The Sun (Malaysia)

SoftBank aims to list domestic telecoms unit this year

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TOKYO: SoftBank Group Corp said yesterday that it wants to list its Japanese telecoms unit this year as CEO Masayoshi Son moves to complete the transforma­tion of the company he founded from domestic telecoms upstart into one of the world’s biggest technology investors.

SoftBank hopes to list shares of its core Japanese telecoms unit, SoftBank Corp, this year, Son told reporters, adding that the proceeds “will be used to strengthen our financial balance and for group growth.”

The company flagged last month that it was considerin­g listing the business, seeking to raise a reported US$18 billion (RM70.4 billion).

SoftBank has long relied on its domestic telecoms business, which makes up a third of overall sales but two-thirds of profit, as a stable source of cash that can be diverted to its growing number of investment­s around the world.

In pursuit of his vision of a future powered by interconne­cted devices and artificial intelligen­ce, Son establishe­d the Vision Fund, the world’s largest private equity

firm, which has funnelled more than US$9 billion into global start-ups since its inception in 2016, Thomson Reuters data showed.

Investment­s announced this year include leading an US$865 million investment in constructi­on startup Katerra, a US$300 million investment in dog-walking app Wag and the closure of a deal to become Uber Technologi­es Inc’s largest shareholde­r.

SoftBank has moved from making early-stage investment­s in companies such as Chinese ecommerce firm Alibaba Group Holding Ltd – a US$20 million bet that paid off spectacula­rly and helped cement Son’s reputation – to making investment­s of hundreds of millions or billions of dollars in later stage startups, an approach widely seen as contributi­ng to a spike in valuations.

Separately yesterday, the company reported a 2.8% fall in third-quarter operating profit, due in part to higher costs. It did not release a forecast for the current business year, saying there were too many uncertain factors. – Reuters

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