Arctic Wolf, the United Kingdom-based security operations firm, has announced its official launch in Singapore, marking the latest milestone in its ongoing expansion across the Asia-Pacific region.
The firm said in a statement on last Thursday that with the launch, organizations in Singapore can now access the company’s full suite of capabilities including Endpoint Security, Managed Detection and Response, Managed Risk, Managed Security Awareness, and Incident Response.
“As organizations struggle with the challenges of the modern threat landscape, we continue to see strong customer demand across the globe for the Arctic Wolf Aurora Platform and the
positive cybersecurity outcomes it delivers,
“We are excited to bring our portfolio of Security Operations solutions to the business and channel communities of Singapore and look forward to working with them to help end cyber risk,” said Nick Schneider, President and Chief Executive Officer, Arctic Wolf.
Used by more than 10,000 organizations worldwide, Arctic Wolf helps businesses manage cybersecurity by delivering scalable, outcome-driven solutions through its Aurora Platform and Concierge Delivery Model.
It is noted that organizations in Singapore face a perfect storm of cybersecurity challenges, including a rapidly evolving threat landscape, increased regulatory scrutiny, and an ongoing shortage of skilled security professionals.
Arctic Wolf helps businesses of all sizes tackle these problems head on by offering a unified, cloud-native platform that pairs AI-driven threat detection with expert guidance and 24×7 monitoring from one of the world’s largest commercial Security Operations Centers.
Arctic Wolf has also on last Thursday released new data from its State of Cybersecurity: 2025 Trends Report, which showed breaches are common and transparency is improving; significant attacks remain widespread; ransom payouts were worryingly high; complexities exist in current cybersecurity stacks.
According to the report, 70 percent of businesses disclosed a breach in the past year as they were required to by law, while 23 percent did so due to requirements from their insurer or an outside entity.
This indicates strong regulatory compliance and incident transparency in the country.
The report also showed Malware and business email compromise were the most used methods followed by ransomware and/or data exfiltration.
Meanwhile, 100 percent of organizations hit by ransomware in Singapore, paid.
Of those, 83 percent engaged a professional negotiator, which led to reduced payments in more than half of the cases.
While respondents are satisfied with the firewall and Network Traffic Analysis (NTA) components of their security stacks, 57 percent cited difficult implementations as a complexity along with lack of efficacy (33 percent).
“The findings from our 2025 Trends Report make it clear that organizations in Singapore are under growing pressure to advance their cybersecurity maturity,” said David Hayes, Director Asia Pacific (APAC), Arctic Wolf.
“From managing AI-driven risks to navigating breach disclosure and responding to ransomware, businesses need more than just point solutions, they need a partner with the breadth and expertise to drive meaningful outcomes,
“We’re excited to officially launch in Singapore and bring our full portfolio of security operations capabilities to help organizations reduce risk, strengthen resilience, and accelerate their security maturity,” he added.
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