As expected, 2025 was the year of the data center, as a digital infrastructure push led the communications sector to topple renewables as the segment seeing the most greenfield FDI globally, according to FDI Intelligence. Total FDI inflows came in at USD 1.3 tn, the fifth-highest figure on record.

Data centers did the heavy lifting for the communications sector, bringing in a record USD 319.7 bn — jumping from USD 184 bn the year before — and accounting for nearly 50% of the 129 megaprojects of the year.

AI’s pull didn’t stop there — its infrastructure lifted FDI levels across other sectors. Investments in semiconductors came in at a record USD 138 bn last year.

The renewables sector was the second-largest FDI recipient, despite inflows falling 26% y-o-y to USD 193 bn. Green hydrogen, clean tech, and wind all saw commitment dips, while solar power remained a bright spot, bringing in USD 75 bn — albeit still less than the previous two years.

Elsewhere, real estate attracted a decade-high USD 102.8 bn, up from USD 96 bn the year before. Projects in aluminum and steel buoyed the metals sector’s USD 62 bn allocation, LNG boosted fossil fuels’ contribution of USD 54 bn, and chemicals made a comeback with USD 33 bn. Automotive manufacturing and electronic components both saw their inflows drop.

Investors are retreating from speculative, long-horizon green hydrogen projects as regulatory hurdles and uncertain revenue models stalled development — and as the focus shifts toward the physical infrastructure underpinning the global AI race. Investors are now prioritizing immediate AI computing capacity assets over future energy technologies.

This might not last long, though. Soaring data center demand is set to increase electricity consumption, turning these facilities into major bottlenecks for aging grids. The next wave of FDI is expected to give special attention to renewable projects designed exclusively to power AI campuses, rather than general grids.

EGX30

49,739

+0.2% (YTD: +18.9%)

USD (CBE)

Buy 46.89

Sell 47.03

USD (CIB)

Buy 46.91

Sell 47.01

Interest rates (CBE)

20.00% deposit

21.00% lending

Tadawul

11,189

-1.4% (YTD: +6.7%)

ADX

10,563

+0.2% (YTD: +5.7%)

DFM

6,691

+0.2% (YTD: +10.7%)

S&P 500

6,932

+2.0% (YTD: +1.3%)

FTSE 100

10,370

+0.6% (YTD: +4.4%)

Euro Stoxx 50

5,998

+1.2% (YTD: +3.6%)

Brent crude

USD 68.05

+0.7%

Natural gas (Nymex)

USD 3.42

-2.5%

Gold

USD 4,979.80

+1.9%

BTC

USD 69,463

-1.3% (YTD: -20.7%)

S&P Egypt Sovereign Bond Index

1,017

+0.1% (YTD: +2.4%)

S&P MENA Bond & Sukuk

151.93

0.0% (YTD: 0.0%)

VIX (Volatility Index)

17.76

-18.4% (YTD: +18.8%)

THE CLOSING BELL-

The EGX30 rose 0.2% at yesterday’s close on turnover of EGP 7.9 bn (37.6% above the 90-day average). Regional investors were the sole net sellers. The index is up 18.9% YTD.

In the green: Ibnsina Pharma (+8.1%), Rameda (+4.8%), and Fawry (+2.2%).

In the red: Raya Holding (-5.3%), Beltone Holding (-3.7%), and TMG Holding (-2.4%).