For a company that is trying to pivot to enterprise business, it makes little sense not to focus on the cyber security entity that one has invested and grow for many years. Now that the investment in Ensign is coming to fruition, it decided to cash out at much lower value as compared to maybe listing it.
So what are they planning to use the 121m on? Give back to shareholders or wait and hope for the Simba/M1 deal to collapse so they can hijack and go back to focus on Telco?
So what are they planning to use the 121m on? Give back to shareholders or wait and hope for the Simba/M1 deal to collapse so they can hijack and go back to focus on Telco?
Speediman ( Date: 16-Apr-2026 16:25) Posted:
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Starhub is selling the rights (ard 20%) to Temasek, gets paid in just 2 weeks. without the rights, Starhub continues to have 38.92% of Ensign.
Actually it is a good deal to get money for the rights. 
Starhub still can cash out the balance if there is an IPO for ensign
   
Actually it is a good deal to get money for the rights. 
Starhub still can cash out the balance if there is an IPO for ensign
   
Use the money to build data center like Singtel?
Core business investment? Telco? Broadband? subscribe TV enterainment?
come on, all are saturated any dying and the no brain IMDA spending years to approve the M1 deal.
invest in AI? lol
Core business investment? Telco? Broadband? subscribe TV enterainment?
come on, all are saturated any dying and the no brain IMDA spending years to approve the M1 deal.
invest in AI? lol
Joelton ( Date: 16-Apr-2026 11:24) Posted:
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StarHub hands Ensign InfoSecurity control back to Temasek in S$115 million deal, books S$200 million gain
The telco is partially monetising its investment in the joint venture while freeing up capital for redeployment
[SINGAPORE] StarHub : CC3 0% is ceding majority control of joint venture (JV) Ensign InfoSecurity to co-shareholder Temasek in a S$115 million deal that closes out a seven-year governance arrangement and books the telco a gain of more than S$200 million.
StarHub said the move will &ldquo partially monetise&rdquo its investment in Ensign Infosecurity while retaining strategic participation, allowing it to redeploy capital towards other strategic and core business investments.
The telco said in a regulatory filing on Wednesday (Apr 15) night that it has agreed with Ensign Technologies, an indirect wholly owned subsidiary of Temasek, to terminate the assignment of aggregate assigned rights.
This refers to a bundle of voting and economic rights over Ensign InfoSecurity shares that Ensign Technologies had transferred to StarHub when the cybersecurity JV was established in 2018.
Under the original JV structure, Ensign Technologies assigned StarHub rights over shares representing 20 per cent of Ensign InfoSecurity&rsquo s total issued capital in exchange for S$52 million.
StarHub subsequently paid further sums to acquire additional assigned rights through a series of capital calls and share subscriptions, bringing the total consideration paid for the arrangement to about S$77.6 million.
The practical effect was to give StarHub an effective interest of 55.73 per cent in Ensign InfoSecurity, well above its registered shareholding, for a fixed period.
That period has now ended. With the termination taking effect on Wednesday, StarHub&rsquo s stake reverts to its underlying 38.92 per cent, and Ensign InfoSecurity will be reclassified from a subsidiary to an associated company of the telco.
Temasek, through Ensign Technologies, resumes majority control.
In consideration for the termination, Ensign Technologies will pay StarHub S$115 million in cash, to be settled within 15 business days.
StarHub said it expects to book a fair-value gain of over S$200 million for the financial year ending Dec 31, 2026, arising from the termination and the remeasurement of its residual 38.92 per cent stake upon the reclassification.
The two parties have also agreed that Ensign InfoSecurity will distribute S$6 million in cash to StarHub by way of a capital reduction, as soon as reasonably practicable, after completion.
At StarHub&rsquo s  full-year 2025 results  in February, chief executive Nikhil Eapen said the company was in &ldquo quite advanced stages&rdquo of selling a stake to its co-shareholder and indicated that an update would be likely in the first quarter of 2026.
Shares of StarHub closed flat at S$1.05 on Wednesday, before the announcement.
 
