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AI in Oman

AI in Oman covers AI, startups, digital policy, investment, jobs, and Vision 2040 with reported stories, market analysis, practical guides, and ecosystem insights across Oman.

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Technology & AI
6 min read

OIA's 10x Return on Crusoe: The $10B AI Bet That Paid Off

Oman's sovereign wealth fund achieved a 10.3x capital return and 68% annual IRR from its partial exit of Crusoe, a $10 billion AI infrastructure company backed by Microsoft and NVIDIA, cementing OIA as one of the world's top-performing sovereign funds.

Zaheer Al-LawatiMay 24, 2026

Oman's sovereign wealth fund has scored one of its most remarkable wins to date in artificial intelligence. The Oman Investment Authority (OIA) announced a partial exit from US-based Crusoe, an AI and cloud computing infrastructure company, generating a 10.3x return on invested capital and a 68% annual internal rate of return. Reported on May 23 by Muscat Daily, Oman Observer, and Times of Oman, the exit confirms that Oman's sovereign capital is not just keeping pace with global AI investment trends: it is setting the benchmark.

🔑 Key Takeaways

🏭 What is Crusoe?

Founded in Denver in 2018, Crusoe started with a deceptively practical idea. Oil and gas operations around the world were flaring natural gas, burning off energy because there was no cost-effective way to transport it to market. At the same time, data centers were paying premium rates for reliable power to run increasingly demanding workloads. Crusoe connected those two problems: capture stranded and underused energy, and use it to power AI computing.

The company evolved that premise into a fully vertically integrated AI infrastructure platform. According to Crusoe's website, it now designs and operates data centers powered by wind, solar, hydropower, geothermal, and captured natural gas, and offers Crusoe Cloud, an AI compute platform built on NVIDIA and AMD GPUs with inference speeds up to 9.9x faster than traditional cloud providers.

The model attracted the world's largest technology companies. In March 2026, Microsoft selected Crusoe to develop a 900 MW AI factory campus in Abilene, Texas, and NVIDIA announced an expanded collaboration covering the full AI factory stack for the agentic AI era. By October 2025, Crusoe had completed a $1.375 billion Series E funding round at a valuation exceeding $10 billion.

"We are building the infrastructure powering the next generation of artificial intelligence."

- Chase Lochmiller, Co-founder and CEO, Crusoe

📊 The Numbers: OIA's Partial Exit from Crusoe

As Oman Observer reported, OIA's partial exit from Crusoe generated:

  • 10.3x return multiple on invested capital
  • 68% annual internal rate of return
  • Crusoe's current valuation: nearly $10 billion

OIA is retaining a stake in Crusoe to capture further upside as AI infrastructure demand continues to grow. The Authority framed the move as standard capital recycling, stating as reported by Times of Oman: "Investment exits are a common global practice used when an asset reaches a stage suitable for sale, enabling investors to realise profits."

The investment sits within OIA's Future Generations Fund (FGF), focused on long-term international bets in future-oriented sectors. According to Zawya, the FGF portfolio held RO 8.57 billion in assets by end of 2025, generated RO 1.04 billion in profits at a 13.9% annual return, and spans 210 specialized investment funds across future-oriented sectors.

🏆 OIA's World-Class Standing: No. 3 Globally

The Crusoe exit is one highlight within a landmark year for OIA overall. As Muscat Daily reported, the Authority's 2025 scorecard reads:

  • RO 2.9 billion in total profits
  • 14.6% overall return on investment
  • 10.4% average return over five years
  • 3rd place globally among sovereign wealth funds for five-year average returns, per Global SWF rankings
  • 1st place worldwide for 2025 public market returns

To put this in context: OIA is outperforming sovereign wealth funds from far larger economies, including several Gulf neighbors with substantially bigger asset bases. For a fund headquartered in Muscat, this is a world-class result by any global standard.

