Partners Group to acquire Singapore-based data center platform Digital Halo
- Partners Group to invest $400M in Digital Halo data centers.
- Aims for 500 MW capacity across Southeast and North Asia.
- Fourth global data center acquisition since 2021.
Partners Group / Key word(s): Investment Singapore; 13 May 2025 |
- Partners Group plans to commit around USD 400 million to support pan-Asian expansion
- Partners Group intends to transform Digital Halo into a regional data center platform with over 500 MW of capacity
- Digital Halo is the fourth data center acquisition for Partners Group globally since 2021, demonstrating its thematic conviction in this high-growth sector
Partners Group, one of the largest firms in the global private markets industry, acting on behalf of its clients, has agreed to acquire Digital Halo Pte. Ltd. (or “the Company”) from its existing shareholders, including ARCH Capital. Digital Halo is a Singapore headquartered data center operator focused on Southeast and North Asia. Partners Group plans to initially commit around USD 400 million alongside ARCH Capital, which will stay on as a minority shareholder.
Partners Group intends to work with the management team to transform Digital Halo into a next-generation data center platform with over 500 MW of data center capacity across multiple markets in Southeast and North Asia. The firm’s value creation plan includes the construction and operation of two seed assets in Manila, Philippines and Johor Bahru, Malaysia. Both assets are located in high growth data center markets with potential for significant expansion. Led by a management team with a strong industry track record, the Company will provide built-to-suit and colocation services to hyperscale and enterprise customers under long-term contracts, generating a predictable revenue profile. Digital Halo benefits from the robust demand for data center capacity in Asia, which is being driven by structural thematic tailwinds such as enterprise cloud migration, continued growth in data usage and e-commerce, and demand for AI training and inference workloads.