Milken Institute Global Conference 2026

The conference in 5 bullets

Where consensus is forming

Where smart people disagree

Top 3 things to consider for the portfolio

  1. Add or up-weight power-generation infrastructure (equity and credit) and real estate in logistics, industrial outdoor, and student housing. This is the cleanest cross-panel call. Multiple credible operating platforms made the same case from different vantage points. If one new private-markets commitment is in budget for the next quarter, this is where to look.
  2. Reassess the Asia underweight, with a barbell expression. Direct China A-shares (anchored on the Sep 2024 consumer-rebalance and the structural household-savings funnel into equities) plus a "China-adjacent" sleeve in Japan, Korea, and Vietnam (semi supply chain, manufacturing reshoring). Avoid pure China megacap tech. Consumer and financialization themes have higher conviction than industrial exposure.
  3. Add downside protection to public-market exposure. TCW's framing of the equity-risk premium combined with the AI-capex equity-return uncertainty argues for explicit tail-protection. Concrete tools: structured products with downside floors (Calamos's 80%/90%/100% protected Bitcoin notes are a useful template for sizing similar wrappers around equity indices), volatility hedges, and tilting public-equity exposure toward secular themes (power, defense, real assets) rather than passive index.

3 most thought-provoking non-investment ideas

  1. Michael Crow at ASU described the top third of US households as "Switzerland for 115 million people," doing better than ever on every measure, while the bottom third is declining on lifespan, education, and economic mobility for the first time in modern American history. He framed it as a sustainability-of-the-economic-model question rather than a fairness one. It explains why housing, healthcare, and education policy will keep absorbing capital in the next decade regardless of administration.
  2. Charles Isbell at Illinois reframed the AI moment. AI in 2026 is the consequence of compute and connectivity decisions made in the 1980s and 90s. The change worth investing patiently around is what AI is setting up for the 2050s, not the chaos of the current adoption cycle. Worth holding in mind when evaluating any 12-month "AI is going to transform this category" pitch.
  3. Yue-Sai Kan and Goodwin Gaw on Chinese consumer brands going global. Pop Mart did $5.4B last year on Labubu (a stuffed toy). BYD is the top-selling car in Singapore. Anta owns Salomon, Wilson, and Arc'teryx and is upgrading them with Chinese manufacturing tech, then exporting from US and Mexico locations. Yue-Sai Kan's anchor on operational density: 250 billion express packages per day in China, a single sunscreen launch doing €6M on day one. Most US and EU portfolios have no exposure to this theme.

Priority-firm speakers

Speakers from EQT, Temasek, Bitmine, China Strategies Group, Blackstone, Apollo, Gaw Capital Partners, Goldman Sachs, US Securities and Exchange Commission, and Starcloud.

Panels attended

Mon May 4, 08:00-09:30

Global Capital Markets

David Faber, Jenny Johnson, James Zelter +4

The CEO consensus on stage was that the AI-driven capex wave (one panelist cited a recent week's announcements totaling roughly $750B from a handful of companies, with multi-trillion-dollar build-outs expected for years) plus continued US consumer strength is enough to sustain th

BlackstoneApollo
Mon May 4, 10:00-11:00

Private Wealth and the Future of Financial Security

David Blanchett, Ida Liu, Jay Jackson +3

The most useful frame for an allocator was the J.P. Morgan-led barbell description of where private-markets capital is currently flowing. Defensive yield via core-plus infrastructure (powering data centers, not the data centers themselves) and shipping and transport leasing to in

EQT
Mon May 4, 10:40-11:00

Advancing a Modern Regulatory Framework: A Conversation with SEC Chairman Paul Atkins

Michael Piwowar, Paul Atkins

This was a 20-minute fireside, not a panel. Paul Atkins, Chairman of the US Securities and Exchange Commission, laid out a deregulatory agenda built on the slogans "Make IPOs Great Again" and the "ACT" framework (Advance, Clarify, Transform). The three most actionable items for a

US Securities and Exchange Commission
Mon May 4, 11:30-12:30

The New Geopolitics of Supply

Amir Husain, Gautam Bhandari, Joe Mathieu +3

The frame from this panel: in 2026 every major nation is racing to localize four critical inputs — electrons (energy), bits (compute), neurons (AI models), and molecules (rare earths and physical materials). The Iran-strike numbers cited on stage (50% of SM-3 missiles, around 33%

Mon May 4, 13:00-14:00

China's Next Alpha: Opportunities in a New Growth Era

Christopher Johnson, Diana Choyleva, Goodwin Gaw +2

All four practitioners on stage (a former top CIA China analyst at China Strategies Group, a UK-based China-focused macroeconomist, a Hong Kong real-estate and equity allocator at Gaw Capital Partners, and a long-time Chinese consumer-brand entrepreneur) said they are more engage

China Strategies GroupGaw Capital Partners
Mon May 4, 14:30-15:30

Multi-Asset Management Across Public and Private Markets

David Steinbach, Michael Brandmeyer, Nabeel Qadir +3

Six allocators (Temasek, Future Fund Australia, Hines, Goldman Sachs External Investing, Lunate, plus an industry moderator) walked through how their multi-asset portfolios are being repositioned. Three actionable consensus calls. First, reduce private equity in favor of private

TemasekGoldman Sachs
Mon May 4, 16:20-17:15

Unstoppable: The Digital Assets Train Has Left the Station

Brett Tejpaul, John Koudounis, Mary-Catherine Lader +3

The panel framed 2026 as the institutional inflection year, anchored on the Genius Act (stablecoin legislation) which Tom Lee at Bitmine called the "ChatGPT moment for digital assets." The most actionable takeaway for an institutional allocator is that the operational rails are n

Bitmine
Tue May 5, 11:30-12:30

Investing in a New Space Economy

Bridgit Mendler, Bulent Altan, Gadi Schwartz +2

The most concrete investment thesis the panel converged on: the space economy's investable surface area is the supply-chain and ground-infrastructure stack around it, not the rocket companies themselves. A panelist said new investors make the mistake of looking only at the launch

Starcloud
Tue May 5, 14:30-15:30

Higher Education's Next Chapter

Beong-Soo Kim, Charles Isbell, Eric Gertler +3

This was framed as a "next chapter for higher education" panel. The most useful frame for an investor was Michael Crow's (ASU) macro point. The bottom third of US personal income is now declining on lifespan, education, and economic mobility for the first time in modern American

Tue May 5, 16:00-17:00

The Global Investment Reset: Public vs. Private Market Allocations

David Gross, Per Franzen, Jennifer Prosek +3

Six CEOs of large asset managers (Bain Capital, EQT, TCW, Barings, Principal, plus Prosek as moderator) disagreed on PE-vs-credit weighting and on whether public markets are mispricing risk. The most actionable cross-panel call: public equity and credit are pricing close to zero

EQT