Established 25 October 1996 as TIME Telecommunications Holdings Berhad, the company was renamed TIME dotCom Berhad on 17 January 2000. Through its many innovations and strategic acquisitions, the company has evolved into a regional telecommunications leader. In 2000,
Khazanah Nasional acquired a 30% equity stake in the company. Time was listed on
Bursa Malaysia a year later. In 2006, Time secured one of two 3G licences from the
Malaysian Communications and Multimedia Commission (MCMC). Their 3G licence was later sold to
DiGi. In the early 2000s, the company was a key player in boosting rural connectivity in Malaysia through its rollout of the National Universal Service Provision (USP) Project in 2006, in collaboration with the MCMC. Afzal Abdul Rahim joined Time in 2008 as Chief Executive Officer. Appointed by Khazanah, he led the company’s recovery strategy starting with the sale of Time’s public telephone business to the prepaid fixed-line telephone company Paycomm for RM8.3 million. Within 1 year and for the first time in 6 years, Time was finally in the black. On 31 March 2010, Time posted a profit run for the fourth consecutive quarter with a Profit After Tax (PAT) of RM18.8 million. Profit from operations improved to RM3.0 million against a loss in operations of RM2.8 million in the preceding year’s corresponding quarter. The company went on to introduce the country’s first high-speed broadband, Time Fibre Broadband, in 2012, achieving speeds of up to 100Mbps. Malaysian financial newspaper The Edge reported that its 100% fibre optic network covered approximately 100,000 homes in the Klang Valley and Penang. This was achieved through fibre-to-the-home (FTTH), a broadband technology that employs optical fibres to supply high-speed internet and other digital services directly to individual buildings. Current speed plan offerings include 200Mbps, 600Mbps, 1Gbps and 2Gbps packages. Time expanded its regional footprint in 2011, after the company’s minority shareholders approved a proposal to acquire four regional telecommunications companies valued at over RM322 million. Among others, it acquired stakes in companies such as Global Transit companies, which invests in submarine cables, and AIMS Group, which owns data centres. Time’s regional presence was further boosted through strategic investments in Vietnam's CMC and Thailand's Symphony, both telecommunications leaders in their respective markets. In 2022, Time sold a 49% stake in AIMS Data Centre Business to US-based
DigitalBridge Group to accelerate their data centre expansion plans across Asia. == Networks ==