⚡ Why AI Infrastructure Became the Winning Bet

Crusoe's success reflects where real value creation in the AI economy has been concentrated. The media cycle focuses on model builders, chatbots, and consumer applications. But the companies generating the most durable returns are those building the physical layer underneath: data centers, GPU clusters, power infrastructure, and the cooling systems that make large-scale AI possible. Crusoe identified this gap early, well before the AI infrastructure investment surge of 2024 and 2025, and built a highly defensible position by combining an environmental angle (reducing gas flaring) with a commercial one (cheap power for compute-hungry AI).

The World Bank's Senior Digital Specialist Zaki Badie Khoury made a related point at a presentation in Muscat earlier this month. As Oman Observer reported, he noted that "the factor that will make Oman move into the era of AI is the agility in moving forwards." OIA's Crusoe bet is direct evidence that Oman's sovereign capital has already been moving forward, and in exactly the right direction.

🇴🇲 What This Means for Oman's Tech Ecosystem

OIA's outsized return from an AI infrastructure company carries concrete signals for Oman's local tech and startup scene:

  • The AI infrastructure thesis is proven. A 10x return from a data center and GPU cloud company validates the same logic behind Oman's AI Special Zone in Muscat: AI infrastructure, not just applications, is where long-term value concentrates.
  • Oman's sovereign capital can back local bets. Profits recycled from exits like Crusoe can fund Omani startups, subsidize the AI Zone, or co-invest alongside international partners building in Muscat.
  • Crusoe's renewable energy model is replicable in Oman. Oman is a natural gas producer with growing renewable energy capacity. The Crusoe model, using stranded or underused energy to power AI compute, could inspire local equivalents within the AI Special Zone.
  • OIA's global reputation attracts co-investors. A top-3 global ranking and a proven AI track record will bring international funds and technology companies to the table when OIA looks for partners in Oman-based AI projects.

🔭 The Vision 2040 Connection

OIA was created as a direct instrument of Oman Vision 2040: to build a diversified, resilient economy that reduces dependence on hydrocarbon revenues. The Crusoe investment checks every box in that mandate. It diversifies Oman's sovereign assets into a high-growth technology sector. It generates returns that can be reinvested domestically. And it positions OIA as a credible, sophisticated investor in the global AI ecosystem, building the relationships Oman needs to attract AI investment at home.

The 2026-2030 Digital Economy Roadmap aims to raise the digital economy's contribution to Oman's GDP from roughly 2.4 to 2.8% today to 10% by 2040. OIA's track record of backing AI winners like Crusoe provides the financial firepower and strategic credibility to pursue that ambition with conviction.

🌟 Why This Matters for Oman

A 10x return is an abstract financial metric until you trace where the money goes. Every riyal OIA recycles from the Crusoe exit can fund Omani entrepreneurs, anchor investment in the AI Special Zone, or support the next generation of founders building in the sectors Crusoe pioneered. OIA has confirmed it is retaining a stake in Crusoe, so the upside is not over yet.

More broadly, OIA's ranking as the world's third-best sovereign wealth fund sends a clear signal to global investors: Oman's capital is disciplined, forward-looking, and ahead of the curve. That reputation will attract co-investors, technology partnerships, and talent at a time when Muscat is actively positioning itself as the GCC's next AI hub. The world is building the infrastructure for the AI age. Oman, it turns out, has already been funding it.

OIAAI InvestmentCrusoeSovereign Wealth FundVision 2040
Technology & AI
7 min read

Oman's AI Zone, GPT-5.5, and Google's Agent Push: April 2026's Biggest Shifts

April 2026 brought a wave of major AI model launches, a landmark AI zone announcement from Oman, and Google's most ambitious enterprise AI push yet. Here is everything that matters.

Layla Al-ZadjaliMay 23, 2026

April 2026 may be remembered as the month AI went from theoretical to operational at scale. OpenAI shipped its most capable model to date, Google redefined enterprise automation at Cloud Next, Meta unveiled a closed-source model built from scratch, and Oman made a bold structural bet on AI with a dedicated economic zone in Muscat. This is not background noise. These are signals that will shape how businesses in Oman build, hire, and compete for the next decade.

