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Redefining telecom ownership in the age of AI infrastructure

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Ajay Sunder

Senior Vice President - TMT
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Sanskar Rathee

Research Analyst
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One of the largest digital infrastructure transactions in APAC marks a decisive strategic shift for Singtel. At a time when artificial intelligence, hyperscale cloud demand, and data sovereignty requirements are driving unprecedented capital intensity in data centres, Singtel and KKR have moved to consolidate control of ST Telemedia Global Data Centres (STT GDC). The deal is not merely about an ownership change but it reflects a broader shift in how telecom operators are funding and structuring strategic infrastructure assets.

A phased capital partnership strategy

On 4th February 2026, Singtel and a KKR-led consortium announced an agreement to acquire the remaining stake in STT GDC, taking full control of the business. The transaction values STT GDC at an enterprise value of approximately S$13.8 billion (around US$10 billion). The consortium will pay about S$6.6 billion (approximately US$5.2 billion) in cash to complete the acquisition. Under the terms of the deal, Singtel will invest approximately S$740 million to hold a 25% stake in the enlarged vehicle, while KKR will hold 75% ownership post-completion. The transaction is expected to close in the second half of 2026, subject to regulatory approvals and customary closing conditions.

This move builds on earlier steps. In June 2024, a KKR-led consortium invested S$1.75 billion to acquire a 20% stake in STT GDC, valuing the business at roughly S$5.5 billion at that time. Even earlier, in 2020, Singtel sold a 12% stake in STT GDC to KKR for approximately S$1.1 billion. That was the first step in bringing institutional capital into the platform. Taken together, these transactions show a phased capital partnership strategy that has now resulted in majority ownership by KKR, with Singtel retaining a meaningful minority stake.

Rationale for Singtel and KKR

STT GDC is headquartered in Singapore and operates more than 100 data centres across over 20 markets, with approximately 2.3 gigawatts of development capacity globally. The platform serves hyperscalers, cloud providers, enterprises, and government customers across Asia Pacific, Europe, and other key regions. Its scale and expansion pipeline position it among the leading independent data centre operators globally.

Singtel gets exposure to high-growth digital infrastructure with lower cash burden. It keeps strategic upside to data-centre growth while committing a smaller equity cheque (S$740m) relative to the platform EV. This preserves Singtel’s balance sheet capacity for other uses. KKR gets control of a scaled, multi-market platform to compound returns. As majority owner, KKR can drive consolidation, yield improvements and exit strategies (sale, IPO, secondary) to realise private-equity returns.

Financially, the latest transaction underscores investor confidence in the structural growth of digital infrastructure. Rising AI workloads, enterprise cloud migration, and regulatory data localisation requirements are driving sustained demand for high-density capacity across APAC. For Singtel, the deal enables continued exposure to this growth while sharing capital requirements with a global private equity partner. For KKR, it secures majority control of a scaled, high-growth data centre platform in one of the world’s fastest-growing digital markets.

What this deal means for APAC DC market

This transaction is important not just for the companies involved, but for the structure of the APAC data centre industry.

  • Institutional capital is now central to growth
    Data centres in APAC are too capital-intensive for telcos to fund alone, especially as AI-driven workloads push power density and development costs higher. This deal reinforces a clear shift towards private equity-backed ownership structures, where telecom operators retain strategic stakes while institutional investors provide scale capital and balance-sheet flexibility.
    This model has precedents. In India, Bharti Airtel carved out its data centre arm Nxtra and brought in private equity capital from Carlyle Group in 2020, selling a significant minority stake to fund expansion. Similarly, regional platforms such as AirTrunk have attracted large institutional investors, including Macquarie Asset Management and PSP Investments to support hyperscale growth.
    The Singtel–KKR transaction therefore fits into a broader structural pattern: telecom operators de-risk capital intensity by partnering with long-term financial investors, while retaining exposure to digital infrastructure upside.
  • Consolidation increasingly becoming a valuation strategy
    From the perspective of large-scale operators, consolidation is increasingly a valuation strategy. Hyperscalers and AI customers prioritise operators that can deliver multi-market capacity and rapid buildouts. As a result, platforms are seeking to aggregate assets across markets to achieve scale, improve utilisation rates, and command higher valuation multiples.
    Recent transactions illustrate this trend. Global investors have pursued scaled portfolios rather than single-asset plays. For example, Blackstone’s acquisition of Australian data centre operator AirTrunk in 2024 reflected the premium attached to established hyperscale platforms with secured capacity pipelines. The Singtel–KKR move positions STT GDC firmly within this category of large, consolidating regional champions capable of attracting premium valuations.
  • Structural separation of infrastructure from telecom
    Data centres are no longer viewed as telecom support assets, but they are standalone digital infrastructure platforms with distinct capital requirements, risk-return profiles, and investor bases. This deal reinforces the structural separation of infrastructure from retail telecom businesses, enabling specialised ownership and capital models.
    Telcos across the region have pursued similar strategies, separating towers, fibre, and data centres into ring-fenced entities to unlock value and attract infrastructure investors. Bharti Airtel’s carve-out of Nxtra is one example. Others include Singtel’s earlier stake sales in STT GDC and tower monetisation transactions across Asia.

The Singtel–KKR transaction signals where APAC digital infrastructure is headed: larger platforms, deeper pools of institutional capital, and clearer separation from traditional telecom models. As AI and cloud demand accelerate, scale, strategic alignment, and funding discipline will define winners. By combining telecom touchpoints with private equity control, this deal reinforces a future shaped by consolidation, capital intensity, and infrastructure specialisation.

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