Telecom Egypt’s board has given preliminary approval to sell a majority stake in its new data centre subsidiary to the Africa-focused private equity firm Helios Investment Partners. The deal, which values the data hub unit at up to $260m, comes just two months after a devastating fire at a central Cairo telecom exchange exposed critical vulnerabilities in the nation’s digital infrastructure, bringing its fintech sector to a standstill.
The binding offer from Helios is for a 75–80% stake in a subsidiary that will own Telecom Egypt’s Regional Data Hub (RDH). The unit is valued at $230m, with an additional $30m contingent on meeting certain performance indicators. The transaction is pending definitive agreements and the formal restructuring of the RDH assets into the new subsidiary.
The timing of the investment is significant, underscoring an urgent need for more robust and decentralised digital infrastructure in Egypt.
A Stark Wake-Up Call
In July, a fire at the historic Ramses Central Exchange — a facility routing over 40% of Egypt’s data traffic — had a catastrophic ripple effect across the economy. The blaze crippled mobile banking apps, froze point-of-sale terminals, and forced the Egyptian Stock Exchange to suspend trading.
Internet watchdog NetBlocks reported at the time that national connectivity dropped to just 62% of normal levels. The incident served as a brutal reality check, revealing that the country’s booming fintech ecosystem was dangerously reliant on a single, ageing point of failure. The crisis highlighted the pressing need to modernise and diversify critical digital infrastructure away from centralised legacy systems.
Building a Resilient Digital Future
The investment from Helios is earmarked for the Regional Data Hub (RDH), a modern, multi-phase campus designed to prevent such systemic failures. This move signals a strategic shift towards building the resilient infrastructure needed to support Egypt’s digital economy.
The RDH’s first phase, which provides approximately 2.5 MW of IT load, became fully utilised within a year of its 2021 launch and has achieved multiple Uptime Institute Tier III certifications, signifying a high level of reliability and redundancy.
The second phase (RDH2), currently in development, is designed for a larger 4.6 MW IT load and has already received its Tier III Design Certification. It is also registered for Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED), indicating a commitment to environmental sustainability.
For Telecom Egypt, the state’s primary telecom provider, the partnership with Helios injects crucial private capital and deep-sector expertise. For Helios, which has a long track record of building digital platforms across Africa, the Egyptian deal on data centres provides a foothold in one of the continent’s most promising, and now most motivated, digital markets. While the deal is yet to be finalised, it represents a direct and necessary response to the lessons learned from the Ramses fire.