Article | Intelligent Investment
How to make the most of the Digital Infrastructure boom in APAC
The unprecedented opportunity for investors
July 8, 2024 10 Minute Read

Overview
Digital Infrastructure is thriving
Despite the growth and mainstream adoption of technologies such as 5G, Internet of Things (IoT) and Virtual Reality, along with a consistent increase in information technology (IT) spending, a significant investment gap and opportunity exists for digital infrastructure development in Asia Pacific. For example, the investment gap in the region is anticipated to reach US$512 billion by 2040 (Figure 1).
Figure 1: Digital Infrastructure landscape in Asia Pacific
Market activity is blazing ahead at a lightning pace
Figure 2: Notable digital infrastructure-related market developments
S/N | Source | Date | Amount (US$) | Description | Link |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1. | KKR-Singtel Consortium | Jun 2024 | US$1.3 Billion | ST Telemedia Global Data Centres (STT GDC) raises US$1.3 billion from KKR-led Consortium with Singtel. | Source |
2. | Digital Core REIT | Mar 2024 | US$103 Million | Digital Core REIT acquired an additional 10% interest in a freehold data centre in Osaka, Japan from Mitsubishi Corporation. | Source |
3. | Keppel & Mitsui | Mar 2024 | US$1.1 Billion | Keppel partnered with Mitsui Fudosan to establish a US$1.1 billion Keppel Data Centre Fund II (KDCF II) for the proposed forward purchase/acquisition of a purpose-built data centre under development in Western Tokyo. | Source |
4. | PGIM | Jan 2024 | US$3 Billion | PGIM plans to invest as much as US$3 billion in the global data centre sector including in major Asia Pacific markets including Tokyo and Seoul. | Source |
5. | Seraya Partners | Dec 2023 | US$800 Million | Seraya Partners closed the fundraising of an $800 million fund called the Asia Infrastructure Fund for Digital Infrastructure and Energy Transition investments. | Source |
6. | KKR | Sep 2023 | US$800 Million | KKR acquired a 20% stake in Singtel’s regional data centre business, valued at US$4 billion. | Source |
7. | Bain Capital | Aug 2023 | US$3.16 Billion | Chinese data centre operator Chindata is to be taken private by existing investor Bain Capital in a US$3.16 billion merger agreement. | Source |
8. | Chindata | Jun 2023 | US$5 Billion | Chindata will construct a 500 MW data centre campus in Datong, North China’s Shanxi province, more than half of which will be powered by renewables. | Source |
9. | Connexa | Jun 2023 | US$661 Million | Connexa acquired local telco provider 2degrees’ tower assets throughout New Zealand for US$661 million, expanding its network to more than 2,350 towers. | Source |
10. | Vantage Data Centers | May 2023 | US$3 Billion | Vantage Data Centers announced it was investing US$3 billion in a new data centre campus in Cyberjaya, Malaysia. | Source |
11. | CyrusOne & KEPCO | May 2023 | US$7 Billion | CyrusOne and KEPCO formed a US$7 billion partnership in Japan, with plans for a 900-MW portfolio. CyrusOne is a newcomer to Japan. | Source |
12. | Frontier Tower Associates | Mar 2023 | US$220 Million | Frontier Tower Associates Philippines snapped up a portfolio of 1,012 towers from local telecoms provider PLDT. | Source |
13. | Area Group | Jan 2023 | Undisclosed | PE firm Area Group acquired 150 acres of freehold industrial-zoned land parcel within the Delapan Special Border Economic Zone (Delapan SBEZ) in the northern Malaysian state of Kedah, for developing a new data centre park. | Source |
Why Data Centres?
The inherent strength and ‘customer stickiness’ of the asset class, higher cap rates, non-cyclical growth nature, long-term stable returns as well as diversified income with rental growth potential are also strong draws for the data centre sector.
At present, investor appetite is strongest in higher-yielding opportunistic and value-add market segments. While investors would typically adopt a more cautious approach, there is significant value both ‘up’ and ‘down’ the value stack where investors stand to gain (Figure 3).
Figure 3: Favourability of data centres across the value stack
The great APAC digital divide
Figure 4: Classification of key Asia Pacific markets for digital infrastructure
- Core Markets Regarded as the epicentre and inception points for the digital infrastructure revolution in Asia Pacific. These markets are highly mature and at par with Tier-1 markets in other regions. These include Singapore, Tokyo, Hong Kong and Sydney. All of these markets consist of data centres with well over a half-GW of live power capacity (despite tighter planning constraints in Singapore).
- Peripheral Markets Peripheral markets are the first markets that benefitted from a spillover from the core markets. These are also markets which by virtue of their size are at the crossroads of leapfrogging into becoming core markets in the near future. Examples include Osaka, Kuala Lumpur, Shanghai and Mumbai.
- Emerging Markets These are markets that hold immense potential and are on the radar of investors as they seek to be early-movers in the space and capitalise on new opportunities. Examples include Johor, Batam, Jakarta and Bangkok.
Core markets by virtue of their size and maturity have gained much traction over the past few years. To further capitalise on this, investors, developers and occupiers familiar with the asset class are now shifting beyond the horizon to peripheral and emerging markets. As newer markets continue to expand alongside increasing demand for digital infrastructure, the Asia Pacific region presents far more opportunities of unprecedented scale.
Charting the course ahead
In our view, three key trends to monitor are the establishment of more creative structures and capital sourcing, increased deal flow and M&A activity as well as the continued prominence of established markets (Figure 5).
Figure 5: Key trends to watch
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