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Singtel Sells $1.16 Billion Stake in Bharti Airtel to Fund Digital Investments

Singapore Telecommunications (Singtel) has sold a 0.8% stake worth about $1.16 billion in India’s Bharti Airtel, as part of its ongoing plan to recycle assets and boost investments in digital infrastructure, the company announced on Friday.

Singtel’s investment arm Pastel sold 51 million shares of Bharti Airtel, India’s second-largest telecom operator, at 2,030 rupees ($23.10) per share — about 3.1% below the stock’s previous close. The transaction was executed through a private placement to institutional investors.

The sale is part of Singtel’s S$9 billion (US$6.6 billion) mid-term asset recycling program, which aims to raise funds for expansion in digital services, data centers, and next-generation connectivity.

Following the divestment, Singtel now holds a 27.5% stake in Bharti Airtel, down from 31.4% in 2022, continuing a gradual reduction of its holdings since first investing in the Indian company in 2000.

Singtel said the sale will generate an estimated S$1.1 billion ($805 million) in gains, benefiting from Bharti Airtel’s surging valuation — its shares have quadrupled since 2019, driven by stronger earnings and rising average revenue per user.

Investors reacted positively to the move, sending Singtel’s shares up about 3% to S$4.65 by midday trading in Singapore. Bharti Airtel shares, however, fell around 4.5% in Mumbai, with more than 55 million shares changing hands via block deals, according to LSEG data.

The deal underscores Singtel’s strategy to strengthen its balance sheet while maintaining a long-term presence in one of the world’s fastest-growing telecom markets.

RBI Committee Recommends AI Framework for India’s Financial Sector

A Reserve Bank of India (RBI) committee has proposed a comprehensive framework to develop AI capabilities in the country’s financial sector while managing associated risks. The recommendations, released Wednesday, aim to balance innovation with security and governance.

Key proposals include creating digital infrastructure for building indigenous AI models, establishing a multi-stakeholder committee to assess risks and opportunities, and setting up a fund to support homegrown AI solutions tailored to India’s financial services. The report contains 26 recommendations across six areas: infrastructure, capacity, policy, governance, protection, and assurance.

Other notable suggestions include integrating AI with digital public platforms such as the Unified Payments Interface (UPI) and designing audit frameworks for responsible AI adoption. The committee, led by IIT Bombay computer scientist Pushpak Bhattacharyya, was tasked with developing the Framework for Responsible and Ethical Enablement of AI (FREEAI). The RBI emphasized that regulating AI requires balancing societal benefits with risk mitigation.

Apollo Acquires Majority Stake in Stream Data Centers to Capitalize on AI-Driven Infrastructure Growth

Apollo has agreed to buy a majority interest in Stream Data Centers (SDC) as part of a strategic bet on the booming demand for digital infrastructure driven by artificial intelligence and cloud computing. Data centers, critical hubs housing computing hardware, are expected to see global spending of up to $6.7 trillion by 2030, according to McKinsey.

Stream Data Centers specializes in building, leasing, and managing large-scale data center campuses. It has completed over 20 projects and has an extensive pipeline with multi-gigawatt capacity. Apollo aims to scale SDC to become a key partner for major hyperscalers like Amazon, Microsoft, and Google, who increasingly rely on third-party developers for land acquisition, regulatory approvals, and power sourcing for their data centers.

Apollo partner Trevor Mills emphasized the ongoing and diverse demand from hyperscalers requiring collaboration with external developers. This investment aligns with rising capital expenditures by tech giants — Meta recently raised its annual spending forecast by $2 billion to as much as $72 billion, Microsoft plans over $30 billion in its fiscal first quarter, and Alphabet increased its 2024 capex target to $85 billion, with further rises expected to meet AI demands.

While financial terms were not disclosed, Apollo’s president Jim Zelter highlighted that data centers will need $1.5 trillion in external financing by 2030, with private credit accounting for $800 billion — a space where Apollo leads. The International Energy Agency forecasts electricity demand for data centers will more than double by then, surpassing Japan’s current total consumption.

Other major asset managers like Blackstone, KKR, and BlackRock have also committed billions to data center investments, underscoring the sector’s growing importance. Stream Data Centers’ management will retain a minority stake and continue running operations post-deal.