Oman Daily Observer

Softbank to sell $41 billion in assets to cut debts

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TOKYO: Softbank Group Corp said on Monday it is selling or monetising up to 4.5 trillion yen ($41 billion) in assets to buy back 2 trillion yen of its shares and reduce debt, sending its stock soaring to its biggest daily gain in nearly 12 years.

The share buyback will be in addition to the up to 500 billion yen buyback announced earlier this month, in the Japanese tech conglomera­te’s biggest ever repurchase.

The buyback tops the $20 billion in purchases sought by activist hedge fund Elliott Management, which has put pressure on Softbank to improve shareholde­r returns, and will see the company retire 45 per cent of its shares.

The asset sales come during a growing financial squeeze on Softbank and its $100 billion Vision Fund, which has recorded two consecutiv­e quarters of losses as its tech bets fall short, with global economic growth sputtering due to the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Softbank’s share price extended early gains on Monday, closing up almost 19 per cent following the announceme­nt of the asset sales, which will be executed over the next four quarters. Softbank did not specify what would be sold.

Softbank’s share price has been hammered by investor scepticism over the outlook for CEO Masayoshi Son’s bets on startups like Wework and Uber.

Its plans to fund the initial 500 billion yen buyback with debt was received negatively by analysts and investors who were concerned by Son’s willingnes­s to leverage the company.

Beyond the share buyback, proceeds will be used for repaying debt, buying back bonds and boosting cash reserves, reflecting Son’s “firm and unwavering confidence” in the business, it said in a statement.

Given fragile markets Softbank may look to monetise its stakes in the merged Sprint and T-mobile US or Chinese ecommerce giant Alibaba, Redex Holdings analyst Kirk Boodry said.

Son previously offloaded part of the stake in Alibaba, of which Softbank currently owns 25 per cent, in a complicate­d transactio­n ahead of the 2016 purchase of chip designer Arm.

The asset sales come as Softbank’s conglomera­te discount, or the difference between its market capitalisa­tion and the value of its assets, last week yawned to a record 73 per cent.

 ?? — Reuters ?? A man talks on the phone as he stands in front of an advertisin­g poster of the Softbank telecommun­ications company in Tokyo.
— Reuters A man talks on the phone as he stands in front of an advertisin­g poster of the Softbank telecommun­ications company in Tokyo.

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