The dynamics are complicated but on the face it seems to indicate Ensign is worth a lot of money. Temasek is willing to pay $115m simply for Starhub not to be able to buy 17ish% of Ensign? Win win.
More money coming for Starhub if
IDA decides that Simba have to pay starhub some compensation as a result of more users (Simba M1 merger) plugging into 700mhz spectrum. 
IDA decides that Simba have to pay starhub some compensation as a result of more users (Simba M1 merger) plugging into 700mhz spectrum. 
shk363 ( Date: 16-Apr-2026 07:53) Posted:
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good news is $120m cash gap up later to 1.2?
Though there's a gain of 121m but why do i feel this is a bad deal especially Ensign's value should be higher.
StarHub and Temasek have agreed to terminate the assigned rights arrangement relating to a portion of StarHub?s overall economic and equity interest in Ensign InfoSecurity for total cash proceeds of S$121 million. This follows the natural evolution of the original transaction structure and allows StarHub to partially monetise its investment and redeploy capital towards other strategic and core business investments.
As part of this, StarHub expects to recognise a fair value gain of over S$200 million from the termination of the Aggregate Assigned Rights and the remeasurement of its remaining 38.92% equity interest in Ensign upon recognising Ensign as an associated company. Ensign remains an important cybersecurity partner to StarHub, and we look forward to the continued collaboration.
StarHub and Temasek have agreed to terminate the assigned rights arrangement relating to a portion of StarHub?s overall economic and equity interest in Ensign InfoSecurity for total cash proceeds of S$121 million. This follows the natural evolution of the original transaction structure and allows StarHub to partially monetise its investment and redeploy capital towards other strategic and core business investments.
As part of this, StarHub expects to recognise a fair value gain of over S$200 million from the termination of the Aggregate Assigned Rights and the remeasurement of its remaining 38.92% equity interest in Ensign upon recognising Ensign as an associated company. Ensign remains an important cybersecurity partner to StarHub, and we look forward to the continued collaboration.
8 mobile seem to be competitive. Lotsa retail shop carry them.
The 5G plan seems very popular
Market share coming back to Starhub?
21st May is the new date now
Speediman ( Date: 25-Mar-2026 15:13) Posted:
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Simba&rsquo s generous S$1.43 billion offer to Keppel for M1&rsquo s telecom business risks lapsing, as it is valid for six months from Sep 26, 2025 &ndash if a new deadline has not been agreed in writing.
Today 25th March 2026 is the end of 6 months offer? 
 
Today 25th March 2026 is the end of 6 months offer? 
 
Will Starhub gap up if Simba is unsuccessful to takeover M1?
Will ST instead launch a counter offer now that they have money in the kitty bank?
https://www.businesstimes.com.sg/companies-markets/telcos-media-tech/key-considerations-hanging-over-approval-simba-m1s-merger

Speediman ( Date: 10-Mar-2026 12:19) Posted:
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Takes another 2 years to realize cost savings and better improve P&L?
I hammer the CEO if I can. He already wasted 3 FY, Dare+ was originally supposed to complete 2024
JurongW ( Date: 06-Mar-2026 23:33) Posted:
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SGX Research Series: 10 in 10
StarHub focuses on structural reset
Emelia TanFri, Mar 06, 2026 &bull 12:50 PM GMT+08  &bull     &bull 8 min read
 
