parent company of
GlobalFoundries, a
semiconductor foundry company. Mubadala owns stakes in numerous companies, including a 7.5 percent share in the
Carlyle Group. In 2007 Mubadala announced an initial investment in
AMD. As of 2017 Mubadala had a stake of 12.9 percent in the chipmaker. In 2019 Mubadala sold its entire stake in AMD. In 2019, Mubadala and Falcon Edge Capital established Abu Dhabi Catalyst Partners, a $1 billion joint venture to invest in financial institutions. In November 2020, Mubadala transferred ownership of two information technology companies it previously owned, Injazat and Khazna, to artificial intelligence company,
G42, and took a stake in G42. In 2021, Mubadala purchased a 2.6% stake in
En+ Group, a manufacturer of green aluminum, from Polina Yumasheva, the former wife of Russian businessman
Oleg Deripaska. The same year, Mubadala purchased MetrôRio, the company that holds the operations for the
Rio de Janeiro metro, from
Invepar. In 2016, Mubadala became the biggest external shareholder at
Investcorp, after acquiring 20% stakes in the
Bahraini firm. In 2023, a former UK minister,
Gerry Grimstone was criticized for conducting and not declaring 13 meetings with Mubadala and Khaldoon al-Mubarak, after acquiring the role as an adviser and the chair of planned climate fund at Investcorp. In March 2021, Grimstone finalized a deal between the UK and Mubadala, allowing it to oversee investment of around £10 billion in the
UK from the UAE. A senior research officer at Transparency International UK, Rose Whiffen said if a minister is working for a firm and meeting its shareholder several times while in office, it should be declared or assessed before approval. In 2021, Mubadala invested in wefox, a German digital insurance platform, through a $650 million funding round and led another $400 million round in 2022. In May 2022, Mubadala Investment Company signed a preliminary agreement with French utility
Engie for the development of a digital platform to charge
electric vehicles in the UAE and across the Middle East. The two companies would also explore areas related to sustainable mobility. In 2022, Mubadala sold the Anglo-Trade Bank, which it funded together with AGTB Holdings in 2018, to Gulf Islamic Investments. In April 2023 Mubadala, together with Stone Point Capital and other partners, acquired 20% of
Truist Insurance Holdings for $1.95 billion. The fund bought the remaining 80% of Truist, together with Stone Point Capital, Clayton, Dubilier & Rice and other investors, for $15.5 billion in 2024. In May 2023, Mubadala agreed to buy a majority stake in a New York–based
Fortress Investment Group from the
SoftBank Group. The $3 billion takeover was intended to be closed in the first quarter of 2024. However, the deal that would give Mubadala 70% stakes in Fortress was being scrutinized by the U.S. national security officers. The deal, which raised concerns for the US over the UAE's ties with China, was being closely reviewed by the Committee on Foreign Investment in the US (
Cfius). In May 2024, the regulatory body approved of the sale. A year later in April 2025, Mubadala and
Fortress Investment started a $1 billion investment partnership. In September 2024,
Turkish Competition Authority confirmed that Mubadala applied to acquire
Getir in entirety. In June 2024, Getir founders, Nazim Salur and Serkan Borancili, opposed Mubadala’s restructuring plan that would separate profitable local grocery delivery operations with noncore businesses. Under the proposed plan, Mubadala was to acquire grocery delivery operations in exchange for $250 million investment. However, in January 2025, Salur alleged Mubadala of an “illegal coup” and vowed to take legal action against the Emirati firm. He claimed that Mubadala attempted to take over all shares of the founders, and “intentionally delayed” transferring units to them. Getir’s founders also stated that Mubadala attempted to back off from the deal at the end of 2024. They appealed to the Enterprise Chamber of the Amsterdam Court of Appeal, and said to take a legal action in
Turkey and the UK as well. Mubadala was planning to propose an alternative plan, which it said was already approved by Getir’s independent directors. But Salur expressed his intent to “continue fighting” the restructuring plan. On 30 January 2025, Salur removed Getir’s CEO Batuhan Gultakan from his position without giving specific reasons. Sources revealed that the move was taken due to Gultakan’s full support towards Mubadala. ==Investment platforms==