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New Delhi has unveiled a sweeping tax holiday to capture the next wave of AI and cloud build-outs, positioning India as a long-term base for exporting compute. Foreign providers that deliver cloud and data center services to customers outside India will pay zero corporate tax on those revenues through 2047, provided workloads run from facilities in India. The budget also introduces a 15% cost-plus safe harbor for Indian data center units serving related foreign parties, simplifying transfer pricing for global delivery hubs. For cloud providers, it strengthens the business case to place GPU clusters, storage, and interconnect in India to serve overseas demand, not just local workloads.
NTT DATA and AWS have signed a multi-year strategic collaboration aimed at accelerating cloud modernization and responsible agentic AI adoption, with clear implications for APAC enterprises and telecoms. The agreement expands joint go-to-market and delivery across four pillars: AI-driven cloud transformation, industry cloud solutions, AI-enabled managed services and customer experience, and sovereign cloud for regulated workloads. NTT DATA has created a dedicated AWS Business Group with close to 11,000 AWS-certified experts and plans to certify nearly 10,000 more in three years. APAC boards want measurable AI outcomes, but legacy estates, data fragmentation, and compliance obligations slow progress.
Apple’s purchase of Israeli start-up Q.ai accelerates its shift toward multimodal, audio-first wearables and tighter on-device AI. Apple acquired Q.ai, a Tel Aviv-based AI company operating in stealth since 2022, in a transaction reported around $2 billion, making it Apple’s second-largest acquisition after Beats. The move lands as Apple pushes a broader AI refresh across devices and services, including a reworked Siri due next month and a reported integration of Google’s Gemini into Apple Foundation Models. The core value is a human-computer interface designed to reduce friction between intent and AI execution. This enables “silent speech” and context awareness without overt voice commands or touch.
ServiceNow has named Anthropic’s Claude as the default model for its Build Agent and a preferred model across the ServiceNow AI Platform, signaling a shift from AI pilots to deeply embedded, production-grade automation. Embedding Claude into that fabric gives customers an on-ramp to agentic automation—systems that can reason over context, decide, and execute tasks—without stitching together point tools. Claude becomes the default model for ServiceNow Build Agent, an AI-assisted builder for apps and automations. Embedding Claude within the ServiceNow AI Platform enables access control, usage monitoring, and compliance aligned to enterprise policies. ServiceNow aims to cut implementation timelines for customers by roughly half by using Claude to accelerate configuration, adoption, and rollout.
Verizon exits 2025 with standout subscriber growth and a leaner 2026 investment plan that shifts dollars from network build to integration, efficiency and customer retention. Verizon posted more than 1 million net additions in the fourth quarter, including 616,000 postpaid phone net adds—the best showing since 2019—and 372,000 broadband net adds driven by 319,000 fixed wireless access (FWA) additions and the strongest Fios Internet quarter since 2020. After years of 5G coverage build, Verizon is pivoting to densification, fiber integration and operating efficiency, allowing capex to step down without undermining network competitiveness. Capital will concentrate on fiber-led convergence, FWA capacity, and experience-centric technologies that reduce churn and support revenue quality.
Telenor is monetizing its 25-year run in Thailand by selling its entire stake in True Corporation, signaling a strategic refocus and a maturing Asian portfolio. Telenor agreed to sell 24.95% of True Corporation to Arise Digital Technology Company Limited at THB 11.70 per share, with a mutual put/call option to transfer the remaining 5.35% two years after closing. The agreed valuation implies proceeds of roughly NOK 39 billion (about US$3.9 billion) and represents a notable premium—around 36% over True’s first post-merger trading day close and about 4% over the recent three-month VWAP. The sale aligns with a broader pivot toward capital discipline, structural simplification, and a tighter Nordic focus.
TeraWave combines 5,280 low Earth orbit satellites with 128 medium Earth orbit satellites—5,408 spacecraft in total—tied together via optical inter-satellite links. The design targets global coverage with two distinct performance tiers: up to 144 Gbps symmetrical RF links per enterprise customer using Q/V-band in LEO, and optical links in MEO delivering up to 6 Tbps for high-throughput trunking between hubs. Blue Origin positions the service for point-to-point private links and enterprise-grade internet access, with an initial target of up to 100,000 customers. The company intends to launch on its own New Glenn vehicles and leverage reusable engines to scale deployment.
France’s three other mobile network operators—Bouygues Telecom, Free-iliad and Orange—have reopened negotiations with Altice to carve up most of SFR, reviving a complex deal that could reshape competition, capex and customer experience across the market. The operators confirmed they are conducting due diligence with Altice after re-engaging in early January 2026, stressing that legal and financial terms remain undecided and that there is no assurance of a transaction. A successful transaction would compress the French market from four to three MNOs, with material consequences for pricing power, 5G/fiber investment, vendor ecosystems and enterprise buyers. Consolidation momentum is building across Europe, evidenced by recent approvals of large transactions with stringent remedies. Altice has been under sustained pressure to reduce debt following restructurings and asset sales.
CEO Börje Ekholm indicated the company will keep trimming headcount after cutting roughly 5,000 positions over the last year. In Sweden, Ericsson has notified authorities and begun union talks that could affect about 1,600 roles, part of a multi‑year restructuring program. The move follows a 2023 plan to remove around 8,500 jobs worldwide—about 8% of its workforce—with further reductions last year in markets such as Spain and Canada. The rationale remains consistent: reset the cost base, protect profitability, and keep investment firepower for strategic bets amid a slower operator capex cycle.
Ericsson is signaling a strategic shift toward defence, mission-critical, and AI-era network architectures as traditional RAN spending stays flat. Management expects the global RAN market to remain flat in 2026, sustaining a multi-year trend that now pegs annual spend at roughly the low-$30 billions. Ericsson is building for a traffic mix shift where AI applications push uplink throughput and latency to the forefront. Defence, utilities, transport, and public safety are moving from proprietary systems to standards-based 3GPP networks.
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