 
StarHub is a homegrown Singapore company that offers quality mobile and fixed services, a broad suite of premium content, and a diverse range of communication solutions. The company develops and delivers solutions incorporating artificial intelligence, cybersecurity, data analytics, Internet of Things, and robotics for corporate and government clients.
1. How is StarHub prioritising resilience and long-term value creation amid an uncertain operating environment?
Resilience in a rapidly evolving industry requires structural discipline. FY2026 is shaping up to be a structural reset year for both the telco sector and StarHub. Our approach is anchored on two key pillars.
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Firstly, StarHub is structurally resetting its cost base through implementing a multi-year cost optimisation programme, with a target of achieving $70 million in run-rate savings across FY2026-2028. This programme is intended as a reset of our operating model, aimed at reaching the minimum efficient scale, with the objective to create a leaner and more agile organisation positioned for sustainable growth.
Secondly, alongside tightening structural costs, StarHub is making targeted investments in areas that reinforce long-term competitiveness, including cybersecurity, network infrastructure, and enterprise capabilities. These investments are calibrated, returns-driven and aligned to strengthening earnings quality and operational efficiency.
Overall, StarHub is utilising the current competitive environment to enhance execution and structural efficiency, while maintaining a disciplined approach to strategic investment. This strategy is intended to strengthen the company&rsquo s position as the sector stabilises and support sustainable long-term shareholder value following this period of adjustment.
2. With competition intensifying in the consumer business, what strategic steps is StarHub taking to defend and grow its market position?
StarHub maintains a significant presence in the market by competing on factors beyond price. As the sole operator with established positions across premium, digital and value segments, we are uniquely positioned to proactively shape behaviour. The company&rsquo s diverse brand portfolio provides the flexibility to defend, maintain or grow market share across various customer groups.
Our strategy is centred on developing profitable and sustainable market share rather than chasing volume at any cost. StarHub works to enhance customer lifetime value across its brands by improving service quality, offering differentiated content, providing bundled services, and optimising the customer experience. In addition, the company utilises data analytics, digital platforms and lifecycle management to support customer retention and increase average revenue per user (ARPU).
3. How does StarHub&rsquo s shift away from ultra-low value reflect a broader reset towards sustainable growth and earnings quality?
As consolidation within the telecommunications industry progresses and regulatory cost parity increases across operators, we expect competitive behaviour to rationalise over time. By focusing on architecting value rather than aggressive pricing strategies, this approach positions the company favourably as the market transitions toward more sustainable forms of competition.
4. Enterprise order book growth remains healthy, but revenue conversion is impacted by timing and mix. How should investors view execution priorities over the next year?
Our strong order book reflects underlying demand for our modern digital infrastructure and managed services platforms particularly within the government and enterprise segment. Revenue recognition timing is largely project-based and conversion timing is influenced by deployment schedules and solutions mix, especially as we increasingly secure larger, multi-year deals.
Our near-term execution priorities are centred around disciplined delivery and selective mergers and acquisitions to drive scale and enhance capabilities to accelerate implementation, strengthen project governance and ensure margin integrity as deals convert. Investors should focus on the order book quality and pipeline sustainability as leading indicators of medium-term growth.
5. As StarHub refines its cybersecurity strategy, how is the group balancing growth ambitions, capability depth and differentiation?
Cybersecurity forms a fundamental component of StarHub&rsquo s responsibilities as a provider of critical infrastructure and as a trusted digital infrastructure partner. It is not just a growth vertical.
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Our approach is capability-led, not purely acquisition-led. This means deepening partnerships, building proprietary expertise and integrating cyber capabilities into our broader modern digital infrastructure platform offering. This integrated model enabled us to scale while maintaining service credibility and margin discipline.
Importantly, as regulatory expectations rise and all operators are required to invest substantially in cybersecurity, structural cost asymmetries begin to narrow. Our consistent investment in this area distinguishes our position in a market where trust, resilience and integration are prioritised over isolated solutions.
For StarHub, cybersecurity is both a defensive and strategic play as it safeguards our core infrastructure while enhancing the value proposition of our enterprise platform. This dual role is central to achieving sustained differentiation over the long term.
6. Considering sector consolidation, how does StarHub view competitive intensity over the next 12&ndash 24 months? What does this mean for capital allocation?
Sector consolidation represents a structural change, but competitive pressures are expected to remain in the near term. We expect pricing discipline to remain challenged, and it will continue to be a key factor in the consumer segment as the market adjusts. Over time, consolidation &mdash together with evolving critical infrastructure obligations &mdash should gradually influence industry behaviour and narrow cost asymmetries across operators.
