Superloop Closes $165M Lightning Broadband Deal to Build National Fibre Network
Superloop closes $165 million Lightning Broadband acquisition
Superloop Limited (ASX: SLC) has completed the acquisition of 100% of Lynham Networks Pty Ltd, the parent company of Lightning Broadband, for $165 million in cash consideration, subject to final completion adjustments in accordance with the Share Purchase Agreement. The transaction, originally executed on 18 February 2026, reached completion on 29 May 2026, marking a material strategic milestone for the company. Two headline outcomes accompany the close: an accelerated national Fibre-to-the-Premises (FTTP) footprint and Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) approval of the Joint Functional Separation Undertaking (JFSU).
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What Superloop is acquiring: scale, geography and regulatory standing
Lynham Networks operates an open-access wholesale FTTP network spanning more than 400 Multi-Dwelling Unit (MDU) and Single-Dwelling Unit (SDU) developments. The business holds Statutory Infrastructure Provider (SIP) status under Australian telecommunications legislation, underpinning its position as the default infrastructure provider for new residential developments it serves.
As at end of April 2026, the asset profile includes:
- 400+ MDU and SDU developments
- Approximately 56,000 secured lots across both FTTP and Purpose-Built Student Accommodation (PBSA)
- Approximately 16,000 services in operation
- National geographic presence across Victoria, New South Wales, the Australian Capital Territory, South Australia, Queensland and Western Australia
| Metric | Detail |
|---|---|
| Developments | 400+ MDU/SDU |
| Secured lots | ~56,000 (FTTP + PBSA) |
| Services in operation | ~16,000 (as at end of April 2026) |
| Geographic reach | VIC, NSW, ACT, SA, QLD, WA |
| Regulatory status | Statutory Infrastructure Provider (SIP) |
Understanding FTTP and why open-access networks matter for investors
Fibre-to-the-Premises (FTTP) refers to fibre optic cabling that runs directly to an individual home or apartment, rather than to a street-level node that then connects via older copper wiring for the final stretch. The distinction matters because full-fibre connections to the premises deliver faster speeds and greater reliability compared to hybrid infrastructure.
Open-access wholesale networks take this a step further. Rather than one company building the infrastructure and exclusively selling retail services over it, an open-access model allows multiple retail service providers to offer their own products across the same physical network. This separates infrastructure ownership from retail competition, which is generally considered more efficient for consumers and more attractive to regulators.
Statutory Infrastructure Provider (SIP) status is a legislatively defined designation under Australian telecommunications law. It grants the holder both the obligation and the right to be the default infrastructure provider for new property developments within its footprint. In practical terms, this means that when new MDU or SDU developments are built in areas where Lynham Networks holds SIP status, the company has a protected position as the infrastructure provider. For investors, this creates a durable competitive moat: the contracted pipeline of secured lots is underpinned by legislative standing, not simply commercial negotiation.
Together, these characteristics align directly with Superloop’s Smart Communities strategy and its Infrastructure-on-Demand platform, which is designed to aggregate and monetise physical connectivity assets at scale.
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ACCC green light and what comes next for Superloop’s Smart Communities platform
The ACCC’s approval of the Joint Functional Separation Undertaking (JFSU) became effective from completion on 29 May 2026. The JFSU establishes a functionally separated operating framework for Superloop’s wholesale FTTP activities and supports open-access engagement with retail service providers as the Smart Communities platform continues to scale. Regulatory approval of this structure is a meaningful de-risking event, confirming that the combined business model has been assessed and accepted by Australia’s competition regulator.
On the funding side, the acquisition was drawn from Superloop’s existing cash and debt facilities. Following completion, net debt is expected to remain at approximately 1.4x EBITDA, a level management characterises as low, reflecting balance sheet discipline at a time of material strategic expansion.
With completion now confirmed and the regulatory framework in place, three strategic outcomes emerge from this transaction:
- Accelerates Superloop’s Smart Communities strategy with a scaled national asset base
- Strengthens Superloop’s position as a national FTTP challenger, backed by SIP-status assets across six states and territories
- Establishes an ACCC-approved operating framework that enables open-access wholesale growth across the combined network
The Superloop Lightning Broadband acquisition brings together a nationally distributed FTTP footprint, legislatively protected infrastructure rights, and a regulator-approved wholesale operating model. With approximately 56,000 secured lots and growth in active services already under way, the platform is positioned to pursue further scale within the Smart Communities segment.
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