Key Takeaways

🚀 OpenAI Releases GPT-5.5: Smarter, Faster, Cheaper Per Task

On April 23, 2026, OpenAI released GPT-5.5, described internally as "Spud" and positioned as the company's new core frontier model. According to TechCrunch, OpenAI framed the release as a step toward a unified AI "super app" capable of carrying out complex, multi-step tasks autonomously.

The model matches GPT-5.4's per-token latency while delivering significantly higher intelligence, and OpenAI says it uses fewer tokens to complete equivalent tasks, which translates into lower API costs for developers. CNBC reported that GPT-5.5 is priced at $5 per million input tokens and $30 per million output tokens for standard access, with a Pro tier at $30 per million input tokens.

GPT-5.5 also ships alongside GPT-5.4-Cyber, a cybersecurity-focused variant restricted to verified security professionals. The dual-track release signals OpenAI is moving toward domain-specific models alongside its general frontier.

For Oman: Omani developers and startups building on the OpenAI API can access GPT-5.5 now. The improved token efficiency means lower cost per output, which matters for Arabic-language applications and budget-conscious SMEs exploring AI automation for the first time.

🤖 Google Cloud Next '26: The Agentic Era Goes Enterprise

Google held Cloud Next '26 in Las Vegas on April 22, 2026, drawing more than 32,000 attendees and making over 260 announcements. The headline release, covered in detail by Virtualization Review, was the Gemini Enterprise Agent Platform: a unified system for building, deploying, governing, and tracking AI agents within enterprise workflows.

Key components include a no-code Agent Designer that lets non-technical staff build custom trigger-based workflows, long-running agents that execute autonomously in background cloud sandboxes, and a new Agent Inbox for monitoring agent activity. Google also announced its eighth-generation TPUs, with two chips: TPU 8t for training and TPU 8i for inference, alongside the open-source Gemma 4 local model offering three times the speed of its predecessor. Full details are in Google's official April AI updates.

For Oman: Oman's growing base of Google Cloud users, including government and financial services entities, now have access to production-grade agentic tools without writing code. This directly supports Vision 2040's automation and digital government objectives. The no-code Agent Designer is particularly relevant for Omani organisations that lack large technical teams.

💡 Meta Launches Muse Spark: A Closed-Source Pivot from Llama

On April 8, 2026, Meta unveiled Muse Spark, the first model from its newly formed Meta Superintelligence Labs. As TechCrunch noted, this marks a "ground-up overhaul" of Meta's AI strategy, moving away from the open-weight Llama series toward a natively multimodal, closed-source reasoning model.

Muse Spark supports visual chain-of-thought reasoning, tool use, and multi-agent orchestration. It powers Meta AI across WhatsApp, Instagram, Facebook, Messenger, and Ray-Ban AI glasses. Meta also released a "Contemplating mode" that runs multiple agents in parallel, achieving 58% on Humanity's Last Exam, according to Meta's own blog.

For Oman: WhatsApp penetration in Oman is extremely high. Meta AI embedded in WhatsApp via Muse Spark means millions of Omani users will interact with this model daily, whether for commerce, support, or personal assistance. Businesses using WhatsApp Business should take note: AI-powered conversational commerce is arriving on a platform already in Omanis' pockets.

🇴🇲 Oman Establishes a Special AI Economic Zone in Muscat

In the most significant local development of the month, The National reported on April 30 that Oman will establish a Special Artificial Intelligence Zone in Muscat, issued under a royal decree. The zone will be managed by the Public Establishment for Special Economic Zones and Free Zones in coordination with the Ministry of Transport, Communications and IT (MTCIT).

Projects established within the zone will benefit from free zone laws, including incentives on taxation, land use, and business licensing. The zone is positioned as a vehicle for attracting foreign AI investment and anchoring Oman as a regional AI hub, directly aligned with the 2026-2030 Digital Economy Roadmap and Vision 2040's target of making digital sectors represent 10% of GDP.

