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Report finds large returns from State Investment Council program

Agency touted over $1.8 billion in commitments to various venture funds and $2 billion in economic impact for New Mexico

The State Investment Council office in Santa Fe in late September. The agency manages New Mexico鈥檚 $71 billion sovereign wealth fund.
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A revamped program under the State Investment Council has created more economic impact in the past year than it has in any year since its inception.

This month, the SIC released a , the first on its Strategic Venture Capital Program, showing over $1.8 billion in commitments to various venture funds. The agency supported more than $2 billion in economic impact through companies like Pacific Fusion, XGS Energy and Castelion Corp. expanding into New Mexico. 

鈥淎ll of those are massive projects from companies that aren鈥檛 headquartered in New Mexico, but they鈥檙e all building substantial facilities here and making substantial investments and commitments to the state,鈥 said Chris Cassidy, SIC director of private equity and venture capital. 鈥淚 think that鈥檚 what everybody actually wants to achieve.鈥

The Strategic Venture Capital Program was spun out of the New Mexico Private Equity Investment Program, which the SIC had been running since 1990, Cassidy said. Originally set up under statute, he said it was considered a differential rate investment program focused on companies headquartered in the state. 

Cassidy said the program鈥檚 limitations were 鈥渦nrealistic,鈥 and its performance continued to prove unsustainable as it did not create good financial returns that aided the SIC in funding government services and education. So much so that in the last session, the Legislature considered shutting it down completely. 

鈥淚 think it鈥檚 fair to say that as New Mexico鈥檚 sovereign wealth fund, we should, where possible, try to help tilt things in favor of New Mexico with the investments we make and be strategic,鈥 Cassidy said. 鈥淭he practical nature is that (the) statute has some flaws in it that limited the opportunity for the state generally.鈥

The Strategic Venture Capital Program allows the SIC to partner with venture capital funds to deliver a 鈥渄ouble-bottom鈥 line of financial returns and economic growth in New Mexico through companies committing to building a presence in the state. 

Jon Clark, the state investment officer, said the report aims to serve as a mechanism to 鈥済et out additional word about those projects, but also our involvement with them.鈥 

鈥淓ven if people had heard about these projects, they may not be aware that the state鈥檚 sovereign wealth fund is investing in them and that we鈥檙e part of the reason why they鈥檙e here,鈥 Clark said.

Under this new strategy, Clark said he鈥檚 鈥渘ever seen this level of momentum鈥 in his 20 years of New Mexico economic development work. The report highlights SIC-backed venture funds like Anzu Partners, a top investor in XGS Energy, which last year announced it is partnering with Meta Platforms Inc. to build a geothermal power plant in northwestern New Mexico.

The report also highlights the SIC鈥檚 funding commitment to Lightspeed Venture Partners 鈥 a lead investor in Castelion鈥檚 recent $350 million funding round. The hypersonic missile manufacturer broke ground on its 1,000-acre Sandoval County facility on Wednesday. 

鈥淭here鈥檚 still a lot of this money that is going to be put to work, going to be invested in other companies, but we鈥檙e already seeing more money getting invested in New Mexico than we sent out the door,鈥 Clark said. 

The SIC manages New Mexico鈥檚 sovereign wealth fund, which recently ballooned to $71 billion. One of the largest funds in the U.S., the agency returned $2.6 billion to the state鈥檚 operating budget in 2025, the report said.

By 2032, the SIC projects the sovereign wealth fund will be worth $100 billion and that it鈥檒l return $38 billion to the operating budget over the next decade. 

Andrew Kreitz, co-founder and chief financial officer of Castelion Corp., speaks during a groundbreaking ceremony for Project Ranger in Sandoval County on Wednesday.

鈥淭here are a lot of questions from New Mexicans about how we鈥檙e using the $71 billion that we manage on behalf of the state, and one half of the story is the incredible amount of money that we send back to the state each year,鈥 Clark said. 鈥淏ut the other part of the story is how we鈥檙e investing in New Mexico and putting this money to work every day 鈥 that鈥檚 this program.鈥

Of the venture capital funds the SIC has committed to, the report shows the agency has put $80 million across UP.Partners branches. This includes $20 million toward UP.Abundance, an arm of the firm focused on New Mexico opportunities that launched in October.

UP.Abundance looks to invest in companies that want to establish a presence in New Mexico. The fund focuses on sectors like deep tech, climate resilience, advanced energy and aerospace defense.

鈥淭his industrialization moment is key to a lot of our discussions, like companies that have grown up elsewhere, largely California, but all throughout the world, and telling them about the things that make New Mexico really appealing,鈥 said Brian Adams, a co-founder and managing partner of UP.Abundance.

Those things, Adams said, include the availability of nondilutive funding from state agencies, the opportunity to create partnerships with national labs and workforce expertise in focused sectors. 

鈥淲e鈥檙e really trying to meet founders where they are and say, 鈥楬ey, here鈥檚 this massive New Mexico opportunity,鈥欌 said David Ellmann, UP.Abundance co-founder and general partner. 鈥淲e just continue to be blown away. The timing is just really, really good for all these different elements.鈥

Pacific Fusion, a California-based nuclear fusion energy company that will build its $1 billion research and manufacturing campus in sa国际传媒官网网页入口鈥檚 Mesa del Sol, was one of the first companies to be included in UP.Abundance鈥檚 portfolio. 

UP.Abundance has held community events at Pacific Fusion offices and around the Bay Area, which Ellmann said is starting to build a 鈥渟elf-reinforcing ecosystem鈥 of founders advising other companies to consider expanding into New Mexico. 

That relationship building, especially between the SIC and its venture partners, is 鈥渋ncredibly important鈥 to the program鈥檚 mission, Clark said.

鈥淭hey鈥檙e the ones on the ground searching for companies here to fund or searching for places to bring companies,鈥 Clark said. 鈥淲e can鈥檛 be everywhere all at once, so it鈥檚 really important that we have that connection.鈥

Hannah 骋补谤肠铆补 covers tech and energy for the Journal. You can reach her at hgarcia@abqjournal.com.