Against this backdrop, our approach to capital allocation is consistent &mdash to be disciplined, focused on returns, and priorities areas within our control. Capital decisions are assessed with the objective of generating long-term value for shareholders, balancing investment in growth with structural efficiency. We will continue to invest selectively in network resilience and cybersecurity, scale enterprise capabilities, and enhance customer experience and digital engagement.
Underpinning this is the disciplined execution of our strategic cost optimisation programme, resetting our cost base to minimum efficient scale &mdash all while maintaining balance sheet prudence, sufficient liquidity headroom and dividend sustainability.
While competitive pressures may persist in the near term, our response remains deliberate. We are allocating capital to strengthen our structural positioning so that, as market rationality improves, we are better placed to capture operating leverage and deliver sustainable shareholder returns.
7. With near-term volatility expected to persist, how is StarHub positioning its core segments to emerge stronger when conditions stabilise?
Across business segments, efforts are concentrated on strengthening fundamentals. Within the consumer division, the focus is on improving proposition value and advancing digital engagement. For enterprise, work is underway to expand platform capabilities, strengthen cybersecurity resilience, and enhance regional operations. In the infrastructure segment, ongoing investment is directed towards network resilience and cyber reliability. These actions are intended to improve operational efficiency and prepare the organisation to benefit from stabilising market conditions.
8. What operational and cost discipline levers are being prioritised to strengthen margins?
We have expanded our multi-year cost optimisation programme, which covers four core pillars: Legacy decommissioning: This involves phasing out outdated platforms as well as removing unused assets and consolidating vendor contracts to reduce the total debt and lower ongoing operating costs.
Network automation: We are digitising and streamlining more than 20 core network functions, upgrading infrastructure, automating processes, and embedding cybersecurity into our network which will improve agility, service quality, and cost efficiency.
Systems re-architecture: Simplifying our IT landscape by consolidating fragmented tools and systems and strengthening our in-house capabilities. This gives us greater control and better long-term efficiency.
Business simplification: Here, we rationalise our product and brand portfolios and redesign our operating model by streamlining offerings, improving omnichannel experiences, and simplifying internal processes to deliver a better customer experience with lower complexity and cost.
These four pillars are underpinned by four strategic themes that run across the company: Simplification to support scalability and sustainability redesign of end-to-end operating models to minimise fragmentation evolution of delivery models to enhance agility and control costs and reallocation of investment from legacy operations to areas aligned with future business needs.
The focus of this programme is to address the most significant and structurally inefficient cost areas &mdash specifically those where complexity and underinvestment have impacted returns and service quality. The intention is to establish a robust operational foundation that enables StarHub to improve competitiveness across market segments and support sustainable, long-term value creation for shareholders.
9. On the $70 million multi-year cost optimisation programme &mdash what are the milestones and when will savings flow through?
Execution is already underway across the pillars, with cost savings to be realised gradually over FY2026&ndash 2028, with meaningful impact on the profit and loss statement anticipated as these initiatives are expanded and outdated cost structures are phased out. The programme is intended to establish a more efficient operational framework to support future business requirements, rather than serving solely as a cost reduction measure.
10. How is StarHub advancing its sustainability commitments?
Sustainability considerations are integrated into our operational and investment practices. Our priorities span across improving energy efficiency, maintaining responsible network operations, advancing sustainable supply chain management, supporting workforce well-being, and promoting digital inclusion. We also contribute to customers&rsquo sustainability objectives by providing smart infrastructure and digital solutions. Governance and disclosure practices are being enhanced in line with these ongoing efforts.
Emelia Tan is a director of the capital market development team at SGX Group
Will support you.
How can small investors raise this DEMAND to the board
Next question is whether the board made up credible people who push the CEO & COO to deliver results or else face the sack?
bechaotic ( Date: 05-Mar-2026 10:43) Posted:
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Ok. We' ll attend this year AGM to vote him out!  Like you said, he implemented DARE and now hope all DARE to oust him.
millcyy ( Date: 04-Mar-2026 17:58) Posted:
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Quickly change the CEO and the management team. Even without the war, starhub share price will go below $1. Starhub CEO was appointed the same time as Singtel CEO, Singtel share has gone to the moon but starhub has gone deeper to the grave. Will become another SingPost in no time, not relevant,
Since the CEO appointment in 2021, his only project for the past 5 years is to implement DARE which is mainly to improve operation and save cost. We do not need CEO to improve operation, we need CEO to source for more revenue generatior.
Since the CEO appointment in 2021, his only project for the past 5 years is to implement DARE which is mainly to improve operation and save cost. We do not need CEO to improve operation, we need CEO to source for more revenue generatior.
stable in a sea of red
Will wait... still think it might go lower.
Speediman ( Date: 27-Feb-2026 13:48) Posted:
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