Business Day

Meet US dealmaker who’s trying to turn around SoftBank’s fortunes

• Investment­s in safe pair of hands

- Krystal Hu

When he left Morgan Stanley to join SoftBank Group in Tokyo in 2015, Alex Clavel had little in common with the swashbuckl­ing dealmakers who surrounded CEO Masayoshi Son.

After years of executive departures and soured bets at SoftBank, including a $16bn investment in co-working space firm WeWork, the former tech investment banker is Son’s top lieutenant leading the attempt at a turnaround.

As the co-CEO of SoftBank Investment Advisers, Clavel is responsibl­e for managing investment­s for the firm’s $160bn Vision Funds and another $35bn on the group’s balance sheet.

Where and how SoftBank deploys its billions will shape the future of many technology start-ups as well as the fortunes of its shareholde­rs, who have suffered four consecutiv­e quarters of losses.

It will also determine whether the Japanese conglomera­te will again manage outside money, after disappoint­ment with its first Vision Fund forced SoftBank to fund its second $60bn fund exclusivel­y with its own capital.

Interviews with Clavel and 12 current and former colleagues shed light on how he rose through the ranks as an unassuming problem solver. Rather than bringing in mega deals or raising funds from investors as his predecesso­rs did, Clavel won Son’s trust as a steady hand managing and fixing SoftBank’s complex or troubled transactio­ns.

REGROUPING

SoftBank needs such skills as it faces a cooling in global tech investment amid higher interest rates. After slowing its investment pace to regroup, the firm said it went on the offensive again in the middle of 2023, focusing on artificial intelligen­ce (AI) and robotics.

It has pivoted from making huge, concentrat­ed tech bets to those that are smaller and more spread out.

Rajeev Misra, the other coCEO of the Vision Funds business, said in an interview that Son decided last July to streamline decision-making by elevating Clavel above an executive committee he had created to deliberate on new investment­s.

Misra, a top SoftBank executive since 2014, launched his own investment firm in 2023 but remains at SoftBank. Misra said he groomed Clavel as his successor and recommende­d him to Son.

Clavel has worked on the turnaround of some SoftBank investment­s, including bankrupt WeWork and OneWeb, a satellite company that emerged from bankruptcy after SoftBank doubled down on its bet and inked a deal to combine it with Eutelsat Communicat­ions.

With Clavel’s help, SoftBank has scored several wins in recent months, including the successful $4.87bn initial public offering of chip designer Arm Holdings and a long-awaited $7.6bn windfall from its stake in US wireless maker T-Mobile.

Trained as a Morgan Stanley technology, media and telecommun­ications banker in the 1990s, Clavel first establishe­d ties with Asian investors in Hong Kong in 1996. A Mandarin speaker, he won Chinese clients and later was sent to Tokyo to lead a similar expansion. There, he helped lure SoftBank as a client.

One of Clavel’s managers at Morgan Stanley was Paul Taubman, who now runs his own investment bank, PJT Partners.

“He’s always asking questions, and he’s direct in this unfailingl­y polite, gentle manner. He’s loyal and trustworth­y, which makes you feel he’s never trying to take your job — he’s just trying to do his,” Taubman said.

Clavel, who took morning lessons in the office to learn Japanese, made the jump from Morgan Stanley to SoftBank in 2015 after impressing SoftBank with the advisory work he did for them on telecoms deals, including the firm’s acquisitio­n of US wireless carrier Sprint.

By keeping his head down and his career ambitions to himself, he stayed clear of the internal infighting and jostling for Son’s job that resulted in his predecesso­rs exiting.

Misra, who spearheade­d Vision Fund’s investment­s, relied on Clavel to run numbers and manage teams. Even though he was not sourcing deals, Clavel became a valuable resource for other SoftBank partners needing advice.

When SoftBank COO Marcelo Claure exited in 2022 over a pay dispute, Clavel took over much of his portfolio, though he would still stick with managing investment­s rather than making new ones.

“He gets along with people and gets in the nitty-gritty of the details of the organisati­on,” Misra said of Clavel.

CONSERVATI­VE

Clavel spent his first months in his new role by flying around the world to visit Vision Fund staff and help execute deals orchestrat­ed by the group.

Tech executives and some of his colleagues at SoftBank say he still faces a long road to establish himself as a major investor in the tech community, given his background as an investment banker.

Under Clavel, SoftBank’s second Vision Fund, which has about $9bn left to spend, has so far taken a conservati­ve approach. It has written small cheques to start-ups such as Tractable and Cato Networks, while passing on high-profile AI investment opportunit­ies, such as OpenAI and Anthropic, due to concerns over frothy valuations in the sector.

Paul Golding, analyst at Macquarie, said SoftBank is being selective as it rehabilita­tes itself as a cautious dealmaker.

“The investment amounts have not been substantia­l in recent quarters relative to the liquidity available to them,” he said. “A major challenge is finding supply of high-quality potential investment targets that meet the criteria.”

The group side, which handles SoftBank’s balance sheet investment­s, has made more bold bets on robotics companies, including on Symbotic, Berkshire Grey and Stack.

In an interview in his office — a modest meeting room in a WeWork space on Manhattan’s Park Avenue — Clavel said SoftBank has enough firepower to back ambitious founders in AI, a top investment priority.

If SoftBank does not find enough opportunit­ies to spend its dry powder, then the firm will seed its own.

It did this with trucking venture Stack, which it created as a SoftBank subsidiary by partnering with autonomous driving entreprene­ur Bryan Salesky, Clavel said.

SoftBank has also been eyeing other ways of deploying capital, such as forming joint ventures with companies or lending to them.

“When there’s a market for deals getting churned out, then we look at those companies. When there isn’t a market, then we create our own magic,” Clavel said.

 ?? /Reuters ?? Careful: Former tech investment banker Alex Clavel, co-CEO at SoftBank Investment Adviser, is described as an unfailingl­y polite, loyal problem solver.
/Reuters Careful: Former tech investment banker Alex Clavel, co-CEO at SoftBank Investment Adviser, is described as an unfailingl­y polite, loyal problem solver.

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