This follows Oman's earlier strategic positioning covered by MIT Sloan Management Review Middle East as a GCC nation using economic zones to accelerate AI ecosystem development.

Why this matters: This is not a pilot programme or a white paper. It is a royal decree with real free zone mechanics. Omani entrepreneurs and foreign investors now have a clear, legally defined entry point for AI-focused ventures. Watch for further details from MTCIT on eligibility, incentive tiers, and the zone's launch timeline.

🔐 Anthropic's Mythos: Powerful, Restricted, and State-Adjacent

Anthropic's Mythos, a cybersecurity-focused AI model, was the subject of significant coverage in April 2026. According to the Peterson Technology Partners roundup, approximately 50 companies currently have access to Mythos, with the NSA reportedly using it to identify vulnerabilities in Microsoft products. The White House blocked expansion to an additional 70 companies, citing national security concerns and strained compute capacity.

The episode illustrates a new dynamic in AI: frontier models are now considered strategic assets, not just commercial products. Governments are actively managing who gets access and on what terms.

For Oman: Oman's National AI Policy, which entered into force in April 2025 and requires governance standards and compliance reporting, positions the Sultanate well to engage with vendors like Anthropic on responsible deployment terms. As Zawya reported, Oman was among the first Middle Eastern nations to implement AI policy guidelines, which builds credibility with vendors navigating access restrictions.

🔗 OpenAI and Microsoft Restructure: The Exclusivity Era Ends

A significant structural shift occurred in April 2026 when OpenAI and Microsoft completed a restructuring of their partnership. According to the Peterson Technology Partners roundup, Microsoft will no longer share revenue with OpenAI under the new arrangement, and the AGI clause that previously gave Microsoft special rights has been removed. Critically, OpenAI can now work with competing cloud providers, including AWS and Google Cloud.

This opens the door for OpenAI models to be deployed across multi-cloud environments, which has direct implications for enterprise IT procurement decisions globally.

For Oman: Omani enterprises that have been hesitant to adopt OpenAI tools due to Microsoft Azure dependency now have more flexibility. As Oman's cloud infrastructure matures under the 2026-2030 roadmap, multi-cloud AI strategies will become viable even for mid-sized Omani businesses.

📋 How Omani Businesses and Developers Should Respond

  • Developers: Upgrade to GPT-5.5 in the API. The token efficiency improvements mean better outputs at lower cost per task, especially for Arabic language processing and multi-step automation workflows.
  • SMEs on WhatsApp: Prepare for AI-driven interactions via Meta AI in WhatsApp. Start thinking about how your customer service and commerce flows will need to adapt as Muse Spark rolls out to billions of WhatsApp users.
  • Enterprise IT teams: Google's no-code Agent Designer is worth a serious pilot, particularly for internal workflow automation in HR, procurement, and finance, where staff can build and manage agents without developer resources.
  • Founders and investors: Monitor MTCIT closely for registration and incentive details on the new Muscat AI Special Economic Zone. Early-mover advantage in a new free zone can be significant.
  • Government and policy teams: The Mythos episode is a preview of AI access becoming a geopolitical instrument. Oman's existing AI policy framework is a strong foundation, but sector-specific guidance for cybersecurity AI is worth developing proactively.

🌍 Why This Matters for Oman

April 2026 compressed years of AI maturation into a single month. The models got cheaper, the platforms got more autonomous, and the infrastructure got more interconnected. For Oman, the most consequential development is not a model release from Silicon Valley but the royal decree establishing a dedicated AI zone in Muscat. This signals that Oman's leadership is moving from policy statements to structural action. Paired with global tools like GPT-5.5 and the Gemini Agent Platform now available to any developer with a credit card, the gap between ambition and capability has never been smaller. The question for Omani businesses is no longer whether to adopt AI. It is how fast.

AI ModelsOpenAIGoogle CloudMetaOman Vision 2040

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